Dickenson v. McLemore

111 S.E.2d 416, 201 Va. 333, 1959 Va. LEXIS 231
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 30, 1959
DocketRecord No. 4989
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 111 S.E.2d 416 (Dickenson v. McLemore) 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
Dickenson v. McLemore, 111 S.E.2d 416, 201 Va. 333, 1959 Va. LEXIS 231 (Va. 1959).

Opinion

Miller, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This suit, in which specific performance of an alleged parol agreement to convey real estate is sought, was instituted in the circuit court of Wise county on July 21, 1954, by W. J. McLemore, appellee, against H. D. Dickenson and Cora Dickenson, his wife, appellants, but for good cause, it was thereafter transferred to the circuit court of Scott county.

It is alleged in the bill that prior to June 14, 1952, appellee, at the instance of appellants, entered into a parol contract in which appellants promised and agreed that if McLemore would erect a dwelling for himself and wife upon a part of a small tract of land owned by the Dickensons, they would convey the lot to McLemore upon completion' of the budding. It is then alleged that in reliance upon the parol promise appellee expended $4,000 in the erection of a dwelling; that the Dickensons refused to convey the lot to him, but on June 14, 1952, fraudulently executed a deed which conveyed a life estate in the property to appellee’s wife, Jalie Jessee McLemore, with remainder to H. D. and Cora Dickenson and that the Dickensons had been in possession of the property since the death of Jalie Jessee Mc-Lemore on January 8, 1954. Appellee prayed for specific performance of the contract; that the deed of July 14, 1952, be set aside; an accounting had of the rents and profits derived from the land by appellants, and for general relief.

In their answer the Dickensons denied that they ever promised or made any parol contract with appellee to convey the real estate to him or that they asked him to build a house on their land. They alleged that Jalie Jessee McLemore expended about $2,000 in building a house on the lot close to appellants’ home because she wanted to live near her daughter, Cora Dickenson; the $2,000 was not sufficient to complete the dwelling, and H. D. Dickenson supplied materials and did a great amount of work necessary to finish the house. Thereafter, at the request of Jalie Jessee McLemore, they executed a deed con[335]*335veying to her a life estate in the land with remainder to Cora Dickenson and H. D. Dickenson. They also alleged that they were presented a deed that had been drawn at McLemore’s instance which would have conveyed the land to him and “Jalie Jessee McLemore in equal shares”, but they refused to sign that deed as they were under no obligation to do so. They further charged that with no objection from McLemore and with his knowledge, they expended about $1,200 after the death of Jalie in painting, repairing and constructing two additional rooms to the dwelling.

The testimony, with exhibits, was taken and submitted in deposition form. The chancellor concluded that the evidence was sufficient to prove that the Dickensons had made a parol agreement with appellee to convey to him the lot which was worth about $100.00, and that in pursuance of the promise he had expended $4,000 in the erection of a dwelling and was entitled to specific performance. A decree was entered on August 12, 1958, that ordered H. D. and Cora Dickenson to convey to appellee the lot on which the house had been erected, described as fronting 100 feet on the County road and extending back between slightly converging lines about 99 feet and having a width of 80 feet in the rear, containing one-fifth of an acre more or less. The description is identical with that contained in the deed to Jalie Jessee McLemore of June 14, 1952, which was set aside and annulled in the decree.

Appellants’ chief assignment of error is that the evidence is insufficient to prove that they ever entered into any parol contract to convey the land to McLemore. Other assignments are to the effect that the court erred by not finding that one-half of the funds expended by the McLemores on the building belonged to and were expended by Jalie Jessee McLemore.

Summarized, the evidence shows that McLemore, who is now about 81 years old, was married in 1936 to Jalie Jessee McLemore, his second wife, who was the mother of Cora Dickenson. After their marriage the McLemores moved to the State of Washington where McLemore’s son, H. H. McLemore, resided. In Washington appellee engaged in operating a berry farm which his son had secured for him, and he also drew an old age pension while there and for a year or two after he returned to Virginia. While in Washington appellee’s wife, Jalie, worked for some time in a fur establishment, and she also drew social security.

In 1947 the McLemores came back to Virginia for a visit, and as [336]*336Jalie was not well, they decided to stay. Appellee returned to Washington for a brief time to dispose of their furniture and personal effects. While here in Virginia in 1947 and 1948, he and his wife stayed with his sister in Wise county.

W. J. McLemore testified that in 1949 he was thinking of renting a house but H. D. and Cora Dickenson suggested that he build on their land, and Dickenson agreed to give him a deed to a 100-foot lot to be selected by appellee if he decided to and did build a house on it. No other dimensions or description of the lot are given but the next day appellee, accompanied by his wife, selected a lot with good drainage and the building was promptly begun. He said that he expended between $3,500 and $4,000 in erecting the house, and that he and his wife moved into it in October, 1949, and continued to live there until her death on January 8, 1954.

When asked where he obtained the $3,500 to $4,000 expended upon the dwelling, he answered by saying that he had earned part of it while in the State of Washington; that he was paid a pension by that State for eleven years, which at times amounted to $80 to $88 a month, and that $800 was derived from the sale of their furniture in Washington. Some of this money had been invested in government bonds which he said were payable to either his wife or him as co-owners, but he insisted that his money was used to purchase the bonds and that he alone cashed them. However, when asked to whom the bonds belonged, he said, “They were mine and hers.” He testified that he did not demand a deed from the Dickensons while building the house because he relied on them to keep their promise and execute the deed. In 1950, some months after the house was completed, he had a deed drawn, which he described as having been “made to me just like it was going to a man and his wife,” but said that when his wife took it to Dickenson for execution, “he wouldn’t sign it.” He denied that he knew anything about the deed of June 14, 1952, and said that he did not know of its existence until sometime after his wife’s death.

On cross-examination he admitted that when his wife died in 1954 at the age of 72, Cora Dickenson told him that he could stay in the house as long as he wanted to, but as he “didn’t want to stay long,” he gave her the key to the house and after his wife died.

Appellee’s brother, J. M. McLemt. e, an attorney of Wise, Virginia, testified that while the house was ; :ing constructed, he had a conversation with H. D. Dickenson fro i whom he had purchased a load of wood, and during the course >f the conversation, Dickenson [337]*337mentioned that the McLemores were building a house on some land that he owned “and that he was giving them the lot.” When asked if Dickenson indicated “whether it was a life estate or fee simple,” that he was going to give them in the lot, his answer was “No. He just said he was giving him a lot.”

Mrs. H. J.

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Bluebook (online)
111 S.E.2d 416, 201 Va. 333, 1959 Va. LEXIS 231, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dickenson-v-mclemore-va-1959.