Union Sand & Gravel Co. v. Northcott

135 S.E. 589, 102 W. Va. 519, 1926 W. Va. LEXIS 65
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 9, 1926
Docket5743
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 135 S.E. 589 (Union Sand & Gravel Co. v. Northcott) 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
Union Sand & Gravel Co. v. Northcott, 135 S.E. 589, 102 W. Va. 519, 1926 W. Va. LEXIS 65 (W. Va. 1926).

Opinion

Miller, Judge :

Complainant, claiming right and title to Racoon Island, situate in the Ohio River about six miles below the City of *521 Gallipolis, in the State of Ohio, upon a bill filed in the Circuit Court of Cabell County, obtained an injunction perpetually restraining and inhibiting defendants,, and each of them, their officers, agents and employees, from trespassing upon or removing any sand and gravel from said island above the low water elevation, as shown on Government Chart No. 76, filed as Exhibit No. 3 with plaintiff’s amended bill, and above the exterior line in red as shown on Merrick’s Exhibit No. 2; also a decree against the defendants for the sum of $288.00, the value at three cents per cubic yard, for 9600 cubic yards of gravel actually removed therefrom. It was from this decree that the final appeal was taken by defendants, and now before us for review.

It is a eoncessum, that aside from the incidental questions, the issues presented by the pleadings, and the determination of the plaintiff’s right to the relief prayed for, and granted, are:

“1. Has the plaintiff by reason of its ownership of Eacoon Island any title to the sand and gravel bar surrounding the same, between high and low water marks?
“2. If the first question be answered in the affirmative, where, under the existing conditions, in said river, is low water mark located, and was it properly located by the final decree with reference to Government Chart No. 76?”

In deraignment of its title to Eacoon Island plaintiff alleged in its original bill that its immediate source of title was a deed dated September 16, 1924, from Moses T. Epling, recorded in Mason County, West Virginia, December 17,1924; that title reverted back for its remote and ultimate source of title, to a decree and deed originating in a suit instituted in 1878 by one F. A. Guthrie, Commissioner of School lands of Mason County, to sell said Eacoon Island as waste and unappropriated land of the State. The bill does not allege the name of the purchaser, nor the date of the deed, but there was introduced in evidence a part of the record in the suit of Guthrie, School Commissioner, including an order therein, of April 21, 1879, showing that the purchaser was one Lewis *522 J. Cook, Ms compliance with the terms of sale, confirmation thereof, and directing the commissioner, upon payment of the residue of the purchase money, to execute and deliver to him a proper deed, conveying to him all the right, title and interest of the State, in and to said lands. There was also introduced in evidence a decree, purporting to have been made in another chancery suit, brought by B. L. Meade, against L. J. Cook, to subject said Racoon Island as Cook’s property to the payment of a judgment of plaintiff against him, and in which it was found that Cook was entitled to a deed for said island, and appointing one Gibbons special commissioner to execute and deliver to him a deed therefor, and decreeing the same to be sold by one Gunn, special commissioner, t.o satisfy said judgment. Another order entered in said cause, on May 7, 1889, introduced in evidence, shows payment and satisfaction of said judgment and a direction that the cause be retired from the docket.

Another fact respecting the title, not covered by any pleading, but appearing in the record as evidence, is that this island tract was delinquent for taxes in 1916, purchased by the State, and was again proceeded against, and sold by B. H. Blagg, Commissioner of School Lands, in 1924, in which proceeding, Bpling and Sheppard, in whose name the delinquency occurred, disclaiming in favor of plaintiff in this suit, appeared and filed their answer; and plaintiff appeared also, and by answer or petition claiming the right of redemption, was on its motion permitted to redeem the property from said forfeiture. A certificate of the clerk of .the county court, also filed in the cause, shows that the property was regularly taxed from 1890 to and including 1924, and that there was no intervening- delinquency or sale of the property except for the year 1916, already alluded to.

While these facts respecting the title to Racoon Island thus appear in the record, no real objection to plaintiff’s right thereto is interposed, except the broad pi’oposition contended for, that the commissioner of school lands had no jurisdiction or authority to proceed against said tract, in so far at least as the said title related to any part of the island below high water *523 mark, and included between that level and low water mark delineated on the Government Chart No. 76, referred to in the decree; defendants’ major proposition being that at the time said school commissioner’s proceedings were begun and continued, all the sand and gravel beds lying between such high water mark and low water mark constituted but a part of the bed and banks of the Ohio River, which were not subject to entry, or sale or disposition thereof for the benefit of the school fund, and that the proceedings of the school commissioners were absolutely void, in so far at least as they involved the right and title to the.gravel and sand bars below high water mark; wherefore plaintiff had acquired no title thereto as against defendants or anyone else, with license or permit to take gravel or sand therefrom.

When so proceeded against in 1878, the land was described as a tract of 1 ‘ about 2 acres of land and sand and gravel bar surrounding same”; and in the commissioner’s report to the court, it was represented that the same was subject to sale under section 1, chapter 134 Acts of the Legislature of 1872-3, as waste and unappropriated lands. Said act, in so far as it is applicable here, -is as follows: “1. All waste and unappropriated lands within this state, and all lands in this state heretofore vested in the State of Virginia by forfeiture or purchase at the sheriff’s or collector’s sale for delinquent taxes and not released and exonerated or redeemed within one year, according to law; all lands heretofore or hereafter purchased for this state, at a sale thereof for taxes,'and not redeemed within one year, according to law; and all lands foi'feited to this state for the -failure to have the same entered upon the books of the assessor and charged with the taxes thereon, as provided for by law, shall, as far as the title thereof shall not be vested in junior grantees or claimants under the provisions of the' eoixstitution and laws, be sold for the benefit of the school fund, in the manner hereinafter prescribed.” By section 3 of the same act, however*, it is provided that: “It shall be the duty of the surveyor of each county in this state, as soon as the same shall come to his knowledge, to report to the commissioner all waste and unappropriated lands in his *524 county, except the lands under the bed of the Ohio River, subject to sale under the provisions of this chapter.”

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Bluebook (online)
135 S.E. 589, 102 W. Va. 519, 1926 W. Va. LEXIS 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-sand-gravel-co-v-northcott-wva-1926.