Wade v. McDougle

52 S.E. 1026, 59 W. Va. 113, 1906 W. Va. LEXIS 92
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 20, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 52 S.E. 1026 (Wade v. McDougle) 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
Wade v. McDougle, 52 S.E. 1026, 59 W. Va. 113, 1906 W. Va. LEXIS 92 (W. Va. 1906).

Opinion

Brannon, Judge:

Daniel R. Neal brought an action in ejectment in the circuit court of Wood county against A. H. McDougle counting in [115]*115his declaration for a tract of sixty acres. A disclaimer was made by the defendant for all of the tract except a parcel of specified boundary containing about fifteen acres. A trial resulted in a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff.

Defendant’s first assignment of error is, that the plaintiff was allowed to prove a survey, made under an order of survey in the case, of the land covered by defendant’s deed. The plaintiff claimed that the deed under which the defendant claimed does not include the land in contest. The plaintiff introduced a deed for the sixty acres dated 1st February, 1867, from William Logan to Daniel R. Neal, under which the plaintiff claimed, but traced no title back to the state. On the strength of paper title, the plaintiff showed no title; for to recover on paper as jper se giving superior title, it must trace back to the state, unless the title of the contestants comes from a common grantor. Ronk v. Higginbotham, 54 W. Va. 137. No show to recovery by the plaintiff on paper title was made in this case. The plaintiff did not even give evidence of the boundaries of the Logan deed to show that it covers the land in controversy. If the plaintiff showed no title in himself, what matters it where the land embraced within the defendant’s deed lies? In ejectment the plaintiff must, if he claims under paper title, locate his exterior boundary, so as to show that his title takes in the disputed land. Miller v. Holt, 47 W. Va. 12. What matters it whether the defendant has title or not, if the plaintiff himself has no title? He must gain on the strength of his own title, not on the weakness of the defendant’s title. Lowe v. Settle, 32 W. Va. 600. Thus, it would seem that this evidence of the defendant’s location would be immaterial, and introduce a matter, and call on the defendant to meet it, not pertinent to the case, and calculated to hurt his defence before the jury. It could not locate the plaintiff’s land, as he had no title to locate. If it is said that to locate the defendant’s deed would locate the Logan deed, as the Logan deed calls for the “Neal and Stokely line”, the reply is, the Logan deed is not surveyed, and the deed to Beckwith does not call for the line.

A second assignment of error is, the admission of evidence of surveying a line between a tract owned by the city, known as the city hospital ground, and a tract of Sarah Neal. I do [116]*116not see what light this could throw on the case. It could add to the intricacy and difficulty of the case and confuse the jury. It was not relevant. Neither claimed under or derived title from the owners of those tracts. Their location would not settle the location of the claims of the plaintiff or defendant. The call in a deed to which the Lauch deed referred for the Neal line was not binding on the defendant; it was res inter alios acta.

A third assignment of error is, that plaintiff gave evidence to prove that defendant’s deed would not reach the disputed land, is well taken under principles stated above, that the plaintiff must show that his own right covered the land. And mere call for distance is not material when a fixed line is called for.

A fourth assignment of error is, the admission of a deed from Taylor, commissioner,' to Sanders, no authority to make it being shown, and no connection being shown between the title of one Davis, whose title the deed purports to convey, and the plaintiff. As passing title it was not admissible; but the plaintiff after giving that deed in evidence, gave in evidence a deed from said Sanders to William Logan, and a deed from Logan to the plaintiff. As color of title for adverse possession, I see no objection to the deed. Mullin v. Carper, 37 W. Va. 215.

A fifth assignment of error is, the admission in evidence of a deed from Sanders to Logan. It is admissible for color of title in connection with the deed from Logan to plaintiff. It is said the descriptions in the two deeds vary. If it were plain that they relate to different land, this would be a good objection; but that seems to me to be a question of identity as a fact for the jury; that is, whether it could give any color as to the land in contest. The fact that no surveying was don eto show the location of the land described in the deed only went to make it weak as affording color of title for the land.

The sixth assignment of error is, the admission in evidence of a deed from Lauck and Logan to Logan and Leach. It is not claimed that the plaintiff claimed the land in this deed, or had any privity with it, or that it bounded on the land conveyed to him by Logan. It was in no sense in controversy. It was irrelevant, producing confusion before the [117]*117jury. The argument for it is that Logan’s deed to the plaintiff refers to this deed, and this deed calls for the Neal and Stokely line. What if it does ? Is it used to locate that line? It cannot do so. It is a declaration by its parties that that line was there; but does their declaration or assertion bind the defendant? No surveying of its bounds proves that declaration true.

The seventh assignment of error is, in the admission in evidence of a deed from Logan and Leach to Parkersburg. What has been said under the sixth assignment here applies.

The eighth assignment of error is, the admission in evidence of a decree of partition and plat of lands of Bradford’s estate. They were transactions between strangers to this suit, not involving the land in dispute. It is claimed that these papers are admissable, as Beckwith’s deed, under which defendant claims, calls for this Bradford land. That would tend to locate the land of defendant; but the plaintiff is suing, and must show where his land is, no matter where may be the defendant’s. Possibly, if the plaintiff had had his tract under the deed from Logan to him surveyed and proven, his right to go to a line the same as the line of Bradford, the call in Beckwith’s deed might be an admission of the location of Beckwith’s line; this is doubtful, because the defendant was not a party to the partition, so as to give it force to establish the true place of the Bradford line. Surely the action of parties to the partition of the Bradford land could not fix its bounds so as to bind Beckwith to a particular line as being the true place of that line called for in his deed. It is res inter alios acta. Action of one party does not bind strangers. But this Bradford land was not surveyed, but laid down by protraction. Where are its lines on the ground? I do not see that the Bradford land can locate the defendant’s land. Would that show that the defendant’s land is in a particular place? It is an effort, by the partition of other people’s land, not in controversy here, to show that the defendant does not own the land in controversy, without showing that the plaintiff owns it. This partition has no connection with this suit. ■

The ninth assignment of error is, the admission in evidence of a deed from Phelps to Bradford. What does it show shedding light on this case? It is between strangers to it. [118]*118Can their acts locate the land involved? No survey of the land mentioned in that deed gave it local habitation, as may be also said of other papers admitted, even of the deed of Logan to the plaintiff. It does not purport to, and could not, locate the plaintiff’s boundary.

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Bluebook (online)
52 S.E. 1026, 59 W. Va. 113, 1906 W. Va. LEXIS 92, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wade-v-mcdougle-wva-1906.