Yokum v. Stalnaker
Yokum v. Stalnaker
Opinion of the Court
This cause was decided by this Court upon a former appeal, reported in 56 W. Va. 296. A full statement of the cause, and of another cause heard therewith, may there be found. It is unnecessary to repeat .the statement here.
The object* of this suit is the partition of a tract of mountain land, said to contain 2,387 acres. This appeal is by Harriet S. Wamsley and Boston Stalnaker, from a decree of the circuit court of Randolph county denying their motion to continue the cause to enable them to produce evidence in support of their exceptions to the commissioner’s report of the partition of said land, and overruling said exceptions and confirming the partition as reported. After the case was remanded upon the former decision, the surveyor who acted in the former partition, and two other commissioners, were appointed to make this partition. The three thus appointed reported substantially the same partition as the one set aside by this Court.- This partition is peculiar,, to say the least. The appellants Wamsley and Stalnaker,
• Appellants complain because their motion to continue the cause, for the purpose of producing evidence in support of their exceptions, was denied. The report of the commissioners was filed on April 10, 1905. The appellants filed their sixteen several exceptions to the report, dated April 12th following. The term of court commenced on that day. The first order of the court which noticed the filing of the exceptions was entered on April 20th. This order recites that the cause was submitted at a former day of the term, upon the commissioner’s report, upon the motion of appellants for time to offer evidence in support of their exceptions, and upon their amended answer. The court by this order, without passing upon the exceptions, gave the appellants until April 25th at three o’clock i>. m. to offer such evidence. The decree appealed from was entered on April 28th. This decree recites that the appellants had, on April 25th, filed the affidavits of Melville Peck and Boston Stal-naker in support of the motion for a continuance. Some of the grounds of the exceptions are, in effect, as follows: That the commissioners did not lay off the land according to quantity and quality; that the land was laid off in such shape that the shares of appellants are of no value to them; that-the plat of partition is not accurate by several hundred acres; that the parcel of land assigned to appellant Wamsley, when correctly platted according to the courses and distances reported, will overlap and include 20 or 30 acres of land outside of the boundary of the tract sought to be partitioned; that the courses and distances of the parcel of land assigned to appellant Stalnaker as reported, when correctly platted, will cut such parcel into two pieces; and that neither of the parcels assigned to the appellants is a full, fair one-thirteenth of the value of the land sought to be partitioned.
In order to make some of these exceptions avail, the appellants must produce evidence to sustain them. Ransom v. High, 37 W. Va. 838; Henrie v. Johnson, 28 W. Va. 190. The exceptions-named went to the very merits
It is urged that a continuance should not have been, granted because of the pendency of an injunction against the cutting of timber from the land sought to be partitioned, in a cause brought by one of the appellants. We do not think that the pendency of the injunction was sufficient ground for overruling the motion for a continuance, The court, in the cause in which the injunction was granted, had full power to continue the injunction, dissolve it, or modify it in accordance with the principles of equity.
The rights involved in the cause at bar are of importance to the parties. It appears to us, from all the circumstances, that there was plain error in overruling the appellants’ motion for a continuance, and that the time given by the court to produce evidence was unreasonably short. As the motion for a continuance should have been granted, the exceptions to the report should not have been acted upon at the time the decree complained of was entered, and the decree should not have been entered. Our views upon the action of the lower court upon the motion for a continuance make it unnecessary to discuss any other reason advanced for reversing the decree.
.For the reasons stated, the decree complained of is reversed, and the cause remanded, to be further proceeded with according to the principles herein announced and the rules governing courts of equity.
Reversed. Remanded.
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