Duty v. Duty

661 S.E.2d 476, 276 Va. 298, 2008 Va. LEXIS 62
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 6, 2008
DocketRecord 071542.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 661 S.E.2d 476 (Duty v. Duty) 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
Duty v. Duty, 661 S.E.2d 476, 276 Va. 298, 2008 Va. LEXIS 62 (Va. 2008).

Opinion

OPINION BY Senior Justice HARRY L. CARRICO.

This litigation was commenced when Margaret J. Duty filed in the trial court a bill of complaint against David Duty, praying for a determination of the rightful owner of a parcel of land in Russell County containing 0.521 acres. 1 In a final order, the trial court determined that Margaret Duty was the lawful owner of the property. We awarded David Duty this appeal.

The case was heard upon an "Agreed Written Statement of Facts," which shows that Margaret Duty received a deed to the 0.521-acre tract from W.B. Gray and America Virginia Gray dated May 16, 1973. The deed recited a consideration of $1,000.00 and was recorded September 13, 1973. The deed described the property as follows:

BEGINNING at a point in the middle of Little Cedar Creek, corner to Maggie Duty lands; thence leaving said Creek, and with the line of Maggie Duty, in a northwesterly direction 101 feet to the center of Secondary Rt. 658; thence with the center of said road as it meanders in a southwesterly direction approximately 514 feet to a point where said secondary road intersects with U.S. Route 19; thence with the northern boundary line of U.S. Route 19 in an easterly direction to the center of said Little Cedar Creek; thence with the center of said Creek as it meanders in a northeasterly direction to the BEGINNING corner, containing 0.521 acres, more or less.

The deed contained no recitation concerning derivation of title. Attorneys in a law firm in which the daughter of Margaret Duty was a paralegal conducted a search of the Russell County land records and were unable to determine the source of title to the Grays, Margaret Duty's grantors.

To establish the source of David Duty's title, his counsel introduced an exhibit entitled "David Wayne Duty Chain of Title,"

beginning with a deed dated November 30, 1938, and recorded December 1, 1938, from W.H. Fogleman, single, to Grace Garrett conveying, in consideration of the sum of $50.00, a one-acre tract of land described as follows:

BEGINNING at a planted stone a corner to the lands of Arthur McReynolds and the School House lot, thence in a northeastern direction with said Arthur McReynolds' line to the new State highway leading from Lebanon to Hansonville; thence along the southwestern side of said new State Highway to a stake at the new bridge across Little Cedar Creek, thence a straight line in a southwestern direction to the old State highway leading from Lebanon to Hansonville, thence in a northwestern direction along the north eastern side of said old State highway to a water gate across said creek, and a corner to the school house lot, thence in a north eastern direction with said school house lot line to the south eastern corner of the same; thence in a north western direction and with said school house lot line to the point of beginning, and containing one (1) acre, more or less, but is sold by the boundary and not by the acre.

This deed, like Margaret Duty's deed from the Grays, did not recite any derivation of title.

The next deed in David Duty's "Chain of Title" is dated February 4, 1975, and recorded February 5, 1975, some seventeen months after recordation of Margaret Duty's deed from the Grays. In the 1975 deed, Grace Litton, widow, formerly Grace Garrett, 2 in consideration of the sum of $500.00, conveyed a 0.521-acre parcel to Bonnie Lou Gibson. The deed described the parcel with the same description that was used in the deed conveying the 0.521 parcel from the Grays to Margaret Duty but did not recite any derivation of title.

The final entry in David Duty's "Chain of Title" was a deed to him from Bonnie Lou Gibson dated October 4, 2004, and recorded the same date, conveying a 0.521-acre tract of land in consideration of "the love and affection which the party of the first part has for the party of the second part." The deed used the same description for the 0.521-acre parcel as was used in the deeds from the Grays to Margaret Duty and from Grace Litton to Bonnie Lou Gibson and recited that it was "the same property conveyed unto Bonnie Lou Gibson . . . by deed dated February 4, 1975, which said deed is of record in the Russell County Circuit Court Clerk's Office."

After entry of the final order finding Margaret Duty to be the lawful owner of the property at issue, David Duty filed a motion to vacate the order. The trial court denied the motion.

On appeal, David Duty argues that the trial court erred in finding that Margaret Duty was the valid titleholder of the land in dispute. Citing Hulvey v. Hulvey, 92 Va. 182 , 23 S.E. 233 (1895), David Duty maintains that because the Grays' deed to Margaret Duty did not identify their source of title, they held no title and could not convey any title to her.

David Duty argues further that, under Code § 55-105, "[a] purchaser shall not . . . be affected by the record of a deed or contract made by a person under whom his title is not derived." In this case, David Duty concludes, his predecessor-in-title, Bonnie Lou Gibson, was a bona fide purchaser for value without notice and her title to the 0.521-acre tract was unaffected by the Gray-to-Margaret Duty deed because it was not in Bonnie Lou Gibson's chain of title.

The trial court, however, made a finding to which David Duty has not assigned error. The court found David Duty had acknowledged he knew "in the 1980s" that Margaret Duty had a deed to the property, such knowledge coming, of course, prior to the recording in 2004 of David Duty's deed to the property. Generally, "a purchaser with notice from a purchaser without notice takes a good title." Guss v. Sydney Realty Corp., 204 Va. 65 , 72, 129 S.E.2d 43 , 49 (1963)

(internal quotation marks omitted). But, for this rule to apply, a purchaser with notice from a purchaser without notice must be a purchaser for value. See Richardson v. AMRESCO Residential Mortgage Corp., 267 Va. 43 , 51, 592 S.E.2d 65 , 70 (2004) (citing Guss, 204 Va. at 72 , 129 S.E.2d at 49 ).

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Bluebook (online)
661 S.E.2d 476, 276 Va. 298, 2008 Va. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duty-v-duty-va-2008.