Stewart v. Tennant

44 S.E. 223, 52 W. Va. 559, 1903 W. Va. LEXIS 86
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 28, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by62 cases

This text of 44 S.E. 223 (Stewart v. Tennant) 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
Stewart v. Tennant, 44 S.E. 223, 52 W. Va. 559, 1903 W. Va. LEXIS 86 (W. Va. 1903).

Opinions

PoeéenbaRgeR, Judge:

Tbe South. Penn Oil Company and Jacob S. Tennant complain, on appeal of certain decrees, made by the circuit court of Tyler County, upon a bill filed against them and others by Louis Stewart for relief from certain alleged erroneous decrees pronounced by the same court in a former chancery suit, under which Tennant and one Cassie A. Tennant, by judicial sale, acquired the title, as they claim, to a certain tract of land, and afterwards leased the same for oil and gas purposes to said South Penn Oil Company, and for an accounting, on the part of said defendants, for one-twelfth of the oil taken from said land. The case is substantially as follows: James Stewart, being the owner of said tract of land, which contained one hundred and seventy-six acres, died in the year 1889, intestate and leaving surviving him a widow .and twelve children. Afterwards, and prior to •July 1, 1890, Jacob S. Tennant and Cassie A. Tennant purchased the undivided interest of six of said children. They then brought a partition suit, praying for an assignment of the dower and division of the land, in which a decree was entered, adjudicating the right to partition and. appointing commissioners to make it and assign the dower. Before this decree was executed, at the August term, 1891, Jacob S. Tennant, by leave of the court, filed in the cause, deeds, executed by the widow and four others of the children, conveying to him the dower interest and an additional four-twelfths of the land, making ten-twelfths of the entire tract, owned by him and Cassie A. Tennant. The other two interests were owned by the plaintiff, Louis Stewart, and Emma Stewart, both infants. Then, evidence was introduced at the bar of the court, tending to show that the interest of said infants would be promoted by a sale of their interest in the land, and payment of the proceeds thereof to their guardian, [563]*563and a decree was entered, setting aside so much of the former decree as ordgred a partition of the land, decreeing a sale of the undivided interest of said infants, which decree was, on the 8th day of December, 1891, executed, Jacob S. Tennant becoming the purchaser for the sum of two hundred dollars. This sale was confirmed and, on August 31, 1895, the commissioner who sold the land under the decree, executed a deed therefor to Tennant. Immediately afterwards, the Tennants took possession of the land and, by two leases, dated, respectively, June 28, 1894, and May 1, 1897, leased it to the South Penn Oil Company for oil purposes, and oh or about the 9th day of April, 1897, said company entered upon the land and commenced drilling for oil and gas, and ever since has been in the exclusive and uninterrupted possession of the same for oil and gas purposes and has drilled, eleven wells on the land, all of which produced and are producing considerable quantities of oil.

On the 29th day of June, 1900, the plaintiff, who had been under age, as has been stated, when said decrees, sale and leases were made, commenced this suit, by an original bill which was filed at July rules, 1900, alleging his infancy as aforesaid, setting up all of said proceedings and transactions, alleging that the decrees and proceedings in said former suit, -whereby the Tennants claimed to have acquired title to his interest in the land, were erroneous, illegal and void, showing that he had attained the age of twenty-one years on the- 11th day of May, 1900, and praying that the said Tennants, South Penn Oil Company and Eureka Pipe Line Company be required to answer the bill under oath, and show the quantilv of oil taken by tluin, and each of them, from said land, the amount held by said Pipe Line Company, and disposed of by it or any of the defendants; that an injunction be awarded, restraining the Tennants and Houth Penn Oil Company from talcing and removing any timber, oil or other material from the lands and from selling or otherwise disposing of the same or tlic proceeds thereof; that if the court should permit them to operate on the land it should appoint a receiver to take charge and control of one-twelfth- of the oil. then on hands or that might be thereafter produced; and that general relief in the premises, as to equity might seem right, should he granted.

To this hill, the appellants and others of the defendants demurred, and the demurrers having been overruled, they filed [564]*564thoir separate answers. Depositions were taken and filed, and, on the 29th day of August, 1901, the decrees complained of wcro pronounced. The objection to one of these is that it sustained exceptions to parts of the answers of the South Penn Oil Corn-pan and the Eureka Pipe Line Company, and to the other that it permitted the plaintiff to file in this cause the record of said former chancery suit, dismissed from the case Cassie A. Tennant on motion of the complainant, set aside and annulled the decrees made in said former chancery cause at the August and December terms, 1891, set aside, annulled and cancelled the said deed to Jacob S. Tennant, made under said decrees, and the lease dated May 1, 1897, in so far as they relate to, and purport 'to convey, the interest of the plaintiff in said land, as clouds upon his title; required Jacob S. Tennant to account to the plaintiff or to him and his assigns for one-twelfth of the royalties, bonuses and ■ rentals received by him from the land, and the South Penn Oil Company to account to the plaintiff or to him and his assigns for one-twelfth of seven-eighths of the oil and gas taken from the land, on the basis of a charge against said company of the whole of one-twelfth of said seven-eighths, to be credited with one-twelfth of the actual cost and expense of production, and the difference to be paid over to the complainant or to him and his assigns. The Oil Company and Jacob S. Tennant were required also to account to the plaintiff for one-twelfth of all the timber taken by them from the land within the five years next prior to the .commencement of the suit, and the cause was referred to a commissioner, to state and report an account, in accordance with directions given in the decree.

Although there are two branches to the case, one represented by the South Penn Oil Company and the other by Jacob S. Ten-nant, whose interests, in some of the questions raised, are common, while in others they are not, and although several questions are raised by the demurrers, all of which are carried into the decree, it is unnecessary, in the discussion and disposition of the errors assigned, to separate and sub-divide them with reference to parties and the stages at which the alleged causes of complaint arose.

One contention is that this suit is not a direct proceeding to uproot the decrees and proceedings in the former chancery cause, but is separate, distinct and collateral thereto', and, for that rea-[565]*565soil, the demurrer should Rave been sustained and the decree setting aside said decrees • pronounced in the former suit and the deed and lease made thereunder,.is erroneous. No argument is submitted in support of this contention, from which fact it may be inferred that it, as-well as some others, which stand in the same condition, is not regarded by counsel for appellants as being very well founded. The bill makes a direct attack upon all these decrees and proceedings, setting them out in detail, making them exhibits, and alleging their infirmity, erroneousness and illegality, but it does not specifically pray that they be set aside, annulled and reversed.

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Bluebook (online)
44 S.E. 223, 52 W. Va. 559, 1903 W. Va. LEXIS 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stewart-v-tennant-wva-1903.