Summers v. Satterfield

196 S.E. 159, 120 W. Va. 1, 122 A.L.R. 229, 1938 W. Va. LEXIS 36
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 22, 1938
Docket8682
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 196 S.E. 159 (Summers v. Satterfield) 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
Summers v. Satterfield, 196 S.E. 159, 120 W. Va. 1, 122 A.L.R. 229, 1938 W. Va. LEXIS 36 (W. Va. 1938).

Opinion

Fox, Judge:

At May Rules, 1937, Camden D. Summers filed his bill in the circuit court of Marion County against Nettie Satterfield and E. K. Satterfield, her husband, praying for the partition or1 sale nf two contiguous, tracts of land described in deeds as 7 4/5 acres and 6 acres, which, from the papers before us, seem actually to contain 12.114 acres, owned jointly by himself and Nettie Satter-field. The coal in said land had been conveyed to a third party and is not involved herein. The plaintiff in his bill asked to be compensated for certain improvements which, at a cost of $383.25, he avers he made on the land sought to be partitioned. The defendants; answered the bill and denied that the plaintiff was entitled to compensation for improvements, or that the land could or1 should be partitioned in kind; but agreed that the same should be sold. The cause was heard before the court in chambers, proof taken, and the record in the chancery cause of Camden D. Summers, Administrator, against Phoebe Bunner and others, a suit to settle the estate of Mary Virginia Summer's, and in which was sold her interest in the land involved herein, was, by agreement of counsel, considered by the trial judge, and is included in the record now before us1. On July 24, 1937, a decree was entered in the cause by which the plaintiff and Nettie Satterfield were adjudged to be owners, in common of said land, and commissioners weire appointed to make partition thereof, with provision that if they should find that said property was not susceptible of partition, they should report to the court the facts upon which such con- *3 elusion was based. The decree also contained the following provisions:

“That the commissioners hereinafter appointed are hereby directed to assign unto the said Camden D. Summers the land on which the barn, the hog house and the chicken house are located, without charging him or his share, with the cost or value of said three buildings, unless to do so would operate in serious. injury and prejudice to the other co-tenant.
a * * *
“And should the said commissioners-find and report that said real estate is not partible in kind, they shall then appraise the said barn, hog house and chicken house and place a fair and reasonable present value upon each of them and as a part of their report they shall include said appraisement so made.”

The defendant, Nettie Satterfield, objected to the entry of said decree, and prosecutes this appeal therefrom. She bases her objection thereto upon the provisions thereof quoted above.

Counsel flor plaintiff in his brief raises' a question of whether or not the decree complained of is a final decree. We think it settles the principles of the cause, in that it decrees the respective interests of the parties in the property sought to be partitioned, appoints commissioners to make partition, and gives direction as to their action thereunder. It upheld the claim of Camden D. Summers that he was1 entitled to compensation for the improvements placed by him upon the property by directing that he be assigned that part of the land on which the improvements had been made, if that could be done in justice to the other tenant, or, in the event the property was not susceptible of partition, laid the groundwork for the ascertainment of the amount he should be paid in cash. This court has more than once held that such a decree is one adjudicating the principles of the *4 cause and that an appeal may be taken therefrom. Richmond v . Richmond, 62 W. Va. 206, 57 S. E. 736; Roush v. Hyer, 62 W. Va. 120, 57 S. E. 368; Sattes v. Sattes, 117 W. Va. 483, 186 S. E. 176. We see no reason to depart from these holdings.

The principal question involved is the right of the plaintiff to be compensated for improvements which he claims he made on the property sought to be partitioned. Ward v. Ward’s Heirs, 40 W. Va. 611, 21 S. E. 746, 29 L. R. A. 449, 52 Am. St. Rep. 911, is authority for the following propositions:

(1) “Permanent improvements made by one co-parcener, without request or agreement of others are not chargeable to the others personally or upon their shares in the land; but if made by their request or agreement, they are a debt upon them, and a lien on their shares in the land.”
(2) “In partition the part improved, if it can be done without injury to others, should be assigned to the improver; but when this can not be done, the cost of improvement can not be charged to him to whom it goes.”
(3) “Where, however, the property is not susceptible of partition, and must be sold to divide the proceeds, the coparcener who made repairs and permanent improvements: shall receive out of the proceeds that amount by which the property, at the date of sale, remains enhanced- in value from the improvements, not their original cost.”

The case from which the above quotations were taken was decided in 1895, and has not been departed from by this court. In Alderson v. Horse Creek Coal Land Company, 81 W. Va. 411, 94 S. E. 716, decided in 1917, it was held that where a co-tenant had located on a particular portion of a tract of land and had enhanced its value by making improvements, the part improved would be assigned to the person making the improvements where it could be done without injustice to other co-tenants, and *5 it was specifically stated that “It is the duty of the court making such a partition to cause the improvements to be assigned to the respective parties who make them, so far as it can be done consistently with an equitable partition of the estate.” In Ward v. Ward’s Heirs, supra, there is a clear discussion of the question by Judge Bran-non which we cannot do better than quote:

“Although it be law that one coparcener can not without consent make permanent improvements, and charge his coparcener or1 his share with their cost, where the estate is partible in kind, as a tract of land, how is it in the case of a house or land which isi impartible in kind for any reason, so that it has to be sold in order to effect a partition, as was the case in the present instance? Is there no difference here? Circumstances alter cases. Is it right for a court of justice to sell the land greatly increased in value by the expenditure of one brother, and put the money into the pocket of another with its eyesi shut to the fact that the property brought more, a great deal, by reason of the new house built by one of the brothers ? Ought it not to be ascertained how much the value was enhanced by the improvement, and pay the amount of the enhancement to the one whose means produced it, and divide the balance? This is different from the case where there is division in kind. In the latter case, to charge the brother who did not consent to the improvement is to force upon him a debt he did not assent to, and to mortgage his estate with a debt which he can not pay and which will take away his patrimony.

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Bluebook (online)
196 S.E. 159, 120 W. Va. 1, 122 A.L.R. 229, 1938 W. Va. LEXIS 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/summers-v-satterfield-wva-1938.