Buford v. North Roanoke Land & Imp. Co.

18 S.E. 914, 90 Va. 418, 1894 Va. LEXIS 9
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 18, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 18 S.E. 914 (Buford v. North Roanoke Land & Imp. Co.) 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
Buford v. North Roanoke Land & Imp. Co., 18 S.E. 914, 90 Va. 418, 1894 Va. LEXIS 9 (Va. 1894).

Opinion

Fauntleroy, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

From the record in this cause it appears that, by deed of the 8th of September, 1810, one John Campbell and wife conveyed to one Bobert Filson 175J acres of land, composed of three parcels, and .that, by deed of the 8th of October, 1810, the said Bobert Filson and wife, in consideration of £1,000, conveyed the same three parcels of land, aggregating 175J acres, to the “lawful heirs” of said John Campbell and Bebecca, his wife.

The said John Campbell and Bebecca, his wife, had, at the date of the said deed of October 8, 1810, three children— Bobert, Clack B., and Susan; and, after the said date of October 8, 1810, Matilda, a fourth child, was born to them, the said John and Bebecca Campbell. The said Matilda married Daniel Stoner, and from her the appellants, Herbert D. C. Buford and Nugent Buford, are lineal descendants. There is no evidence of any partition having been made of these 175J acres of land, and there is no record of any deed of partition vesting the title in severalty in any one in any part of these 175-?,- acres of land, though it is averred, without proof, that there was a deed of partition which had been lost and never recorded. Clack B. Campbell resided, from 1843 till his death in 1881, on a part of this undivided 175J acres, and held exclusive possession and enjoyment of it and built upon it. It is said in the depositions that this part was defined by rock fences, though' it is not proved that the said fences were put there by Clack B. Campbell, or after he went on it, or as line feuces of this particular part.

[420]*420Clack R. Campbell died in 1881, leaving a will by which he devised all of his .realty to his wife, Lncy, for her life, with remainder after death to his niece, Nannie L. Williamson, for life, with remainder over, in fee, to the children of said Nannie L. Williamson.

On the part of which the said Clack R. Campbell resided there is “ Lot number 6 ” — the part which is the subject of the controversy in this case. The aforesaid Mrs. Nannie L. Williamson had several children, the remainder men, in fee, under the will of Clack R. Campbell, and a suit was instituted in the circuit court of Roanoke for the sale of the realty to which the said children (then infants) were entitled in remainder, and this suit embraced “Lot number 6.” The record of that suit is not in the record in this cause, and whether the proceedings had were such as are requisite in the sale of infants’ land does not appear. The appellants charge that they were not. Be that as it may, it seems that there was a decree for sale, and a sale made to M, P. Preston and his associates, who sold this “ Lot number 6 ” to the appellee, the North Roanoke Laud and Improvement Company, for |27,500, who, being advised that there was a cloud upon the title,.brought this suit in chancery in the hustings court of Roanoke city to clear the title.

The Bufords, appellants, were made parties, but they lived in another county, one hundred miles away, and the bill was taken pro confesso as to them, and all the other parties defendant, the Williamsons only having answered the bill.

The hustings court of the city of Roanoke, on the 16th day of September, 1891, rendered a decree, final in form but not in operation, during the then current term of the court, in favor of the appellees affirming the title made to them by Preston and others, and derived from Clack R. Campbell, through the Williamsons.

The appellants — the Bufords — on the 26th day of September, 1891, during the same term of the hustings court, moved the court for leave to file their demurrer and answer, which [421]*421motion the court overruled and refused the leave. From this decree the Bufords appeal, assigning but one error — the refusal of the court to allow them to file their answer and make defence to the suit against them.

The answer was tendered, and the leave to file it asked for during the term of the court at which the decree of the 16th of September, 1891, was rendered, and it does not appear chat the decree of the 16th of September, 1891, had been actually-entered upon the chancery order book by the clerk, before the motion for leave to file the answer was made and refused by the court, upon the sole grouud that it was “ too late.” The affidavit of G-. W. Hansbrough, who appeared for the Bufords, says that he had been employed by them only the day before— the 25th.

The answer tendered by the defendants — the Bufords — sets forth such a defence as, if sustained, would have changed the decree rendered on the 16th of September during the same term, and set up a title to an undivided interest in “ lot number 6,” sold by the Williamsons to Preston and by Preston, &c., to the appellee. The answer asserts that, by the deed of October 8, 1810, from Filson, a title to an undivided share of the 175J acres of land enured to Matilda, the daughter of John and Rebecca Campbell, born after the date and recordation of that deed, as well as to and equally with Robert, Clack R., and Susan — the sons and daughter of John and Rebecca Campbell — born before and living at the date of the said deed from Filson. That this undivided share of the said Matilda descended, in part, to the said Bufords, who áre shown and admitted to be her lineal descendants.- Also the shares of Robert Campbell and Susan Campbell (Thrasher), which they con-' veyed by deed of August 15, 1853, to Daniel Stoner, and by Stoner to Nefinger, trustee. That no partition of the said 175 J- acres was ever made, and no allotment in severalty was ever made, among the joint or common owners; that the entire four, Robert, Susan, Clack R., and Matilda (their anees-[422]*422tress), did hold the said 175J acres of land jointly, and that no ouster of Matilda was ever made, or is charged; that the relation of joint tenants between the said four has never been changed, nor the legal title in severalty has never vested in any one of the said four to any part of the said 175-J acres; that the statute of limitations is not applicable here, and is no bar to appellants’ title.

The transaction of 1810 was an arrangement by John Campbell for the benefit of all the children who were, or who might be, born to him and his then wife Rebecca. It gave a fee, in remainder, to one undivided third to Robert, Susan, and Clack R., respectively, to be opened for Matilda when born. That the lawful heirs of John and Rebecca Campbell, his wife, meant their children who at their deaths should be ascertained to be their lawful heirs, and that all four — Robert, Susan, Clack R., and Matilda — were deemed to be entitled jointly, is admitted and averred in the bill, where it is alleged that “ they, Robert, Susan, and Clack R., took possession of the (175^ acres) land, and that they, together with said Matilda, continued so to hold the same jointly, openly, adversely, notoriously, and exclusively, till 1843. This establishes the fact that the whole four had title and held the land jointly, in fee, until 1843; and there is nothing in the record to show any change in the joint character of their estate, or any vesting, in fee, in severalty, in any one of the four in any part of the said 175J acres of land.

The entry upon and exclusive use and occupation of a part of the land by Clack R.

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Bluebook (online)
18 S.E. 914, 90 Va. 418, 1894 Va. LEXIS 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buford-v-north-roanoke-land-imp-co-va-1894.