Benn v. Hatcher

81 Va. 25, 1885 Va. LEXIS 6
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedApril 30, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 81 Va. 25 (Benn v. Hatcher) 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
Benn v. Hatcher, 81 Va. 25, 1885 Va. LEXIS 6 (Va. 1885).

Opinion

Lewis, P.

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was an action of ejectment in the circuit court of Goochland county. The case is as follows: By deed bearing date August 19, 1851, the widow and the children and devisees of Josiah Hatcher, deceased, conveyed to John T. Sublett a certain tract of land, situate in the said county, “reserving to the parties of the first part three-fourths of an acre as a burying-ground for the family and their descendants.” The lot of ground thus excepted is the subject of this controversy. In the following year Sublett and wife conveyed the land to David A. and Frank J. Hatcher, two of the nine grantors in the first mentioned deed, and by intermediate conveyances it is now owned by the plaintiff in error, who was the defendant in the court below. In none of these subsequent conveyances, how[28]*28ever, is there any reservation of the burying-ground, or any reference to the exception in the deed of August 19, 1851.

At the trial the defendant demurred to the evidence, and thereupon the jury returned a verdict for the plaintiffs, subject to the opinion of the court on the demurrer, and assessed their damage at the sum of $500. -Judgment was rendered in accordance with the verdict, and thereupon the defendant was allowed a writ of error and supersedeas.

The first objection urged by the latter is that the exception in the deed to Sublett is void for uncertainty. But this objection is not well founded. It is well settled that in such case the uncertainty may bu cured by the election of the grantor, which, however, must be made within a reasonable time.

In Dygert v. Matthews, 11 Wend. 35, a deed was made conveying fifty acres of land, “reserving out of the said parcel of land so much as is necessary for the use of a grist-mill,” etc. The court said that strictly an exception of a part of the thing granted is void, but an incident to the grant may be reserved. Therefore “this exception, as such, assuming it to be an attempt to reserve out of the grant one acre of land, is void; but construing it as a reservation of a mill site, which is the obvious intent of it, it is valid, but inoperative until used for the purposes reserved.” And further it said: “Until the right is exercised and the grist-mill built, it cannot be ascertained with certainty what quantity of land will be necessary for that purpose, nor the precise location.”

Nor is there anything at variance with what is here said in the decision of this court in Butcher v. Creel’s heirs, 9 Gratt. 201, to which counsel have referred. In that case, it is true, the exception relied on was held inoperative, but not solely on the ground that the land intended to be excepted was not sufficiently described in the deed; for the court went on to say that if it might be identified by entry and taking possession, yet, [29]*29as no such entry had been made, the action could not be maintained.

In the present case there is no doubt as to the precise three-fourths of an acre intended to be excepted. The evidence shows that long prior to the death of Josiah Hatcher, it had been set apart as a family burying-ground; that the whole, in course of time, became covered with cedars, bushes and other natural growth of the soil; that it was not more than seventy-five yards distant from the defendant’s dwelling-house, and that its boundaries were plainly defined and unmistakable. It also appears that it was in the uninterrupted possession of the family for the purpose for which it had been set apart, until the defendant refused to permit the body of a deceased member of the family to be buried there, in the summer of 1882, a short time prior to the institution of the present suit. And this testimony was properly admitted as explanatory of the deed, and to give effect to the intention of the parties. 1 Greenl. on Ev. section 275 et seq.; Altman v. McBride, 4 Strob. 208; Worthington v. Hylyer, 4 Mass. 196; Wiley v. Sirdorous, 41 Iowa, 224.

This being so, the plaintiffs contend that the lot in question was dedicated to the use expressed in the deed, and that this quality adhered to it, and was not affected by any subsequent alienation. In its technical legal sense dedication is the appropriation of land for a public use, as for a highway, a common, or the like, but may be effectual, it seems, when made to a pious or charitable use, though not distinctively a a public one. „ It is not necessary that it should be by deed or in writing; it may be by act in pais; nor is it necessary that the fee should (pass; for dedication has respect to the possession, and not the permanent estate. And where property is thus set apart an estoppel arises which precludes the owner from revoking the dedication; for the law considers that it would be in violation of good faith, and in some instances even sacrilegious, [30]*30to reclaim at pleasure property which has been devoted to the use of the public, or in furtherance of some charitable or pious object. Beatty v. Kurtz, 2 Pet. 566; Cincinnati v. White’s Lessee, 6 Ld. 431; Hunter v. Trustees of Sandy Hill, 6 Hill (N. Y.), 407; 3 Washburn on Real Property, marg. p. 459.

The present case stands on even higher ground. It stands on the solemn agreement of the parties themselves, that the lot in question should not only be excepted out of the deed to Sublett, but that it should be devoted, in the future, as it had been in the past, to the use of the family as a place of burial for its dead. And the appropriation thus made was not for the separate use of the individuals respectively, who composed the family at the time, but for the family as a whole, and could not he relinquished or assigned, in whole or in part, except by the concurrent act of all for whose benefit it was intended. It follows, therefore, that ho title to the premises in controversy was acquired by any of the conveyances subsequent to the deed to Sublett. Pearson v. Hartman, 100 Penn. St., 84; Pierce v. Spafford, 53 Vt. 394.

It is next insisted by the defendant that the verdict ought to have been set aside on the ground of variance between the declaration and the verdict in respect to the description of the premises. In the declaration the land is described as lying on the north side of the Whitehall road, while in the verdict it is described as lying .on the south side of that road. But in all other essential particulars the description in the declaration is minutely followed in the verdict, and we must, therefore, presume that the description in the declaration is a mistaken one, and that the plaintiffs have recovered the land described therein, though by a different and corrected description. Koiner v. Rankin's heirs, 11 Gratt. 420.

At the trial both the plaintiffs and the defendant requested certain instructions to be given to the jury; but the court [31]

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Bluebook (online)
81 Va. 25, 1885 Va. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/benn-v-hatcher-va-1885.