Court Opinion

ID: 8178635
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 22:24:42.320461+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:40:05.088809
License: Public Domain

POEEENBARGER, JUDGE :
The decree appealed from requires specific performance of the contract construed by this court in Freeman v. Carnegie Natural Gas Co., 74 W. Va. 83, but it was pronounced in a new suit the parties to which are not identical with those of the cause to which reference has just been made. The reported decision, however, sets forth the contract, the situation of the parties and many of the facts material to the disposition of this cause.
The parlies defendant to this bill are Lewis A. Swiger, husband of Rachel J. Swiger, the, deceased owner of the land and vendor of the oil and gas interests in controversy, and her seven children and heirs at law. The Carnegie Natural Gas Co. and Sarah M. Cumberledge, parties to the former suit, are omitted. Five of the children are infants and are represented by a guardian ad litem. The administrator of Rachel J. Swiger was not made a party.
As the sufficiency of the bill is challenged in argument here, only on the ground of failure to make the administrator and the Carnegie Natural Gas Co., assignee of the lease' on the land, parties, acquiescence in its sufficiency in all other respects may be assumed. It alleges full and strict compliance with all the conditions of the contract, including payment of $200.00 to Lewis A. Swiger, on account of the first and only gas well drilled on the land, April 1, 1907, and within ninety days after the tubing and testing thereof, the well having been completed January 7, 1907.
Admitting the well settled doctrine that the personal representative of a deceased vendor is a necessary party to a bill for specific performance of the contract, Hill v. Proctor, 10 W. Va. 59; Steenrod v. W. P. & B. B. R. Co., 27 W. Va. 1; Hinchman v. Ballard, 7 W. Va. 152, counsel for the appel-lee, by way of avoidance of the effect thereof, treats the husband and wife as joint obligees at the date of the contract and invokes the legal proposition, that, in such case, the obligor may discharge himself by payment in full to either of the joint obligees. Hatfield v. Cabell County Court, 75 W. Va. 595; Allen v. South Penn Oil Co., 72 W. Va. 155; Bish. Con., sec,. 875; 1 Parsons Con., 271; C. J. 537. If the obligation to *427pay tbe $200.00 is referable in point of time, to the date of contract, and is analogous to rentals stipulated for in- an oil and gas lease executed by a husband and wife, on land owned by only one of them, the money was payable to them jointly and the vendee could discharge himself by payment to either of them. Allen v. South Penn Oil Co., 72 W. Va. 155; Sandusky v. Oil Co., 63 W. Va. 260; Coffman v. Hope Natural Gas Co., 74 W. Va. 57. The contract bears on its face evidence of intent to make the money payable to both husband and wife. It recites an agreement to make the first payment to them and acknowledges receipt of the money, and is silent as to the payees of the amounts to be subsequently paid. Presumptively, the parties to whom the first payment was made were intended. If, on the other hand, it is to be regarded as having arisen at the date of payment, the vendee having the option to pay or not and the consequence of non-payment being forfeiture of his title, the forfeited title going to the husband and heirs, the right to the money would not have accrued to Rachel J. Swiger in her life time, nor to her administrator after her death. It was, in that case, purchase money of the life estate of the husband and the estate-in remainder of the heirs, and, therefore, payable to them. Since it would not have been payable to the administrator, in either event, he is not a necessary-party.
As the bill does not seek an accounting for oil or gas taken from the land, or to be taken therefrom in the future, there is manifestly no occasion for the presence of the lessee. It is not interested in the cause of action set up in the bill. After settlement of the question of title, there may be no occasion for any litigation with it, and the court cannot assume necessity therefor.
The time of payment of the $200.00 having been proved only by the testimony of the plaintiff, objection to his competency as a witness to prove the fact was interposed under the claim that it was a personal transaction between him and a deceased person. It was obviously not a transaction with Rachel J. Swiger at all, for the bill alleges she died in 1906 and the answer, denying this, avers she died in 1904. Compensation for the well was paid to Lewis A. Swiger, one of *428the parties to this suit and is proved, except as to date, by his receipt.
Failure to require a defeasance clause in the deeds of conveyance ordered to be executed, accordant with the stipulation in the contract for forfeiture of the title for failure to pay $200.00 for each well that shall be drilled on the land, within ninety days after the tubing and testing thereof, is an 'error necessitating a modification of the decree. This seems to have been the result of inadvertence, since the decree only impliedly negatives the requirement and the appellee admits the error. Disclaimer of right to an unconditional deed here argues lack of claim thereof in the court below and of intent to make such claim, or take a decree giving such right. If the appellants had protested against the form of the decree in the court below, no doubt it would have been readily corrected in this respect. Modified so as to correct the error noted, the decree wall be affirmed and costs in this court awarded to the appellees, agreeably to the principle enunciated in Hope Nat. Gas. Co. v. Shriver, 75 W. Va. 401; Rowan v. Tracy, 74 W. Va. 649; Teter v. Teter, 65 W. Va. 167; and Frye v. Miley, 54 W. Va. 324.
The cause will be remanded for further proceedings.

Modified, affirmed and remanded.