Wallace v. McClung
Opinion of the Court
(after stating tbe facts). It is first objected by the plaintiffs, as a ground of error in the court below, that the case was improperly removed from the state to the federal court, for the alleged reason that the petition for removal was made too late. The petition was filed in the federal court on the
We come, therefore, to consider whether it was competent for the judge of the circuit court to direct a verdict for the defendants without a trial of the facts in issue respecting the validity of one or the other line between the Welch and Bowen tracts, — the plaintiffs’ line, Z to N, or the defendants' line, S to M, laid down on the verdict map. The judge of the circuit court took this question of fact from the jury on a technicality. ITis ruling in that respect was based upon the idea that, technically, the plaintiffs were es-topped from recovering in this action — First, by a recital in their deed conveying the 162 acres of land to Gideon Brown; and second, by the proceedings in the suit against them in the circuit court of Greenbrier county by William and Joseph Brown, in which their title to the 1,000 acres of land devised to Mrs. Wallace by James H. Bowen was adjudged defective, except as to 162 acres of the tract lying below the line, S to M, and conveyed, as just stated, to Gideon Brown by deed.' This grants 162 acres, more or less, and adds:
“Being all the land, ascertained by the surveys, and plats filed in the chancery cause of William and Joseph Brown v. Washington Wallace and others, lately pending in the circuit court of said county of Greenbrier, and devised to said Miriam Wallace by her father, James II. Bowen, of the 1.000 acres conveyed by said Washington and Miriam Wallace to said William and Joseph Brown, by deed dated on the 17th day of May, 1881, and recorded, etc., after deducting from said 3.000 acres the lands covered by the Welch title, which was owned by said Gideon Brown.”
The intention of every deed must be obvious, and the language expressing that intention must be precise, clear, and unambiguous. There can be no estoppel if these qualities are wanting in the instrument claimed to effect it. The language of the deed of the Wallaces to Gideon Brown is wanting in both respects. The sentence “being all the land ascertained by the surveys and plats filed in the chancery cause,” etc., “and devised to Miriam Wallace,” etc., omits to define what was ascertained by the surveys, and is followed by references to exhibits filed in court proceedings, to deeds, to surveys and maps, all requiring close and intelligent examination, study, and research. To hold a married woman, un
The case is the same as to the suit in the state court. The decree in that suit had not been fully obeyed by the complainants who brought it. They had, indeed, executed a deed of reconveyance to Mrs. Wallace, but certain persons holding from them still held possession. The suit here is brought by the Wallaces against those persons to recover the possession decreed them by the state court. Whatever may-be the ultimate rights of parties, wherever may lie the final title to the land, yet certainly, as to the purposes of this suit of the Wallaces for possession under a decree in another suit directing these defendants to restore possession to them, the proceedings in the other suit, which decreed such possession, cannot be held to estop them from suing for the possession which itself decreed. As to this matter of possession, under the decree in the other suit, if there be estoppel at all, it is against the defendants.
If the decree of the state court had been obeyed in full, the Wal-laces would have entered into possession of the land in suit, and the defendants here would have been put to their suit to recover possession on the strength of their own right. The complicated question of title would have been examined by a jury, and would have been settled by its verdict. The proceedings in the case at bal-are quite unsatisfactory in respect to the title of the land in controversy. The trial of a contention over rival and conflicting boundary lines has not been by a jury. The very right of this case should have been so tried. We are of opinion that the court below erred in holding that the recital in the deed of the
Reference
- Full Case Name
- WALLACE et ux. v. McCLUNG
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- Published