Steptoe v. Mason

172 S.E.2d 587, 153 W. Va. 783, 1970 W. Va. LEXIS 244
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 3, 1970
Docket12795
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 172 S.E.2d 587 (Steptoe v. Mason) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Steptoe v. Mason, 172 S.E.2d 587, 153 W. Va. 783, 1970 W. Va. LEXIS 244 (W. Va. 1970).

Opinion

Berry, Judge:

This is an appeal by John C. Studt and Elizabeth Studt from a judgment of the Circuit Court of Berkeley County of April 8, 1968, holding a deed in the chain of title prior to Studts to be a forgery. The appeal was granted by this Court on December 16, 1968. The judgment of the Circuit Court cancelled and annulled a total of nine deeds, but only three of the deeds actually involve the appellants’ title in this appeal. Two of the deeds in question are purported conveyances from Johnny L. Mason to J. H. Messick, and the third is from Messick to the appellants, Studts. Actually, the two deeds from Mason to Messick are purported to be the same deed, as one is claimed to be the original and one is claimed to be the copy of the original that was recorded in the office of the Clerk of the County Court of Berkeley County.

The remaining six deeds involve land purported to have been conveyed by Mason to Messick, which were then conveyed by Messick to a Chester Minghini, who did not appeal from the judgment annulling his deeds, and the judgment is final as to those deeds. However, the matter of the forgery of all the deeds from Mason to Messick is related to and may be considered in connection with the deeds involved in this appeal.

*785 Johnny Lemon Mason died on May 15, 1963, leaving according to records in said Clerk’s office at the time of his death about 503 acres of land, which the administrator of his estate, Kobert M. Steptoe, described in the complaint filed May 13, 1964, in this suit as belonging to the decedent. However, on August 15, 1963, Messick had presented to the Clerk of the Berkeley County Court a deed from Mason which the Clerk recorded and which is involved in this appeal. By this deed, if valid, certain lands listed in the complaint might have been removed from the estate. The date of the deed was March 15, 1963, and the acknowledgment of the grantor taken by A. H. Shipper, a Notary Public, was dated August 15, 1963, three months after the grantor, Mason died. Likewise, the acknowledgment incorrectly gave the date of the deed as August 15, 1963. Mr. Shipper apparently did not appear at the trial and no further reference to him is contained in the record. We, therefore, have no explanation in the record as to why the anomaly in dates occurred.

On June 10, 1963, Messick also presented and had recorded a deed from Mason conveying four acres, which he later conveyed to Minghini. This deed was dated May 11, 1963, four days before Mason died, and the acknowledgment by a notary was dated the same day. The description of the four acre tract in this deed had been taken verbatim from a plat prepared from a survey made by T. J. Snyder which was recorded on June 7, 1963, about three weeks after Mason died. A notation contained on the plat indicated it was made after the death of Mason.

After Mason’s estate was appraised, the administrator ascertained that there were not enough assets to pay his debts and instituted the suit on May 13 or 14, 1964, to subject the real estate to discharging the debts or so much thereof as necessary to do so. The complaint alleged that the deed in question dated March 15, 1963, was ambiguous and prayed that it be reformed or rescinded. The heirs, creditors, and Messick were made parties to the suit, and the Studts intervened, after which a cross-claim was filed *786 by the heirs against Messiek and the Studts in which the heirs claimed that the deed in question was a forgery. The plaintiff then amended his bill to charge that the acknowledgment was defective.

The case as now on appeal is a second trial of the issues. The jury returned a verdict in the first trial that the deeds were not forgeries but upon proper motion and good grounds, the verdicts were set aside and a new trial granted. About three weeks before the first trial in 1967 Messiek stated that the original deed of March 15, 1963, had been destroyed by fire when his house burned, but a few days later still before the first trial started, he produced what he claimed to be the original of the recorded deed with an acknowledgment dated March 15, 1963, instead of August 15, 1963, as the clerk’s record showed it. After the first trial, when the cross-claimants had the opportunity to have the deed examined, it was examined by Charles A. Appel, Jr., a nationally known examiner of questioned documents. It was upon the basis of an affidavit of Appel that he found the deed to be a forgery and of an affidavit by the Martinsburg fire chief that the deed, if placed where Messiek said it had been, could not have been protected from the fire and from being destroyed, that a new trial was granted.

At the second trial the evidence with regard to the forgery of the deed claimed by Messiek to be the original was presented, together with evidence as to other deeds from Mason in which he was grantee, and the jury returned verdicts that the deeds were forgeries. There is no question from the evidence but that this deed of March 15, 1963, claimed to be the original was an outright forgery, and that it was not the same deed which had been recorded on August 15, 1963, three months after the grantor, Mason, died. The fourth page of the “original” deed, on which the acknowledgment was dated before the grantor died, was proved not to have been on the same paper as the first three pages and to have been done at a later time than the first three pages. Then, too, the documentary stamps had been cut off another paper *787 and placed on the fourth page and the words at the top of it did not connect with the third page. There were some 42 differences in the deed claimed by Messick to be the original and the Clerk’s copy of the one that he had recorded on August 15, 1963. He had attempted to have the recorded deed corrected before the trial, but the deputy clerk refused to make any corrections because the deed presented later by Messick was not the deed he originally presented for recordation.

John L. VanMeter, attorney for the administrator, testified that after the appraisement of Mason’s estate had been filed, Messick came to his office and told him he had bought certain land, which apparently was the same land later referred to in both versions of the deed dated March 15, 1963, and had not received a deed for the land. VanMeter told Messick to bring in his papers and receipts, which he did, but they were not considered satisfactory proof, being mostly undecipherable. However, it appears that Messick came back to VanMeter’s office sometime after the first visit and brought a deed with him which he said was the deed for the land involved. VanMeter looked at the deed and apparently noticed that the description was uncertain or ambiguous, the same as it later appeared in the recorded and the claimed original deed, by which it could not be easily deduced whether there were 226 or 50 acres of land conveyed. However, he told Messick that if he thought it was a good deed he should have it recorded.

The administrator testified that prior to the time Mes-sick conveyed the land to the Studts, they had knowledge that there was some difficulty with regard to Messick’s title to the land. However, this information was given to the Studts by Mrs. Studt’s father who had done some surveying in connection with the land involved, and it appears to have related to the discrepancy in the description and not to the forgery.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
172 S.E.2d 587, 153 W. Va. 783, 1970 W. Va. LEXIS 244, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steptoe-v-mason-wva-1970.