Dobson v. Culpepper & Wife

23 Va. 352
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedApril 9, 1873
StatusPublished

This text of 23 Va. 352 (Dobson v. Culpepper & Wife) 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
Dobson v. Culpepper & Wife, 23 Va. 352 (Va. 1873).

Opinion

Moncure, P.

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a supersedeas to a judgment of the Circuit court of Gloucester county, affirming a judgment of the county court of said county, in favor of the plaintiffs against the defendant in that court, in an action of unlawful detainer, to recover possession of a tract of land lying in said county. The case was tried upon the general issue; and the parties, by consent, entered of record, [353]*353waived the right to have a jury; and thereupon the whole matter of law and fact was heard and determined, and judgment given by the court. Ho exception appears by the record to have been taken to the said judgment, or to any ruling of the court in the progress of the trial. There is copied, after the judgment of the county court, in the transcript of the record, what is certified by the clerk to be “the evidence adduced upon the trial of the foregoing case;” but it is not made a part of the record by any order or act of the court; and unless it can be .considered as made a part of the record by consent of the parties, there is certainly nothing in the case that can show any error in the judgment, and it must, of necessity, be affirmed. But in the petition to this court for a supersedeas to the judgment of the Circuit court, it is said that, “when the county court rendered, its judgment neither of the counsel for plaintiff's or defendant being present, no statement of the evidence heard at the trial was certified by the court. But a statement of all the evidence offered at the trial was written out by the counsel for the plaintiff's, signed by him, the counsel for Dobson, and the judge of 1 he court, and presented and used by the parties at the hearing before the Circuit court, and is now with the record of the case, as used before the Circuit court.” And in the argument of the case before this court, no objection was made to the correctness of what is said in the petition as aforesaid, but the said statement of the evidence was treated by the counsel on both sides as being properly a part of the record. However irregular this may be, we must, therefore, consider the case, as if a bill of exceptions had been taken to the judgment of the County court, and the said evidence had been set out and certified in said bill. So considering the case, we have now to enquire, whether there be any error in the judgment.

[354]*354. Before we enter unon this enquiry we will notice an agreement signed.' by the parties by their counsel, and placed by them, with their notes of argument, in the hands of the court to be acted upon as we might think Pr0Per- That agreement is in these words: “We the undersigned counsel for appellant and appellees, in Dodson v. Culpepper wife, agree, and request, that in the event the court shall reverse the decision of the Circuit court below, on the point that the- action is brought by the wrong parties, the court shall decide all the points in the case upon the merits of the case. We do this from the fact, that the subject matter is small, and that the pecuniary circumstances of our clients are such as to illy afford farther costs in the premises.” We will comply with this request; but in doing so will first consider the case upon the merits; that is, whether the defendant in the court below, who is the plaintiff in error here, Dobson, is entitled to the possession of the property in controversy ; and if not, then, secondly, whether the plaintiffs in the - court below, who are the defendants in error here, Culpepper and wife, are entitled to such possession, or rather were so entitled when the action was brought. . If Dob-son be not so entitled, then Culpepper and wife, with • whom or with one of whom, Culpepper, Dobson made a contract to purchase the land in controversy, on the. 28th day.of December 1860, are entitled, unless they lost their title . by reason of the deed of gift made by them for the land to Walter T. Simcoe, dated the 81st day of August .1869, and constituting a part of the evidence in-the case; the said Dobson contending that if he is not entitled, then the said Simcoe is entitled by virtue of - the said deed of gift, and not the said Culpepper and wife. Then we proceed to enquire : , .

First: Is the said Dobson entitled to the possession of the said land % .....

[355]*355On the 28th day of December 1860, Dobson contracted with Culpepper to purchase the said land of them at the price of $275, of which the sum of $80 was payable in cash, and the balance, $195, twelve months after date; and on the same day, Culpepper and wife executed a receipt to Dobson for the $80, the cash payment, and for his note at twelve months for the said balance of $195; about the same time, it seems, Dobson received possession of the land, and has been in possession of it ever since, but has never received any deed for it. Culpepper and wife, not having, as he says, received any part of the purchase money from Dobson for the land, not even the cash payment of $80, made a formal demand upon him for possession, in July 1870, which possession he, Dob-son, refused to deliver, and he has held the laud adversely to the claim of Culpepper and wife ever since. On the 1st day of April 1872, they brought this action of unlawful detainer against him for the land.

There can be no doubt, and it is not controverted, but indeed admitted, by the counsel for Dobson, that either Culpepper and wife or their donee Simcoeare entitled to recover the said land of him in an action of unlawful detainer, unless at the time of the biinging of such action there had been such payment or performance of what was contracted to be paid or performed on the part of the vendee, as would in equity entitle him, or those claiming under him, to a conveyau ce of the legal title of such land from the vendors, or those claiming under them, without condition, according to the Code of 1860, chapter 135, section 20. That provision of the Code is containe d in the chapter concerning the action of ejectment; but it is not confined to that action, either in its literal terms, or its substantial meaning. It applies, as well to the action of unlawful detainer, as to the action of ejectment, which are concurrent remedies in such a case as this. Williamson, [356]*356trustee, v. Paxton trustee, 18 Gratt. 475, 505. A vendor of land who had put the purchaser in possession, whilst the contract remains executory has the legal title as to purchaser; and unless the said provision of the appty f° the ease, may demand possession of the purchaser, and recover it of him by an action of ejectment or unlawful detainer; at least, unless, since the date of the purchase, the interest of the vendor in the land has terminated, or been transferred by him to another. That the vendor may recover possession of the land in an action of ejectment in such a case is clearly shown by the case Burnett v. Caldwell, 9 Wall. U. S. R. 290; and the case just cited from 18 Gratt., shows that there is no difference between ejectment and unlawful detainer in this respect. Whether such subsequent transfer would destroy the right of such recovery by the vendor himself, is a question to be hereafter considered.

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Bluebook (online)
23 Va. 352, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dobson-v-culpepper-wife-va-1873.