Glovier v. Dingus

4 S.E.2d 551, 173 Va. 268, 133 A.L.R. 468, 1939 Va. LEXIS 193
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 12, 1939
DocketRecord No. 2051
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 4 S.E.2d 551 (Glovier v. Dingus) 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
Glovier v. Dingus, 4 S.E.2d 551, 173 Va. 268, 133 A.L.R. 468, 1939 Va. LEXIS 193 (Va. 1939).

Opinion

Holt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This appeal is from a decree in a suit for the partition of land among the heirs-at-law—and purchasers from certain of them—of Griffith G. Glovier, deceased.

The decedent died intestate in October, 1933. He owned at the time of his death a farm of about 150 acres on Lick creek, north of St. Paul, in Lipps magisterial district of Wise county. He bought it in 1903, built a house on it and lived there the remainder of his life. He was survived by his widow, Sally Glovier, and by ten children, namely, William S. Glovier, Thomas M. Glovier, George G. Glovier, Henry D. Glovier, John W. Glovier, Lloyd N. Glovier, Samuel J. Glovier, Margaret Glovier Blevins, Cornelia Glovier Williams and Ida Glovier Williams. Without assignment of dower, but with the consent of the heirs, the widow continued until her death, July 7, 1937, to live in the mansion house on the farm.

Prior to the death of the widow, J. W. Bandy bought the undivided one-tenth interest of Lloyd N. Glovier, and a deed was made to him by the widow and all the heirs. There is no copy of the deed in the record, but it is referred to in the evidence as having conveyed a certain definite part of the farm, and that the part was described “by courses and distances, or by metes and bounds.” However, there is further evidence tending to show that Bandy was to receive what was necessary to vest him with a child’s share, and that in the voluntary partition hereinafter mentioned some four or five acres were added to the tract theretofore conveyed him.

In July, 1937, shortly after the death of the widow, four men of the vicinity were chosen by the parties in interest [272]*272to partition the farm. The commissioners, so selected, went upon the land and after two days of work completed a partition of the 150 acres among the several owners and furnished each of them with a description by metes and bounds of his or her allotment.

Samuel J. Glovier bought the shares of his two brothers, Thomas M. and George G. Glovier, which purchase made his total holdings three-tenths. The plaintiff-appellee, Maggie Dingus, who is a daughter of William S. Glovier, bought the shares of two of her aunts, Cornelia Glovier Williams and Margaret Glovier Blevins, thereby becoming the owner of two-tenths. The remaining four-tenths are, or were when this suit was begun, owned respectively by William S., Henry D. and John W. Glovier and Ida Glovier Williams.

Following the voluntary partition, deeds were executed” by all the heirs to each allottee—except Maggie Dingus and her father, William S. Glovier—conveying to each the part of the 150-acre tract assigned him or her. William S. Glovier, while not having accepted a deed for his own share, united in the execution of each of the other deeds.

Maggie Dingus, being dissatisfied with the partition as made by the commissioners, institued this suit on December 19, 1937, for a judicial partition. In her bill she made no mention of the partition above stated but proceeded as though there had been none. The ten heirs-at-law and J. W. Bandy were made parties defendant, and in due course Samuel J., Thomas M., George G., Lloyd N., Henry D. and John W. Glovier, and Cornelia Glovier Williams, Ida Glovier Williams and Margaret Glovier Blevins filed their joint answer. After admitting the averments of ownership as set forth in the bill, the defendants alleged the previous voluntary selection of the four commissioners; that the latter had duly performed their duties; that the partition made by them was fair and just and as near equal in value as could be made; that following the partition Maggie Dingus took charge of the part allotted her and that she has been using it as her own ever since; that likewise the other parties have taken charge of and have been using the por[273]*273tions assigned to them; that after the partition Maggie Dingus and John W. Glovier entered into a written agreement to exchange certain parts of the tracts laid off to them, and that the agreement was written and signed by her; and that she, “by reason of her acts and conduct in connection with said partition, has ratified and approved the same and is now estopped to institute and prosecute this suit, seeking another partition of said real estate.”

The plaintiff filed a demurrer to the answer and also moved to strike that pleading from the record. Both the demurrer and the motion were overruled by the Circuit Court. After more than 200 pages of printed proof had been adduced by the respective sides the cause was orally argued by counsel and submitted.

On July 5, 1038, the Circuit Court made and entered a decree adjudging the ownership of the farm to be as alleged in the bill; “that there has been no mutual agreement for a partition of the tract of land between the owners thereof and that there has been no act or acts of ratification of any alleged partition sufficient to create an estoppel; that no definite lines were established by said alleged partition; and no survey made.” The decree then dismisses the answer filed by the defendants, and grants the prayer of the plaintiff’s bill.

Four of the defendants, Samuel J., John W. and Henry D. Glovier and Ida Glovier Williams, prosecute this appeal.

The contentions of counsel for neither side are indicated with the clear-cut definiteness that is desirable, yet from the record and the briefs we gather that they are substantially as follows:

In behalf of Maggie Dingus it is contended that the voluntary partition was and is without legal validity, first, because, as claimed, she took no part in the selection of the four commissioners; second, because, as claimed, she was not personally present when the commissioners performed their work or when they made their awards; third, because, as claimed, her interests were not represented on any of those occasions; fourth, because, as claimed, she did not re[274]*274ceive a just and fair allotment; and fifth, because, as claimed, a parol partition is ineffectual by reason of the statute of frauds.

In behalf of the appellants it is contended, first, that Maggie Dingus herself participated to a certain extent in the arrangements for the partition and was from the outset represented by her father, William S. Glovier, and her husband, Rufus Dingus, and through them had full information at the time as to every step taken in the matter; second, that her attitude and her positive acts subsequent to the partition, as also the acts of the other parties in interest, constituted a ratification and a part performance such as render the partition legally valid and binding although in parol, and also that they work an estoppel; and, third, that the allotment made her by the commissioners was and is a fair and just one.

Apparently, counsel for Maggie Dingus failed to appreciate the legal significance of the voluntary partition and the legal situation created by that partition and by the subsequent acts of executing and recording deeds, etc., else those facts would not have been disregarded in the drafting of the bill, as was done. Facts can not be obliterated, nor can their legal effect be annulled by any expedient so simple as that of ignoring them. Whatever of informality, or even of legal infirmity, may have characterized the previous partition, it was a fundamental misconception of the law of the matter to treat all those acts as though they had never been performed and as though no change in the legal status had resulted from them.

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Bluebook (online)
4 S.E.2d 551, 173 Va. 268, 133 A.L.R. 468, 1939 Va. LEXIS 193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glovier-v-dingus-va-1939.