Eason v. Rose

32 S.E.2d 66, 183 Va. 359, 1944 Va. LEXIS 161
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 20, 1944
DocketRecord No. 2814
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 32 S.E.2d 66 (Eason v. Rose) 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
Eason v. Rose, 32 S.E.2d 66, 183 Va. 359, 1944 Va. LEXIS 161 (Va. 1944).

Opinion

Spratley, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action of unlawful detainer instituted by J. E. Rose, Jr., hereinafter called the plaintiff, against T. P.' Eason, upon a summons issued by a justice of the peace on February 3rd, 1943, to recover the possession of a farm. At the hearing before the trial justice of the county of Isle of Wight, judgment was entered in favor of the defendant, T. P. Eason.

The plaintiff appealed, and the case was thereafter heard on-July 3rd, 1943, in the circuit court. Neither party demanding a jury, all matters of law and fact were submitted to the court. The court being of opinion that T. P. Eason was a tenant at will rendered judgment that the plaintiff recover the possession of the land, and accordingly awarded [361]*361him a writ of possession. From this the defendant, Eason, has appealed, upon the principal grounds that the trial court erred in holding that the tenancy of T. P. Eason was at will and not from year to year, and in awarding the plaintiff all crops planted by the defendant.

The following facts and circumstances appear from the evidence:' •

The real property in question, a farm of 118 acres and a one-room house, in the County of Isle of Wight, Virginia, was formerly owned by S. P. Eason, the father of T. P. Eason. In 1924, at a foreclosure sale under a deed of trust, P. M. Eason purchased the property. P. M. Eason then told his brother that the latter could repurchase the farm by paying to the former the amount of money he had invested in it. Thereafter S. P. Eason “continued to look after the farm,” and although a price was made to him, he never offered to ‘buy it. Each year from 1924 to 1935, inclusive, S. P. Eason paid to his brother $ 160, which he thought its use was worth. In 1936 and 1937, S. P. Eason rented the farm to a colored man for $150 per year, which he paid over to P. M. Eason. Beginning with 1938, T. P. Eason began to farm the place, and each year paid to P. M. Eason $100.

P. M. Eason testified that he never had any rental agreement with anyone; that every one knew he was going to sell the farm as soon as he could, and used it with full knowledge of that condition; that he told his nephew, T. P. Eason, that he would sell it to him if he wanted it for just what he had in it; that in the fall of 1942, he sent some prospective purchasers to see the place and they saw both S. P. Eason and T. P. Eason and looked over the property; that at about the same time he executed an option for its sale, expiring on January 10th, 1943; that on January 1st, 1943, T. P. Eason came to see him about renting the place for 1943, and was told that he couldn’t rent it because of the option and because he wanted his money out of it, and the first man that brought him $3,500 after the option expired would get it; that T. P. Eason said he knew another place he could get, but if the property wasn’t sold, he would like to get it for [362]*3621943; that he, T. P. Eason, would call him on January nth; that T. P. Eason did not come back to see him or call him on January nth, and he sold the farm on January 12th, 1943, to John E. Rose, Jr.; and that, the use and occupation of the farm was a family affair and his brother and nephew used . the place in that relation more than anything else.

On January 15th, 1943, P. M. Eason informed T. P. Eason by letter that he had sold the farm to J. E. Rose, Jr., instructing his nephew to move his wire fences and hog houses so as to clear the place for the immediate possession he had promised the new owner, adding that he thought the latter would treat him all right about any crops already planted.

S. P. Eason testified “that P. M. Eason offered to sell the farm to T. P. Eason for $2,500.00 but he told his son that his brother didn’t have that much in the place and not to give that for it; that P. M. Eason promised to let him have the place for what he had in it, but never did give him the amount, and that if he did not buy it and the place was sold to someone else then he was to pay him for his crops on the farm and move away.” He further said that in the year 1938 his son, the defendant, began to farm the place.

J. E. Rose, Jr., testified that he purchased the farm on January 12th, 1943, and received á deed for it three days later; that he then went to see T. P. Eason and told him he had bought the place and asked him if he could get off in a week; that T. P. Eason told him “No, but that he would get off by February 1st”; that he made arrangements for taking over the farm on February 1st, and in the meantime T. P. Eason took down nearly all of the permanent fence and removed a permanent hog feeder house; and that when he went to get possession on February 1st, he was told by T. P. Eason that he had decided he wasn’t going to move and was going to farm the place in 1943.

The evidence of T. P. Eason,- in his own behalf, presents little conflict with the foregoing. He testified that although he had never had any specific agreement with' his uncle about the farm, he had for five years paid him $100 per year, which he considered its worth as rent; that he paid no atten[363]*363tion to the prospective purchasers who viewed the farm; that on January 1st, 1943, he went to Portsmouth, Virginia, to pay the rent for 1942, and then learned that P. M. Eason had given the option mentioned, and was told that he could not rent the farm for 1943 «because of the option, and his uncle’s expectation that he would sell the farm; that, at that time, he had planted nine acres of oats and three acres of pasture; that he did not call his uncle back and didn’t know what happened about the prospective sale until the plaintiff came to him and told him that he had bought the farm and wanted him to get off in a week; that he told the plaintiff that he couldn’t get off in a week, but would get off about the first of February, if he could find another place; that when Rose, the purchaser, came to see him on February 1st, he told him he could not find another place and had decided he was going to farm the land for 1943; that in the meantime he had moved one of the hog houses and had taken down most of the fence on the farm; that in the late fall of 1942, he had purchased some lumber for the purpose of erecting a barn on the property, expecting to stay there or buy the farm as soon as his uncle “figured up” the amount he had in it; that P. M. Eason had told him he would take $2,500, but after talking with his father, he decided not to pay that much; that while the case was pending on appeal, he “cut his oats and pasture,” and planted twenty-two acres of peanuts, an acre of Irish potatoes and eight acres of corn, which he valued at $750; and that the reason he continued to stay on the farm was that he wanted to buy it and was waiting for a correct price from his uncle, which price he had not been given.

The law is not in dispute. The real question is whether or not an estate at will or a tenancy from year to year was created under the established facts.

There is, as we have said, little conflict in the, evidence, which was heard ore tenus. We do-not have a case of a tenant merely in possession under a lease for an indefinite term or under a general permission to occupy, with an agreement to pay a periodical rent, and holding over at the [364]*364expiration of his term. Nor do we have an estate at will arising by implication of law, which became an estate from year to year, through the payment and acceptance of rent. The rule applicable to such cases is not in point here.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
32 S.E.2d 66, 183 Va. 359, 1944 Va. LEXIS 161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eason-v-rose-va-1944.