Boggs v. Bright

222 F. 714, 1915 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1556
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Virginia
DecidedMarch 13, 1915
StatusPublished

This text of 222 F. 714 (Boggs v. Bright) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boggs v. Bright, 222 F. 714, 1915 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1556 (E.D. Va. 1915).

Opinion

WADDILL, District Judge

(after stating the facts as above). The court will consider the case, upon the pleadings. and proofs arising upon the answer of Mrs. Nancy J. Bright, before reviewing the same in the light of Mrs. Higginbotham’s answer, and will first dispose of the two preliminary questions arising upon exceptions taken during the introduction of the testimony.

[1] First, complainants ask that certain portions of the cross-examination of H. A. Atkinson, a witness called by them, be stricken out, for the reason that the same was not responsive to any matter about which inquiry had been made in chief, was irrelevant to any issue raised by the pleadings, and was purely hearsay, consisting merely of the witness’ opinion as to matters about which he admitted having, no personal knowledge; and, secondly, that certain copies of papers, purporting to be a part of the record of the proceedings in a suit in the circuit court of the county of Henrico, wherein Nancy J. Bright was plaintiff and William M. McGruder’s executor and others were defendants, offered to be filed in this cause, might be excluded.

The court, after much consideration, and with considerable doubt as to the last-named exception, has concluded to overrule both motions. As to the first, it cannot be said that the questions objected to were not permissible on cross-examination of the witness,, though it [717]*717is largely true that the matters sought to be inquired into were not covered by the pleadings, and it is entirely true that Mr. Atkinson’s statement is entitled to little or no weight, being purely hearsay. As to the second motion and exception, much greater doubt exists; but the court feels that, although the record involved only incidentally bears on the subject of this litigation and is between different parties, still its rejection might be prejudicial, and hence allows the same to be introduced, although as a record it seems to be incomplete.

Coming to the merits of the case, complainants insist that the land in question was the property of Capt. McGruder, that he paid for the same with his own money, that Mrs. Bright held title thereto as a mere naked trustee, that she was a dependent sister, for whom he cared and provided through a long life; while the defendant Mrs. Bright claimed the property as her own, averring that she paid full consideration therefor to John T. Jones, and was in no way bound or affected by any relation that existed between Jones and McGruder, whatever that relationship may have been. The determination of this question largely depends upon a correct solution of what the real facts are as respects the contentions of the two parties. On the one hand, it is in effect that McGruder was a mere dependent of his sister, Mrs. Bright; whereas, on the other, it is that she was absolutely dependent on him, without means, and that he cared and provided for her, as he also did for another widowed sister, Mrs. Wrenn, the mother of Mrs. Higginbotham, and her two children, through a long series of years.

[2] The court has given much consideration to this phase of the case, and its clear and deliberate judgment is that the complainants, as respects the occupancy and ownership of Capt. AfcGruder and Mrs. Bright in the property in suit, have established their case. That there is no real foundation in or warrant for the suggestion that during the 35 years William M. McGruder and his sister lived together on this property as their home, that he was a mere dependent, so to speak, of hers, and not the full owner and occupier of the premises, but, on the contrary, she was supported by him, and was the object of his care and solicitude. This record does not sustain the view either that McGruder occupied a subordinate relation to any one during this long period, that he was a mere figurehead, or, as is suggested in taking the testimony, “an overgrown, rollicking, fox hunter”; on the contrary, it shows that he was a man of affairs from his early manhood to the day of his death, that he acquired from his father the ancestral home at Short Pump, Henrico county, Va., a place in those days of no mean importance, that he shortly thereafter entered the Confederate army as captain of the Henrico Cavalry, and when the war was over he returned to his home at Short Pump, and about that time had to care for his two widowed sisters, Mrs. Bright and Mrs. Wrenn —the latter having two children, Fannie, now Mrs. Higginbotham, and another sister, who married Mr. Sinton, the two girls having been born, it appears, in the McGruder home.

In a few years, to wit, in 1870, he was elected treasurer of Henrico county, which was one of the largest and wealthiest counties in the state, and continuously held this position for a period of some 13 [718]*718years, when he retired from public life. About the time of and shortly after becoming treasurer, Capt. McGruder acquired from the heirs ■of the late James A. Fisher two valuable tracts of land on the river road, about eight miles west of the city of Richmond, in these proceedings referred to — the first' tract on the 29th of June, 1869, being on the south side of the road, and opposite to Duval’s; the second tract, of 334 acres (Duval), on the north side of the road, the subject of this litigation, ■ being conveyed by deed of the 13th of September, 1872. During the fall of 1872 McGruder moved from his home at Short Pump down to the newly acquired property, the residence being on the north side of the road, and known as “Sleepy Hollow,” bringing with him his two widowed sisters and two nieces. His brother, Dr. McGruder, also removed to the new home, and the four brothers and sisters, with the two nieces, resided there, with the exception of Mrs. Sinton, who moved away, until they one by one were taken by death; Mrs. Higginbotham being now the survivor, Mrs. Bright having survived all the others. Capt. McGruder never married. He was the owner of the property, and head of the new home; his sister, Mrs. Wrenn, having control and management of the housekeeping, especially during her lifetime, and after that the same was assumed by her daughter, Mrs. Higginbotham, and Capt. McGruder’s sister, Mrs. Bright. Capt. McGruder managed, controlled, and directed the affairs of the place, and conducted the farm on his acquisition of the property, as an entirety, until the sale of the portion on the south side of the road in May, 1906, and the residue until his death in November; 1907. From the expiration of his office as treasurer in 1893, some 20-odd years before his death, he was engaged exclusively in the cultivation of this large and valuable farm. The testimony, seems undisputed that at the time of the purchase of this property Mc-Gruder paid for the same, exchanging 200 acres of the Short Pump farm at the price of $2,000 in part payment of the land on the south side of the river road; that he, as testified to by Robert H. Fisher, one of the vendors of the property to him, caused the same to be conveyed' to Miss Fannie Wrenn, Fisher’s statement.being that: ■

“He (referring to Oapt. McGruder) wanted ttie deeds made to lier. He bad. them made to her.”

There is no suggestion that at this time Mrs. Bright or any one else, other than Capt.

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Bluebook (online)
222 F. 714, 1915 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1556, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boggs-v-bright-vaed-1915.