Curtis v. Hiden

84 S.E. 664, 117 Va. 289, 1915 Va. LEXIS 35
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 11, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 84 S.E. 664 (Curtis v. Hiden) 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
Curtis v. Hiden, 84 S.E. 664, 117 Va. 289, 1915 Va. LEXIS 35 (Va. 1915).

Opinion

Keith, P.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellant, Curtis, filed his bill in the Circuit Court of Warwick county, in which he shows that Mrs. Virginia R. Chewning, in her life time, was seized in fee of certain tracts of land, containing by estimate 215 acres; that she had been twice married, and by her second husband, who survived her, she had one child, which is still living; that by her will she devised the land to the children of her first marriage, subject to the life estate by curtesy of. her surviving husband, H. M. Chewning; that the complainant, Curtis, by deed dated June 2, 1902, bought of Chewning his life estate in said tracts of land, and has been and now is in possession of them; that by deed dated July 1, 1910, the devisees under the will of Virginia R. Chewning conveyed their interest in remainder to R. E. Richardson and P. W. Hiden; that Chewning, whose grantee is entitled to the possession and usufruct of the land during his lifetime, is now fifty-five years old, and his expectancy is, therefore, seventeen years; that all the land of which he is life tenant, except about fifteen acres, is grown up in timber, mostly old field pines, ranging from saplings to trees of from 12 to 20 inches in diameter; that this timber constitutes the chief value of the land; that the timber is peculiarly valuable for piling and is now of proper size and ready to be cut as such; that it will depreciate in value if allowed to stand and grow during the expectancy of Chewning, when it will be above the proper size for piling; that the smaller trees retard the growth of the timber where they are too thick and should be thinned out and those cut down sold for cord wood; that the growing timber needs scientific cultivation and modem methods of forestry applied to it, which can best be done by one owning the fee simple estate in possession; that piling of the character of that growing upon these lands is now in great demand along the seaboard, and [291]*291will bring more if sold now than later on; that by a sale now the interests of all parties will be promoted. The plaintiff further represents that although he has been in possession of the property for over eleven years and keeping and preserving the same from trespass or depredation by others, and has neither cut nor permitted to be cut any timber thereon, and has paid the taxes thereon, the only rental or other income which he has been able to derive therefrom is from six to twelve dollars per annum for the small piece of cleared land, which amount is less than one-fourth of what the taxes amount to; that the taxes have been largely increased by reason of the increased value of the timber, and are now a burden which complainant is compelled to bear, without sufficient revenue therefrom to pay the same. The complainant further avers that the remaindermen, Hiden and Richardson, are both engaged in the pile, wood and lumber business, and are men of large means, and if the said property should be sold, they are amply able to purchase it, and in fact their interests will be promoted by owning it, so as to be able to cut and market the timber to the best advantage; that if, on the other hand, it brings more than they are willing to pay, they, as such remaindérmen, will get the benefit thereof. Wherefore, the premises considered, the complainant being remediless save in a court of equity, to which jurisdiction over this subject-matter has been expressly given by statute, files this bill of complaint, and prays that the said P. W. Hiden and R. E. Richardson may be made parties defendant thereto, and required to answer the same, and that all further and general relief may be granted as the nature of his case -may require.

To this bill the defendants, Hiden and Richardson, filed their demurrer, which the circuit court sustained and dismissed the bill, and the case is before us upon an appeal awarded by one of the judges of this court.

[292]*292The only ground of demurrer which we shall consider is “that the act under which these proceedings are sought to be had, to-wit, section 2436-a, Pollard’s Code of Virginia, 1904, in so far as it seeks to authorize the sale of lands, the remainder in which belongs to adults under no disabilities, without the consent of such adults, is unconstitutional and void.”

We shall not consider the power of the courts to sell lands held by joint tenants, tenants in common, or co-parceners, for the purpose of partition, where partition in kind cannot be had, nor the power of courts to sell lands held in trust, nor of the State, as parens patriae, to authorize the sale of contingent remainders. We shall confine ourselves to the precise question presented by the bill of a plaintiff owning a life estate coming into court and asking the sale of the estate held in .remainder, where neither plaintiff nor defendants are under any disability whatsoever, where there is no obscurity or difficulty as to the title, but a naked case of an absolute legal title to the life estate in the plaintiff, and a vested remainder in fee in the defendants who are sui juris and are opposed to the sale.

There are but two grounds assigned in the bill for invoking the jurisdiction of a court of equity. The first is that the plaintiff, who is a voluntary purchaser from the tenant by curtesy of the life estate, which he now holds, has found the investment unprofitable. He bought with his eyes open. The property is today, or was at the date of filing the bill, in the same condition in which he purchased it. The fact that he has made a bad bargain constitutes no ground for the interposition of a court of equity.

The contention of the plaintiff that the timber on the land should be cut and sold as piling or cord wood, and that scientific cultivation of the timber would inure to the interest of the defendants, is without merit, for the plaintiff has no interest in the standing timber and cannot use or enjoy it [293]*293except in the limited degree permitted by law to life tenants for agricultural and domestic purposes connected with the use of the premises. “The right thus incident to every estate for life, unless otherwise stipulated, does not warrant the selling of wood or timber by the tenant, nor the commission of any needless destruction in the premises.” 2 Minor’s Inst. (3rd ed.) 100.

There is nothing in the bill, therefore, to call into exercise any of the equitable sources of jurisdiction to sell land and the right of the appellant, if it exists, must depend solely upon section 2436-a of Pollard’s Code, which provides that “when real estate is held by a party as tenant by the curtesy, or in dower, whether the remainder be vested or contingent, and whether the remaindermen be infants or adults, it shall be lawful for the circuit and corporation courts, or such court having jurisdiction of the subject-matter, upon a bill filed by the party holding such estate by curtesy or in dower, in which bill all persons directly or contingently interested shall be made defendants, to decree a sale of such real estate, or any part thereof, and to invest the proceeds of sale under the decree of the court for the use and benefit of the party so holding the estate, subject to the rights of the remaindermen: provided, however, that the bill of the plaintiff shall set forth the facts which, in his or her opinion, would justify the sale of the said real estate, and shall be verified by the affidavit of the party, and provided the court shall be of opinion that the interests of all parties will be promoted by such sale, and shall so certify in the decree.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
84 S.E. 664, 117 Va. 289, 1915 Va. LEXIS 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/curtis-v-hiden-va-1915.