Bolling v. Teel

76 Va. 487, 1882 Va. LEXIS 53
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJuly 13, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 76 Va. 487 (Bolling v. Teel) 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
Bolling v. Teel, 76 Va. 487, 1882 Va. LEXIS 53 (Va. 1882).

Opinion

Staples, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action of ejectment brought in the circuit court of Floyd county. The parties having dispensed with a jury, the whole matter of law and evidence was referred to the court.

Upon the trial it appeared that in the year 1823 a suit was instituted in the county court of Franklin for the purpose of partitioning the real estate of John Ferguson, deceased, among his heirs, of whom Amelia, the wife of Mankin Teel, was one. The commissioners, appointed by the court to make the partition, reported that “ they had allotted to Mankin Teel', legatee, a tract of 382 acres, lying in Montgomery county,” and this report was afterwards confirmed by the. court. It would seem, however, that no deeds [490]*490of conveyance were executed by any of the parties, nor were any directed or required under the decree of the court. Mankin Teel and wife held possession of the three hundred and eighty-two acre tract until the sale and conveyance, hereafter to be more particularly mentioned.

As has been already stated, the commissioners charged with making the partition allotted the land to Mankin Teel, instead of his wife, whose inheritance it was. This was probably due to the ignorance of the commissioners, and the confirmation of this report was no doubt the result of inadvertence on the part of the court.

It is now claimed that the effect of the decree was to clothe Mankin Teel with the legal title to the land, to the exclusion of his wife, and however erroneous it may be, that decree cannot be successfully assailed in any collateral proceeding. It is a very well settled doctrine of courts of equity that a decree of partition does not of itself operate as a conveyance of the title. Such a decree does not purport to invest the parties with title to their several allotments. Hence it is that the court, in making partition, usually requires that mutual conveyances shall be executed. If any of the parties are laboring- under disability, the proper deed is made by a commissioner of the court on their behalf, and such deed under our statute has the same effect in passing the title as if the parties had been competent and had actually executed the same. See 2 Minor’s Ins. 424; 2 Daniel’s Ch. Practice, 1061, 1161; 1 Barton Ch. Prac. 293-4; Freeman on Cotenancy and Partition, § 427.

The case of Hurt v. Jones and Wife, 1 Matthews, 341, cited by counsel, is not at all inconsistent with this view. In ■ the opinion delivered by Judge Burks, it is conceded throughout that Hurt, the purchaser, did not acquire under the decree of the court the legal title to his wife’s interest in the estate, but a mere equitable right which was sufficient for his protection in an equitable forum, to which [491]*491the parties complaining had applied for .the adjudication of their rights. That case is in the line of the authorities which hold that a decree for a partition in equity is not of itself sufficient to pass the legal title, but at best confers a mere equitable right. The 15th section of chapter 159, Code of 1873, does not alter this rule of the chancery courts. The object of that section was simply to require the registration of decrees of partition or for the assignment of dower, precisely as is required the registration of other muniments of title.

In neither case does the registration give any new effect or impart any additional force to the decree, deed, or assignment. Its efficacy in passing the title depends upon considerations outside the recording acts; the sole purpose and effect of the registration being to give notice of the instrument or writing when duly recorded, whether the estate transferred be legal or equitable.

To give the decree of partition in this particular case, the construction insisted upon by the defendant’s counsel would be to extend its operation and effect farther than is warranted by any just rule of interpretation. In all cases, then, where at common law and under our statutes a voluntary partition in pais can only be made by deed (as in case of joint tenants), it would seem that a mere decree of partition will not of itself operate as a conveyance of the legal title to the parties of their several allotments. But in such cases there ought to be mutual conveyances made to pass the legal title.

Looking at the bill and proceedings in the county court, we see that the object was a partition of the real estate of John Ferguson among his heirs, of whom Mrs. Teel was one, and that her husband had no sort of interest in any part of this estate, except as tenant by the curtesy of such portion as should be allotted to his wife. It cannot be supposed that either the commissioners, or the county [492]*492court, intended to confer upon the husband a title in fee to his wife’s inheritance. What they meant, no doubt, was that the husband should hold the land in right of his wife—that is to say, as tenant by the curtesy—and after his death the inheritance should revert to her as its proper owner. This is the just interpretation of the decree, as read by the bill, the orders, and other proceedings in the county court.

It has been said, however, that if Mankin Teel acquired no title under the decree of the county court, neither did Mrs. Teel; that no conveyances having been executed by her coparceners, Mrs. Teel had the legal title only to one-ninth of the 382-acre tract, and this one-ninth is all her children can recover in the action of ejectment. The answer to this is, that Mankin Teel had no title to or interest in any. part of John Ferguson’s estate, except as tenant by the curtesy of the part which might be allotted to his wife, and which he might reduce into actual possession. Although entitled to call for a partition in right of his wife, he was not a coparcener of the estate.

His title as tenant by the curtesy was derived from and through his wife. An allotment by commissioners and a decree of confirmation might therefore be a sufficient assignment of her share or portion, and yet be ineffectual to vest him with any title beyond that of tenant by the curtesy. Mrs. Teel was a coparcener, and at common law coparceners could make partition even by parol.

Partition (says a learned author) between coparceners, neither amounts to nor requires an actual conveyance. It is less than a grant. Its operation is not to pass the land by a fresh investiture of the seizin, for parceners are supposed to be already in posssssion of the whole land. Partition therefore makes no degree. It only adjusts the different rights of the parties to the possession. Each does not take her allotment by purchase, but is as much seized [493]*493of it by descent from the common ancestor as she was of her undivided share before partition. Allen on Partition, 124-128; 1 Lomax Digest, Vol. 1, 493.

Whether this rule of the common law is now changed and mutual conveyances are necessary under the statutes of frauds and perjuries, is a controverted question. Judge Lomax and Professor Minor concur in the opinion that coparceners may still make partition by parol without deed. 1 Lomax Digest, 493; 2 Minor’s Inst. 438. The special court of appeals, in Coles v. Wooding, 2 Patton and Heath, 189, laid down the same doctrine. My brethren take the same view. It must be admitted, however, there are many respectable opposing authorities. See Freeman on Cotenancy and Partition, sections 397, 398, 400. This case does not call for any express decision of that question.

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