Estate of McDaniel v. May
This text of 48 Va. Cir. 522 (Estate of McDaniel v. May) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Spotsylvania County Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
In this case, a former spouse makes a claim against a decedent’s estate for rent associated with the decedent’s use and possession of property that the decedent and former spouse owned as co-tenants.
The decedent’s heirs, or some of them, contend that the claim is baned by the doctrine of res judicata. They also contend, as does the administratrix of the estate, that the claim, or most of it, is barred by the statute of limitations.
Background
Nelson Lynn McDaniel and Patricia Ann McDaniel, now Patricia Ann Wise, married in 1969. They acquired property in Doe Run Estates in 1985 as tenants by the entirety. They placed a mobile home on the property and lived there until their separation in 1987.
Wise filed suit for a no-fault divorce in February of 1990. During the pendency of the suit, McDaniel and Wise conveyed the Doe Run property to themselves “as joint tenants with right of survivorship as at common law.” The divorce was final on April 19,1990. The Doe Run property was not mentioned in the pleadings, depositions, or decree. There was no property settlement agreement.
McDaniel continued to live on the property until his death on September 21, 1996. He died intestate, survived by four children: Terry L. May, a [523]*523daughter bom of his marriage with Wise; and three children of a previous marriage.
After McDaniel’s death, Wise sold the properly to Hoffman, apparently under the impression that she owned the property pursuant to the 1990 survivorship deed.
On January 21,1997, McDaniel’s three children of his previous marriage instituted a partition suit (# CH97-28) claiming ownership of their father’s one-half interest in the Doe Run property. They joined Hoffman, Hoffman’s mortgage company, and May. Hoffman filed a third party claim against Wise. May, as administratrix of McDaniel’s estate, intervened in the suit.
The court held that the 1990 divorce of McDaniel and Wise extinguished survivorship in their co-tenancy under Virginia Code § 20-111 and converted it to a tenancy in common. Upon McDaniel’s death, his one-half interest passed by operation of law to his four children in equal shares. Therefore, Hoffman acquired only Wise’s one-half interest, and each of McDaniel’s four children owned a one-eighth share.2
A final decree was entered in die partition suit on January 22,1998.
Wise appealed. Finding “no reversible error,” the Supreme Court denied the appeal (Record No. 980786) on July 29, 1998. Thereupon, the adjudications in the partition suit became final.
Meanwhile, May qualified as administratrix of McDaniel’s estate and proceeded with administration. She caused a debts and demands hearing to be conducted on June 4, 1998, before the commissioner of accounts. The commissioner filed his report.
Then, on November 19, 1998, Wise submitted a claim of $29,810.00 to die estate “for rent on the [Doe Run] property ... that McDaniel occupied exclusively from May 1990 to September 1996.”
The administratrix filed a petition asking the court to setde Wise’s claim, to approve her accounts, and to discharge her upon distribution of the balance of the estate.
Arguments were heard on March 1,1999. Counsel submitted memoranda. This opinion addresses the issues raised by Wise’s claim against the estate.
[524]*524 Plea of Res Judicata
The doctrine of res judicata gives meaningful finality to judgments by declaring that matters of law and feet once adjudicated between the parties to a lawsuit cannot be judicially reconsidered. When a person sues another person on a particular claim, the final judgment in that lawsuit bars all future litigation as to matters of law and feet that have been determined. Bryson Virginia Civil Procedure (3rd ed., 1997), pp. 478-79.
The heirs contend that in the partition suit fee court made determinations of fact feat cannot be reconsidered and feat those established facts negate Wise’s claim for rent.
In fee partition suit, Wise testified regarding fee purpose of fee 1990 survivorship deed and fee circumstances surrounding its execution. She said feat fee deed was intended as a property settlement, fee purpose of which was to ensure that fee parties’ respective rights of survivorship survived fee divorce. Further, she explained, because McDaniel was in poor health and seventeen years older, they agreed feat he could continue to live there until his death. She presented other evidence, including testimony of May, in support of her position.
These facts were essential to Wise’s claim in fee partition suit regarding fee purpose and circumstances of fee 1990 deed, that is to say, essential to her effort to circumvent fee impact of § 20-111. Although fee court held feat § 20-111 nevertheless applied so feat fee post-conveyance divorce extinguished survivorship, fee court accepted Wise’s version of the facts. Those factual determinations were not merely collateral or tangential, nor were they dicta. They were an integral part of feat litigation.
The doctrine of res judicata precludes reconsideration of fee factual determinations feat were an integral part of fee partition suit. Those factual determinations are binding on fee parties and their privies.
Wise argues feat fee doctrine does not apply here because she was not really a party to fee partition suit. She points out that she had sold her interest to Hoffinan and for feat reason fee heirs made Hoffman, not her, a party defendant. She was joined by Hoffman as a third party defendant.
Her argument is without merit. She was a party in feat litigation. She actively participated in fee suit, taking a position adverse to fee heirs and presented evidence against them. Wise and fee heirs were “adverse parties” in all respects.
[525]*525What is the consequence of the finality of the factual determinations made in the partition suit?
As noted above, Wise testified that she and McDaniel agreed, for reasons that she explained, that McDaniel could continue to live on the Doe Run property until his death. She presented other evidence, including the testimony of May, to confirm her testimony. The court determined that those facts had been established.
If, as the court determined in the partition suit, Wise and McDaniel agreed that McDaniel could live on the property until his death, on what basis would she be entitled to rent for that period?
As a general rule, where a co-tenant uses the common property to the exclusion of his co-tenants, he is accountable to the co-tenants for more than his just share or proportion, measured by the fair rental value of the property. However, this rule is subject to a number of exceptions. A court may not award rent where the absent co-tenant has voluntarily left the property and the other co-tenant remains in possession to maintain and safeguard the property. So, too, a court will not award rent where the occupying co-tenant is in possession by agreement of all the co-tenants. See, generally, SA M.J., Co-tenancy, § 22 and § 24; also see Virginia Code § 8.01-31.
In view of the facts of the case, which were decided in the partition suit and cannot be reconsidered, Wise is not entitled to rent.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
48 Va. Cir. 522, 1999 Va. Cir. LEXIS 132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-mcdaniel-v-may-vaccspotsylvani-1999.