Bailey v. Clark

20 Va. Cir. 508, 1963 Va. Cir. LEXIS 10
CourtRichmond City Circuit Court
DecidedDecember 27, 1963
StatusPublished

This text of 20 Va. Cir. 508 (Bailey v. Clark) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Richmond City Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bailey v. Clark, 20 Va. Cir. 508, 1963 Va. Cir. LEXIS 10 (Va. Super. Ct. 1963).

Opinion

By JUDGE ALEX H. SANDS, JR.

This case involves two primary issues, (1) the nature of the alley in question, and (2) whether the defendants have acquired title thereto by adverse possession.

Findings of Fact

The evidence in the case, heard ore tenus, establishes to the satisfaction of the Court the following facts pertinent to the issues under consideration:

(1) That the alley in question was carved out of the original tract (comprised of the land now designated as Lots 600 through 608 fronting on Main Street and Nos. 5 and 7 fronting on 6th Street, all contiguous to the 12-foot alley in question) by deed from Fleming Jones and Mary S. James to Hugh W. Fry in 1860. (See Plaintiff’s Exhibit # 1.

[509]*509(2) That at the time the original tract was partitioned into four parcels and conveyed from Price and Hall to Meredith in 1873, the alley was designated as "an alley in common to the whole property known as the Arlington property" (comprising the present Lots 600 through 608 on Main Street and Nos. 5 and 7 N. 6th Street).

(3) That at the time at which John D. Chapin and Thomas W. Clark acquired No. 7 North 6th Street, the alley in question was a private alley in common to No. 7 North 6th Street and Lots 606 and 608, the interest of the then owners of No. 7 North 6th Street and Nos., 606 and 608 Main Street being the right of use thereof as tenants in common.

(4) That at the time of acquisition by the defendant and John D. Chapin of No. 7 North 6th Street on July 9, 1920, the defendant and said Clark painted (and subsequently posted) upon the north wall of No. 7 North 6th Street and upon the south side of the wall on the north side of the alley signs notifying the public that the alley was private property, used for private parking and warning "unauthorized cars" to "keep out," and that these or comparable signs have been maintained by defendant continuously until the present time.

(5) That defendant acquired the sole interest in No. 7 North 6th Street from his deceased partner’s estate on June 6, 1947, and that at all times since the acquisition of No. 7 North 6th Street by defendant and his partner in 1920, defendant and employees of his company have been using the alley in question for the parking of vehicles during business hours and that defendant has prevented the use by members of the public other than his co-tenants (owners of Nos. 606 and 608 Main Street) of the alley during business hours and has attempted to assert his right of exclusive use of the alley even against one co-tenant.

(6) That his efforts to assert exclusive right of user against his co-tenants has not been successful and that while shortly after the witness Urbach’s acquisition of 608 Main Street in 1947, defendant attempted to withhold the right of use of the alley from Urbach, but the latter refused recognition of such right and continued to use the alley over defendant’s objection.

[510]*510(7) That upon occasion, though infrequently, both complainant and the Urbach brothers have used the alley in question for parking, and both have used it frequently as a means of ingress and egress to and from the rear of their respective properties, the Urbachs since acquisition of 608 and complainant since acquisition of 606.

(8) That such use as was made of the alley by complainant and the Urbachs was not, as defendant contends, by virtue of permission by him granted, but rather in open reliance upon their respective rights thereto as tenants in common with the defendant.

Conclusions of Law

(a) Nature of Interest in Alley

Under any view which be taken of the evidence in this case, the defendant, Clark, and his partner, Chapin, acquired upon the purchase of No. 7 an interest in the alley along with the owners of Nos. 606 and 608 East Main Street and with such owners became co-tenants (here tenants in common) as to the rights of user of the alley. Each successive owner of No. 7 North 6th Street and Nos. 606 and 608 Main in the chain of title acquired what amounted to a fee in that portion of the alley which abutted his parcel subject to the right, in common with other abutting land owners, of ingress and egress of each such owner to and from his respective parcel. Cogeto v. Dart, 183 Va. 182 (1944). If the language of the deed of 1873 from Price and Hall to Meredith that the alley was "an alley in common to the whole property" meant what it said, each lot acquired thereby a right of user of the alley which was a right appurtenant to such lot and which passed to each subsequent purchaser of such lot. French v. Williams, 82 Va. 462 (1886).

But even though the language of the deed were completely disregarded, the subsequent conveyances which described No. 7 North 6th Street and Nos. 606 and 608 East Main Street as adjacent to the alley, under the facts of this case, would be sufficient to give such abutting owner rights of user as co-tenants in the alley which had been carved out of the original tract owned by a common grantor. Gish v. Roanoke, 119 Va. 519 (1916); Walters v. Smith, [511]*511186 Va. 159 (1947). Under any view, therefore, which may be taken, complainant and defendant were and are co-tenants as to the right of user of the alley unless, as defendant contends, he has acquired title thereto or the exclusive right of user through adverse possession.

(b) Issue of Adverse Possession

Defendant and complainant’s predecessors in the chain of title having been established to have been co-tenants as to the right of user of the alley, the applicable Virginia law appears rather plain. As to co-tenants and those claiming in priority, the entry and possession of one is ordinarily deemed the entry and possession of all, Buchanan v. King, 63 Va. (22 Gratt.) 414 (1872), and this presumption prevails in favor of all until some notorious act of ouster or adversary possession is brought home to the knowledge of the others and until such time as there is notice, actual or constructive, that the possession is hostile, it will be deemed amicable even though the co-tenants’ possession may have been wholly adversary. Stonestreet v. Doyle, 75 Va. 356 (1881); Shenandoah, etc., Bk. v. Burner, 166 Va. 590 (1936). And while it is true that a co-tenant may enter adversely and claim in severalty, Va. Coal and Iron Co. v. Richmond Coal Corp., 128 Va. 258 (1920), and while it is further true that the intention to hold the land (or to exercise the interest) adversely to other co-tenants may be shown by acts of the co-tenant asserting adverse possession, Shenandoah Mat. Bk. v. Burner, supra, yet the possession or use of one co-tenant is prima facie the possession or the use of the other co-tenant or co-tenants and the possession or use by one is never adverse to the title or right of user of the others unless there be proved an actual ouster or disseisin, or some other act amounting to total denial of the others’ rights as co-tenants. Fry, et al. v. Payne, et al., 82 Va. 759 (1887). The elements necessary for establishment of rights under adverse possession by one co-tenant against another are thus clearly set forth in Braxton v. Phipps, 183 Va. 771, at pages 773-774 (1945):

Each and every tenant in common is entitled to an undivided portion of the whole, hence [512]

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Related

Stonestreet v. Doyle
75 Va. 356 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1881)
French v. Williams
4 S.E. 591 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1886)
Fry v. Payne
1 S.E. 197 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1887)
Gish v. City of Roanoke
89 S.E. 970 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1916)
Virginia Coal & Iron Co. v. Richmond & Clinchfield Coal Corp.
104 S.E. 805 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1920)
Shenandoah National Bank v. Burner
186 S.E. 92 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1936)
Randall v. Commonwealth
31 S.E.2d 571 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1944)
Braxton v. Phipps
33 S.E.2d 650 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1945)
Walters v. Smith
41 S.E.2d 617 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1947)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 Va. Cir. 508, 1963 Va. Cir. LEXIS 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bailey-v-clark-vaccrichcity-1963.