Whittaker v. Southwest Va. Improvement Co.

12 S.E. 507, 34 W. Va. 217, 1890 W. Va. LEXIS 71
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 28, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 12 S.E. 507 (Whittaker v. Southwest Va. Improvement Co.) 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
Whittaker v. Southwest Va. Improvement Co., 12 S.E. 507, 34 W. Va. 217, 1890 W. Va. LEXIS 71 (W. Va. 1890).

Opinion

BraNNON, Judge :

This is a chancery suit brought in the Circuit Court of Mercer county by William AYhittaker and Eliza his wife, against the South West Virginia Improvement Company and others, to set aside on the ground of fraud an option made by Eliza Hale, later Whittaker, to John Graham, Jr., giving Graham option to.purchase right to minerals in a tract of four hundred acres of land lying in Mercer county and Tazewell county, Ya., and. a deed made by said Eliza [220]*220Hale and John Graham, Jr., conveying such right to Joseph I. Doran, who conveyed to said company. A decree was pronounced annulling the deed from Eliza Hale to Joseph I. Doran; and from this decree said company has appealed to this Court.

I shall consider the case first as regards the option; for, if there be no ground, for annulling it, the deed made under it, so far at least as it merely executes the option, would be wholly unaffected by the fraud, if any, connected with the execution of the subsequent deed; or the circumstances relied upon to show fraud as connected with the deed should be viewed in a different light — a light more favorable to the defendent than if there had been no valid option.

What then are the grounds on which we are asked to overthrow the option ? The charge is that Dr. James O’Keefe went to the house of Eliza Hale, then a widow, to purchase the minerals in the land, stating that they were of but little value and would never be of any more value, unless there was railroad transportation for the coal, and that might be ninety years, there being no immediate prospect at that time of such road, though he was the agent of John Graham, Jr., chief engineer and projector of a railroad then under construction, which he, O’Keefe, and those for whom he was acting knew, but of which Eliza Hale ■was.ignorant; and, induced by the concealments and representations of O’Keefe, she signed a paper, which she after-wards learned was such option, the same not having been read to her, agreeing to sell the mineral rights of said land at seven hundred and twenty dollars; but that in the mean time she ascertained that the railroad, which was to be postponed for ninety years, was in process of construction, and in the fall of that year the cars were running to' East river and up the same; and that she had also been told by a practical miner not to sell, as the lands were worth one hundred dollars per acre instead of one dollar and eighty cents; and that it was then worth one thousand dollars per acre. The bill alleges that said Eliza “has little or no knowledge. Raised chiefly in the mountains of West Virginia, she had not the educational advantages of more favorably situ[221]*221ated ladies.” These allegations constitute the length and breadth of the cause, for which the option is attacked.

How, as to the statement of the value of the minerals. It was matter.of opinion. The evidence discloses that theretofore they had no value, and this was matter of opinion of which Mrs. Hale, from long residence there, was equally competent to judge. Hext, as to the coming of the railroad, for in this matter consists the pith of the assault upon the option. The bill says that O’Keefe said the railroad might be delayed ninety years, and that there was then no immediate prospect of it, while in fact the railroad was then under contract and construction, and that he knew it, but she did not. If the road was then under construction theie or anywhere near there, it is strange that she was ignorant of it. We all know that so important a matter as the construction of a railroad, especially in our mountain sections till'then utterly without railroad, is a matter from the very first step during the preliminary surveys and during construction universally talked of, there being no subject of more wide-spread interest. She herself, while averring in her bill such ignorance, does not on the stand say she was ignorant of the events and occurrences touching the important work then going on towards the construction of this railroad which was to redeem that section from the wilderness.

The evidence shows that the Hew River railroad was begun in 1879, and it was not very far from this land and pointed in its direction, and the survey was' made up East river, and the road let to contract in July or August, 1881, to Pocahontas, a few miles from the land. The surveying-must have been going on before or as early as the 19th of April, 1881 — the date of the option. How can we .say that she did not know of this surveying, and of all the railroad construction and railroad enterprises then going on in that section ? It is hardly to be credited in the face of these things, that she was wholly and solely influenced to sign the option by the declaration or opinion -of O’Keefe that the railroad might be delayed ninety years. Anyhow, as she states it, it was in the garb of an opinion merely, as it must have appeared to her. And in view of the fact, which [222]*222slie states in Hier bill, tliat he had applied to her in vain several times before to buy the land, and the fact that options on many neighboring lands were being taken, she had reason not to rely on such statement, but to suspect and believe to the contrary. A representation to vitiate a contract must be false, and be confided in also. And the statement by O’Keefe, that the railroad might be delayed, may have been the expression of an honest opinion, for it is not positively shown that he knew the road would certainly be built; and such enterprises are problematical, and subject to many vicissitudes. O’Keefe, as a witness, says that in the work of taking contracts, in which he was then extensively engaged in that section,.he told every one that if they could buy coal lands low, they would build a railroad, but did not know when, and he supposes he told her what he told all others, lie means to say that that was what he told her, and not that he told her the road would be delayed ninety years. So he denies this charge. If ho did not make a false statement, he was not bound to tell her the railroad would come, even if he knew it. The mere fact of his knowledge, and her ignorance, of the coming of the railroad would not destroy the agreement. Harris v. Tyson, 24 Pa. St. 347; Kerr, Er. 96. The evidence is not sufficient to overthrow the option for fraud. When fraud is relied on to set aside a contract, the evidence must clearly establish it. Vanbibber v. Beirne, 6 W. Va. 168; 3 Wait, Act. & Def. 445; Smith v. Beatty, 2 Ired. Eq. 456; Crebs v. Jones, 79 Va. 381; Houghtons. Graybill, 82 Va. 573. Though a party charged with fraud may not have been perfectly clear in dealing, no relief can be had, unless fraud is strictly and clearly proved. Hord v. Colbert, 28 Gratt. 49.

As to inadequacy of consideration it may be said, that there is no doubt under the evidence, that the price tested by the state of things up to and at the date of this option was a fair price. Many other options for lands in the vicinity were taken about that time at even lower rates. Indeed until the change wrought by the construction of the railroad wild lands commanded no greater price, generally not so great, for the soil itself not merely the minerals. A magical appreciation may have been brought about in the [223]

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Bluebook (online)
12 S.E. 507, 34 W. Va. 217, 1890 W. Va. LEXIS 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whittaker-v-southwest-va-improvement-co-wva-1890.