Beattie v. Wilkinson

36 F. 646, 1888 U.S. App. LEXIS 2662
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Virginia
DecidedOctober 29, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 36 F. 646 (Beattie v. Wilkinson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beattie v. Wilkinson, 36 F. 646, 1888 U.S. App. LEXIS 2662 (circtwdva 1888).

Opinion

Paul, J.

This suit is brought by the plaintiff for the partition and the assignment of an interest claimed by her in certain lands in Smyth county, Va. The cause presents the following state of facts: Joseph Scott, of Smyth county, died in the year 1842, intestate, and seized of considerable real estate. He left a widow, Ann Scott, and six children, his heirs at law, viz., William Scott; John H. Scott; Elizabeth, who intermarried with James Porter; Rachel, who intermarried with Hiram Greever; Isabella, who intermarried with James Higginbotham; and Ann, the plaintiff in this suit, who intermarried during the life-time of her father, the said Joseph Scott, with James C. Beattie, now deceased. In 1843 William Scott purchased the interest of James Porter and wife in the said real estate of Joseph Scott, deceased. In the same year John H. Scott purchased the interest of Greever and wife in said lands, and at ¿'bankrupt sale bought the life-estate of James C. Beattie in'the interest of his wife, the plaintiff here. And in December, 1843, the plaintiff [647]*647sold to the said John H. Scott, at the price of $650 cash, and the further consideration that the said John H. Scott should pay her proportion of any debts that should come against the estate of Joseph Scott, deceased, her interest in said lands, for which she executed and acknowledged a deed, but in which deed her husband, James C. Beattie, did not join; he being at that time a non-resident of the state of Virginia. This deed was not put on record. In July, 1847, said John H. Scott brought a chancery suit in the circuit court of Smyth county for a partition of the lands of said Joseph Scott, deceased. To this suit he made the widow of Joseph Scott, deceased, and all other parties in interest, including the said James C. Beattie and his wife, the plaintiff in this suit, parties defendant. The said James C. Beattie and -wife being non-residents, were proceeded against by order of publication in the manner provided by the statute of Virginia in case of non-resident defendants. In his bill the said John H. Scott claimed as his interest in said lands his own share and the interests of Greever and wife and of Beattie and wife, and filed his deeds therefor as exhibits with his bill. At the October term, 1847, a decree was entered in said cause appointing commissioners to make partition of said lands, directing them to assign dower to the widow of said Joseph Scott, deceased, and directing that in the assignment of the residue of said lands they should “allot to John H. Scott the interests of Hiram A. Greever and wife and James C. Beattie and wife, which has been conveyed to him by deeds.” In January, 1848, the commissioners made their report to the court, in W'hich they assigned the interests of Greever and wife and of Beattie and wife to John H. Scott, in addition to his own interest. At the May term, 1848, of the circuit court of Smyth county, the report of the commissioners was affirmed, and the decree of affirmation directed the execution of mutual deeds of conveyance by Higginbotham and wife and John H. Scott and Susannah Scott, one of the heirs of William Scott, deceased, and appointed P. S. Buchanan a commissioner, to make a conveyance on behalf of the infant children and heirs of William Scott, deceased, which he did. The record fails to show whether the other deeds of mutual conveyance were made or not. The suit in Smyth county circuit court, though ordered to be stricken from the docket by the decree at May term, 1848, appears to have remained on the docket until the August term, 1866. The children, heirs at law of Joseph Scott, deceased, are all dead, except the plaintiff. The land assigned to John H. Scott by the decree of the circuit court of Smyth county, is now owned by Alexander Richardson, E. M. James, and others, who claim to be purchasers for value. The plaintiff in this suit asks to have assigned to her one-third of the land allotted and assigned to John H. Scott by the decree and proceedings of the circuit court of Smyth county.

The plaintiff, in support of her right to recover one-third of the land assigned to John H. Scott-in the suit in Smyth county, being one-sixth interest in the estate of her father, Joseph Scott, deceased, relies on the following grounds: First, that she and her said husband, James C. Beat-tie, were not made parties defendant to said partition suit in Smyth [648]*648county, and that she is not bound by the decrees and proceedings of that suit; and, second, that if she and her husband were made parties, that the deed which she executed to John H. Scott, conveying her interest in her father’s estate, was null and void, because her husband failed to join in the execution of the deed, and because the same was not recorded as required by the statute of Virginia, prescribing how a deed to land by a married woman shah be executed, (Code Va. 1849, §§ 4, 5;) that her deed to John H. Scott being void, no title passed to him by said deed, nor could any pass to-him under the decrees and proceedings of the chancery suit for partition in the circuit court of Smyth county.

It is insisted on the part of the defendants that the right of the plaintiff to bring this suit is barred by the statute of limitations of entry on, or action to recover, land. Chapter 146, §§ 1, 4, 5, Code Va. 1878. Section 1 provides that “no person shall make an entry on, or bring an action to recover any, land * * * but within ten years next after the time at which the right to make such entry or bring such action shall have first accrued to himself, or to some person through whom he claims.” Section 4 provides:

“If at the time at which the right of any person to make entry or to bring an action to recover land shall have first accrued, such person was an infant, married woman, or insane, then such person, or the person claiming through him, may, notwithstanding the said period mentioned in the first section shall have expired, make an entry on and bring an action to recover such land within ten years next after the time at which the person to whom such right shall have first accrued as aforesaid'shall have ceased to be under such disability as existed when the same so accrued, or shall have died, whichever shall first have happened.”

Section 5 provides:

“The preceding section is subject to these provisions: That no such entry or action shall be made or brought by any person, who, at the time at which his right to make or bring the same shall have first accrued, shall be under any such disability, or by any person claiming through him, but within thirty years next after the time at which such right shall have first accrued, although the person under disability at such time may have remained under the same during the whole of such thirty years, or although the term often years from the period at which he shall have ceased to be under any such disability, or have died, shall not have expired; and when any person shall be under any such disability at tlie time at which his right to make an entry or bring an action shall have first accrued, dnd shall depart this life without having ceased to be under any such disability, no time to make an entry or to bring an action beyond the time prescribed in the first section next after the right of such person shall have first accrued, or the ten years next after the period of his death, shall be allowed by the reason of the disability of any other person.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
36 F. 646, 1888 U.S. App. LEXIS 2662, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beattie-v-wilkinson-circtwdva-1888.