Baker v. Seekright
This text of 1 Va. 177 (Baker v. Seekright) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
This was an ejectment, brought in the District Court, by the appellee against the appellant. The declaration claimed the lands by the ordinary description. A mesne deed of conveyance under which the plaintiff claimed, called for the line in dispute by course and distance only. At the trial, the lessor of the plaintiff offered evidence, that a particular line represented on a plat in the cause, was well marked, and was the line of the plaintiff’s land. To the admission of this the defendant objected, and prayed the opinion of the Court, whether, as the call of the deed was for course and distance, without any other boundary, natural or artificial, parol evidence should be admitted to prove any marked trees, not in the course or termination of that line as called for in that deed, to be the true line called for or intended in the aforesaid deed. The Court was of opinion, that' such evidence was admissible. To this opinion an exception was taken. There was a verdict for the plaintiff for the lines from. H. to A. thence to B. thence to A. and from thence to H. and for one penny damage. The judgment was for the plaintiff for his term, yet to come, of and in the lines aforesaid, and the penny damage. From which judgment an appeal was taken to this Court.
*Botts, for the appellant, made the following points : 1st. That the description of a line by words of plain unequivocal import in a deed of mesne conveyance, cannot be contradicted by oral evidence.
2d. That the grantee, under such mesne conveyance, claiming under the same exclusively, must be limited, in every respect, by the terms of the deed creating that claim.
3d. That such grantee must locate his title according to the description of the lines made out in the deed giving birth to such title, and not according to oral proof of other lines inconsistent therewith.
4th. That as a man cannot obtain title to land by oral proof, that the lines bounding the same are his, without a deed a fortiori, he cannot obtain title by oral proof of lines, inconsistent with the deed under which he claims them.
Sth. That a verdict and judgment for lines from letter to letter, without describing on what these letters are — whether in a plat, report, or any thing else — and when these letters could not be found in the woods by the sheriff, are variant from the declaration and issue, insensible, uncertain and void.
6th. That the term having expired
Edmund J. Dee and Call, for the appellee, relied on the opinion of Judge Pendleton in Shaw v. Clements,
Wednesday, November 17. By the whole Court, (absent Judge Fleming,) the judgment of the District Court was affirmed.
As to amending-the term Zin ejectment, see 4 Burr. 2447; Doe v. Pilkington, 2 W. Black. Rep. 940; Roe, ex dem. Lee v. Ellis, Cowp. 341; Vicars v. Haydon.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
1 Va. 177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baker-v-seekright-va-1806.