Ward v. Medley

93 S.E. 941, 81 W. Va. 25, 1917 W. Va. LEXIS 159
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 9, 1917
StatusPublished

This text of 93 S.E. 941 (Ward v. Medley) 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
Ward v. Medley, 93 S.E. 941, 81 W. Va. 25, 1917 W. Va. LEXIS 159 (W. Va. 1917).

Opinion

Williams, Judge:

, By this writ of error plaintiff seeks to reverse an order of the circuit court of Kanawha county refusing a writ of error to a judgment'for defendant, rendered in an action of ejectment by the common pleas court of said county.

J. Brisben Walker, being the owner of a tract of land, laid it off into building lots, streets and alleys, and caused a map thereof to be made and recorded in the clerk’s office of the county court of Kanawha county. He and others then formed a joint stock association, known as the Western Charleston Extension Company, for which he declared he held the title to the property in trust. The map is described as, “The Proposed Addition to the City of Charleston.” ■ Lots 6 and 7 in Block 8 of that map are the lots here involved, defendant owning lot 6 and plaintiff lot 7. Lot 7 was conveyed by said Walker, trustee, to William Thompson in 1873, the deed describing it by the number of the lot and block, as shown by said map, also, as fronting “forty feet on Virginia Avenue and running back one hundred and sixty feet to an alley.” Virginia Avenue has since been renamed Tennessee Avenue. Said Thompson and wife conveyed the lot to Charles Ward in 1874. He has since died, and the title, which descended to his heirs, is now vested in his son Harold M. Ward, the plaintiff.

[27]*27Defendant acquired title to lot 6 in Block 8 by deed from R. R. Dawson, dated the 17th of January, 1901.' Said Dawson had previously purchased it at a sheriff’s sale, made in December, 1899, for taxes delinquent thereon for the years 1897-8 in the name of Lucy A. Medley, the mother of defendant, and obtained a deed therefor from the clerk of the county court. Mrs. Medley had acquired title to the lot from the Kanawha Valley Bank which had purchased it, together with a large number of other Walker lots, at a judicial sale made in the suit of Jas. M. Payne, Administrator d. b. n. of James L. Carr, deceased, vs. J. Brisben Walker and others, and had' received a deed therefor from the special commissioner of the court. None of the deeds mention the width of this lot on Tennessee Avenue, but it is admitted that all the lots fronting on Tennessee Avenue, in Block 8, except lot 1, were originally laid off with a frontage of forty feet. Plaintiff contends that lot 1 was laid off only thirty feet wide.

Two questions of fact were presented to the jury. First, what is the true location of the dividing line between lots 6 and 7; and second, defendant’s claim of adverse possession of lot 6 to the line claimed by him. Plaintiff’s counsel insists that the evidence is conclusive to establish the dividing line between lots 6 and 7 on the location claimed by plaintiff, and that the evidence respecting adversary possession by defendant is not sufficient to support the verdict in his favor. The only evidence plaintiff offered to prove the location of the disputed line is a copy of the Walker map of the proposed addition to the City of Charleston and the testimony of engineers that the width of lot 1 in Block 8 was only thirty feet, whereas the width of the nine remaining lots in that block, fronting on Tennessee Avenue, were each forty feet, as ascertained by applying the scale to the map, and that the line along the front of all the ten lots, ascertained in the same way, was only three hundred and ninety feet. There are eleven lots in that tier of lots in Block 8, but lot 11 lies along Charleston Street and is triangular, having its apex at the intersection of Charleston Street and Tennessee Avenue, and hence adds nothing to the sum total of the width of all the lots. From these facts, thus ascertained, the theory [28]*28of plaintiff seems to be, that by allowing forty feet instead of thirty as the width of lot 1, which lies at the corner of Fay-ette Street and Tennessee Avenue, the lines of all the remaining lots have been shoved over toward Charleston Street a distance of ten feet. It appears from the report of Wm. P. Hogne, who made a survey in obedience to an order of the court entered in this cause, which counsel have agreed might be read and considered as evidence, together with the maps filed therewith, without his testimony, he being a member of the National Guard and then absent in the service of the United States. The maps which are frequently spoken of in the testimony have not been brought up with the record. Said Iiogue reports that he began at a stone corner at the curb line of Fayette Street and Tennessee Avenue and measured along the curb line of Tennessee Avenue to its intersection with Charleston Street, first laying off ten feet for the sidewalk, then thirty feet to a point opposite the corner between lots 1 and 2, as claimed by plaintiff; thence continuing and allowing forty feet for each one of the remaining lots from 2 to 10, both inclusive, he says the sixth forty foot measurement brought him to a point opposite a fence, now standing between lots 7 and 8, shown by the red line on his map. This map is not before us, but this.fence is evidently the one testified to by witness Myers. The ninth forty foot measurement, which represents the frontage of lot 10, when reoffset to the property line, he says, lacked 1.2 feet of reaching the present building line on Charleston Street, as shown on his map. This surveying he did at the request of the plaintiff. He reports that he then measured along the same curb line from the same point, at the request of the defendant, allowing ten feet for the sidewalk on Fayette Street, and forty, instead of thirty feet for lot 1, and forty feet for each of the remaining nine lots,' and that the tenth forty foot measurement, when reoffset to the property line, carried him 8.8 feet beyond the present building line of Charleston Street. These measurements prove, of course, that the distance between Charleston and Fayette streets, as they are now located, lacks 8.8 feet of making ten forty foot lots, and, allowing only thirty feet for lot 1, and forty feet for each [29]*29of the others, it is 1.2 feet too long. But they do not prove that the location of the dividing line between 6 and 7, as it is claimed by plaintiff, is correct. .

Plaintiff did not attempt to prove, by any other means, the location of any of the lines dividing the lots, as they were actually made on the ground at the time the land was laid off, if any such lines were then so made. Copies of other maps of the same addition to Charleston, or at least of such parts of it as included the íots in Block 8 and the streets surrounding that block, and other blocks in its vicinity, made from the records of the clerk’s office, were also filed as evidence. From them it appears that all of the lots fronting on Tennessee Avenue, in Block 8, from lot 1 to 10, both inclusive, scale about forty feet in width. No witness has undertaken to say that the street lines, as now located, are exactly where they were represented on the original Walker map to be. On the contrary, there is a good deal of testimony to prove that the property line along Charleston Street has been moved back several feet, by consent of the property owners, since that map was made, in order to make the street wider. George Ort and others acquired title to parts of lots 9, 10 and 11, by deed from Jonathan Edens and wife, in September, 1898. That deed conveyed sixty-five feet off the eastern end of those lots, and describes the closing line as running eighty-seven feet along Virginia Avenue (now Tennessee Avenue) to its junction with Charleston Street.

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Related

Lyons v. Fairmont Real Estate Co.
77 S.E. 525 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1912)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
93 S.E. 941, 81 W. Va. 25, 1917 W. Va. LEXIS 159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ward-v-medley-wva-1917.