Battle v. Rock

131 S.E. 344, 144 Va. 1, 1926 Va. LEXIS 225
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 14, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 131 S.E. 344 (Battle v. Rock) 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.

Bluebook
Battle v. Rock, 131 S.E. 344, 144 Va. 1, 1926 Va. LEXIS 225 (Va. 1926).

Opinion

Burks, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

[4]*4William Battle and Patty Battle were married in 1898. She was then about twenty-one years of age and he was seven years older. He took her to his home near Nashville, N. C., on the farm of J. W. Henry who had “near raised” him. In 1904 they desired to buy a small piece of land adjoining that of Henry for the purpose of making a home. They did not have the money to make the purchase. Mr. Henry loaned them, or one of them, it is not clear which, $95.00, without security, with which to make the purchase. They bought twelve acres and ten poles, which was conveyed to William A. Battle in 1904 for the consideration of $100.00. Henry says this money was repaid to him by Patty Battle. In 1910 they bought two acres adjoining the twelve acres at the price of $75.00. Henry advanced the money for this purchase also, and Patty, or Patsy, as she was called, “worked it out.” The deed to this parcel was also made to William A. Battle. They were both hard-working, frugal colored people and stood well in the community. They worked day and night. Patsy took in washing for four or five families in Nashville, N. C. “She washed at night.” She did a lot of day labor besides helping her husband on the farm. “She kept chickens, and marketed them and eggs and other produce from the farm,” and Mr. Henry testified that he had “heard her speak about she wanted to get her little home paid for.” She and her husband kept no separate accounts of their money transactions, and she had implicit confidence in his honesty and integrity. They both testify that they thought the land had been conveyed to them jointly. They were ignorant colored people, and he could neither read nor write. By their frugality and industry they were enabled to greatly improve the land and to erect thereon a dwelling house which in [5]*51920 was valued at $4,000. There was a small store' house in the corner of the yard which she attended as far as she could in the day time, and he at night. At the time the farm was bought Battle was making fifty cents a day and sometimes he got as much as $1.50 a day. He was “farming and working a little.” She was “washing and ironing for the people in town.” It does not appear how much each contributed to the purchase and improvements of the farm, but the fair inference is that they pooled their accumulations and treated the transaction as a kind of partnership, or joint affair, in which each was equally interested. Battle and his wife both testified that they owned the North Carolina property jointly, and she further testified: “I paid one-half of the erection of the house and everything on the property.” In March, 1920, they sold their little farm with the improvements thereon to J. G. Henry, son of J. H. Henry, for $7,000 cash. The purchase money'was paid by cheek. The check could not be found, but the purchaser testified: “I do not remember how the cheek was written, but, to the best of my recollection, it was made to William A. Battle and wife, but I would not swear to that.” Some negotiations took place before this sale was consummated. Sometimes Battle and wife were both present, sometimes only one of them. They were dickering over the price to be paid. The purchaser testified that “William Battle and his wife came to me, I reckon possibly two' weeks before I bought, and told me that he was ready to sell and that there were several bids for it. I asked him the price and he said he was asking ten thousand dollars, and I refused taking it. A few days afterwards he saw me and told me he would take eight thousand, and I still refused, and a few days after-wards he and I met in the road, his wife not present, [6]*6and lie said he would split the difference, and I offered him seven thousand, and he said he was willing provided his wife was willing to it. This was about Thursday before Saturday, the day the agreement was written up.” Afterwards, the purchaser saw Patsy and reported to her his conversation with her husband and she assented to the sale at $7,000. The purchaser further testified as follows:

“Q. When did the next time you saw Patsy Battle in regard to this transaction, and what conversation did you have with her?
“A. Well, I think it was on Saturday morning; I went to see William and her, and I asked her ‘Where is William this morning?’ and she said, ‘he has already gone to town,’ and I said, ‘I come to get him this morning to fix up some papers,’ and she also told me that whenever I paid, not to pay all that money to William, that half of it was her’s and I immediately told her that I did not ame to pay but fifty dollars that day.
“Q. What, if anything, was said by Patsy Battle in this conversation about signing the deed or any condition which must be complied with before she would sign the deed?
“A. She told me that half the money was her’s. And the day we came out here to pay in full, she told William, in my presence, that morning that ‘now we are selling this place with the understanding that I must get my money out of it, that half the money belongs to me.’
“Q. I understand, Mr. Henry, that this conversation which you heard between William Battle and his wife, Patsy Battle, was on the day that the deed was executed and delivered to you?
“A. Yes.
[7]*7“Q. Did you purchase the land for the price of seven thousand dollars?
“A. Yes.
“Q. Do you recall how this money was paid out and to whom it was paid?
“A. The first money that was paid was on Saturday, the day I was speaking of. The remainder of the seven thousand dollars, if I am not mistaken, it was .on March 7th, but I would not swear to the date.
“Q. Do you remember how you paid the money and to whom?
“A. If I am not mistaken, you or Mr. Austin wrote the deed and I wrote the check and signed it. I would not swear to how it was written.
“Q. Was William Battle and his wife both present at the time one transaction was closed?
“A. Yes.
“Q. How long, in your opinion, was it that you heard Patsy Battle tell her husband that she was selling the land only on condition that she get half the money, before the transaction was closed and the money paid over?
“A. To the best of my recollection, Mr. Davenport, the Saturday morning I came out here and paid this; the evening before I saw them together and I told William that both of us would come to Nashville the next day and fix up the papers so that neither one could fly the track, and Patsy told William that whenever I paid for the land that she was to have her half of the money out of it. She laughed and told me not to pay all of this money to William but to pay part of it to her, and I told her that the money would be paid by check, and it was. I do not remember how the check was written, but to the best of my recollection it was made to William A. Battle and wife, but I would not swear to that.”

[8]*8The $7,000 received for the land was deposited to the credit of William A. Battle in the Bank of Nashville, N. C., and was drawn out by cheeks of William A.. Battle, and by two cashier’s cheeks in favor of William A. Battle, one for $3,000 and the other for $2,000.

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Bluebook (online)
131 S.E. 344, 144 Va. 1, 1926 Va. LEXIS 225, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/battle-v-rock-va-1926.