Yokum v. Fickey

17 S.E. 318, 37 W. Va. 762, 1893 W. Va. LEXIS 28
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 25, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 17 S.E. 318 (Yokum v. Fickey) 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
Yokum v. Fickey, 17 S.E. 318, 37 W. Va. 762, 1893 W. Va. LEXIS 28 (W. Va. 1893).

Opinion

En&lish, President :

On the 15th day of October, 1890, George W. Yokum, commissioner of school lands for Randolph County, filed his petition in the Circuit Court of said county, asking for the sale of a tract of land containing eight thousand acres for [764]*764the benefit of the school-fund, said land is described in his petition as the “eight thousand acres Fickey and Thomas land.” On the following day Fred Fickey, Jr., and Edward L. Thomas filed their petition in said cause, praying that they be allowed to redeem said tract of eight thousand acres, claiming that they were the owners thereof by virtue of a patent issued to them from the state of West Virginia on the 22d day of April, 1867. Said cause was referred to a commissioner, who made a report therein on the 16th day of December, 1891, to which report said Fickey and Thomas filed twelve exceptions.

Said commissioner reported that said Fickey and Thomas tract of eight thousand acres was located on the Shavers fork of Cheat river in said county of Randolph, and was surveyed for said Fickey and Thomas on the 19th day of May, 1861; and that on the 22d day of April, 1867, the governor of this State issued a giant to said Fickey and Thomas for said tract of laud, which was duly recorded in said county on the 28th day of July, 1883; that said tract of land was entered upon the land books of said county for the year 1883, and assessed for taxes for said year, and has been so assessed ever since ; that said tract had never been assessed with taxes until the year 1883, and thereby became forfeited for the years commencing with 1868 and ending with 1882, and that the taxes and interest due thereon amounted to the sum of one thousand five hundred and seventy one dollars and seventy two cents on the 1st day of May, 1891; that said land became forfeited in the name of Fickey and Thomas in the year 1873, because of the failure of the said Fickey and Thomas to enter the same upon the land-books of Randolph county for the five successive previous years, and cause themselves to be charged with the taxes thereon, and pay the same ; that the greater part of said tract of eight thousand acres was covered by a large sui-vey known as the “ Henry Hanks survey of thirty six thousand acres,” which was surveyed for said Henry Banks on the 8th day of March, 1795, and that said survey of thirty six thousand acres was conveyed and passed regulaidy from said Banks down to the present owners or claimants, Dewing & Sons, who acquired their title from Ario Pardee [765]*765and Benjamin Rich, by deed dated the 4th day of November, 1885; that at the time of the forfeiture of said Fiekey and Thomas tract they had the legal title thereto by reason of the grant from the governor of West Virginia, aforesaid; that at the same time Ario Pardee and Benjamin Rich had legal title to said large tract of thirty six thousand acres by reason of deed from Jacob W. Heavener, administrator de bonis non with the will annexed of Henry 0. Middleton, deceased, dated December 21,1872; that James H. Dewing, and those under whom he claims and holds title, caused said tract of thirty six thousand acres to be placed upon the land-books of said county of Randolph in the year 1866, and assessed with the taxes for said year, and that said tract of thirty six thousand acres had been regularly assessed with the taxes for all the years since 1866, and said taxes have been paid; that said James II. Dewing, for Dewing & Sons, contracted for said land in September or October, 1885, and soon thereafter obtained their deed dated on the 4th day of November, 1885, and took immediate posession of the same by building houses, clearing, improving the land, cutting timber and by publishing notice in the Randolph Enterprise, a weekly newspaper published in said county, that they had purchased the land, and posted the same, and thereby warned the public and all trespassers that they would he dealt with according to law, etc.; that the whole of said eight thousand acres Fiekey and Thomas land lies within said thii’ty six thousand acres James H. Dewing land, except one thousand and ninety six acres thereof, which lies -within a tract of land known as the “Nellie L. Maynard twenty five thousand acres,” that eighty five ames of this one thousand and ninety six acres lies in the county of Pocahontas, in this State, and was proceeded against several years anterior to the date of said report by the commissioner of school-lands for said last-named county as waste and unappropriated lands, and was decreed by the Circuit Court of said county to be sold and was sold, under said decree, and purchased by citizens of said county of Pocahontas, who conveyed the same to A. H. Winchester, who conveyed it to the present owner, James H. Dewing, by deed bearing date May 11, 1885, [766]*766and of record in Pocahontas county; that the residue of said, one thousand and ninety six acres, being one thousand and eleven acres, lies within and is covered by the said survey or tract of land owned by Nellie L. Maynard as aforesaid; that the said James II. Dewing took possession of said eighty five acres at the same time he took possession of the thirty six thousand acres aforesaid; that the said James H. Dewing, Nellie L. Maynard, and Dickey and Thomas all claimed adverse titles to the said eight thousand acres of land at the date of the forfeiture in 1873 ; that is to say, the said Dewing, or those under whom he holds title, claimed six. thousand nine hundred and four acres of said eight thousand-acre tract, and said Nellie L. Maynard, or those under whom she holds title, claimed the residue of said tract, or one thousand and ninety six acres; that said Nellie L. Maynard holds said land by a deed from S. A. Pugh, etc., to her, dated January 10, 1873, and a deed from James D. Wilson, clerk, to her, dated February 19, 1875; that the said Dewing and the said Nellie L. Maynard, as well as the said Ficlcey and Thomas, titles to the said lands above mentioned, have all passed regularly fom the commonwealth of Virginia and from this State to them respectively; that the said twenty five thousand acres was placed upon the laud-books of this county in the year 1870, and assessed with taxes in the name of Samuel A. Pugh, who then had the title thereto by virtue of a deed from Charles de Selding to him, dated August 1, 1865, and recorded; Charles de Selding got that title from Edward de Selding and others, referring to deed-books, where the same is recorded; also the Surveyor’s Book No. 1., where it appears the same was duly surveyed for Standish Ford under and by virtue of certain treasury-warrents from the commonwealth of Virginia; that the said Dewing derived his title from Pardee and Rich, who got title from J. W. Hcav-ener, administer, etc., citing the deeds, by which the title was conveyed, and referring to the Surveyor’s Book No. 1, page 153, for the survey made for Henry Banks from the commonwealth of Virginia; that the said Nellie L. Maynard, and those under whom she claims and holds title, havé paid all taxes since and including the year 1870 to the present date.

[767]*767Said commissioner, therefore, was of opinion that the said Eickey and Thomas, claimants of the said eight thous- and acres, were debarred from redeeming the same for the reasons before stated, and that the said eight thousand acres of land had long since become vested and merged in the said James I~I. Dewing title and that of the said Nellie L. Maynard, under the provisions of section 3 of article 13 of the constitution of this State ; that the said survey of Dickey and Thomas contains in fact eight thousand seven hundred and fifty eight acres.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 S.E. 318, 37 W. Va. 762, 1893 W. Va. LEXIS 28, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yokum-v-fickey-wva-1893.