Hannon v. Hannah

9 Va. 146, 9 Gratt. 146
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedAugust 11, 1852
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 9 Va. 146 (Hannon v. Hannah) 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
Hannon v. Hannah, 9 Va. 146, 9 Gratt. 146 (Va. 1852).

Opinion

Allen, J.

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a decree of the Circuit court of Mason, making partition of a tract of land. The petition merely alleges, that the court erred in making partition, instead of dismissing the bill with costs; and there is no assignment of the particular errors complained of in the petition, nor has there been any such assignment at the bar. The court is thus left to grope its way in the dark, and to search through the whole record, to ascertain whether there is any error of which the appellants can complain. The bill was filed by the appellee, to obtain, partition of a tract of 3080 acres situate in Mason county, of which the appellee claimed to be entitled to one-third. The land it seems was patented to William Austin, by patent bearing date the 22d May 1798. On the 13th December 1814, a certain John Austin, describing himself in an office copy of a deed, made an exhibit as the father and heir 'of his son William Austin, conveyed to a certain Mosby [148]*148Shepherd of Henrico all lands to which he was entitled as heir of William Austin. This deed seems to have been proved and recorded in the county of Hanover, where the grantor resided on the 25th January 1815, but does not appear to have been ever admitted to record in the county where the lands, the subject of this controversy, were situate.

Mosby Shepherd, by a deed dated the 15th February 1817, and recorded in Kanawha county 1st May 1817, conveyed to John Wilson of Kanawha county, and Jesse Winn of- Hanover, two-thirds of all the lands, wherever the same might be found, conveyed by John Austin to said Shepherd, by deed dated the 13th December 1814, and admitted to record in the court of Hanover the 25th January 1815.

On the 3d of September 1824, John Wilson and wife conveyed to Luke Prior of Mason county an undivided third part of a tract of 3080 acres situate in Mason county, which undivided third part as aforesaid the deed sets forth “was deeded to John Wilson by Mosby Shepherd, and is of record in the clerk’s office of Kanawha county. This deed was duly certified and recorded in Mason county on the 6th of March 1826.

On the 19th October 1827, Prior and wife conveyed to John Hannon, one of the appellants, 500 acres by metes and bounds, part of a survey granted to William Austin for 3080 acres, deeded to Prior by John Wilson, attorney for said Austin. This deed was admitted to record on the 26th October 1843.

On the 18th August 1823, Prior, as assignee of John Wilson, attorney for William Austin, conveyed to Matthew D. Brown one hundred acres by metes and bounds, which it appears was situate -at the upper end of the 3080 acre tract.

By these conveyances, the one-third of the 3080 acres claimed by John Wilson, under the conveyance [149]*149of Mosby Shepherd to him and Jesse Winn, was transferred to and vested in the heirs of Luke Prior, who has departed this life, and his alienees, Hannon ~ • Brown.

On the 28th November 1845, Jesse Winn conveyed to the appellee his undivided third part of the 3080 acres, of which he claimed to be seized in fee by virtue of the deed of Mosby Shepherd to him and John Wilson, dated the 15th February 1817.

The appellee thus claiming one undivided third part of the tract, filed his bill for a partition, making the unknown heirs of Mosby Shepherd the owners of the undivided third part not conveyed by their ancestor, and the appellants as alienees of the one-third part conveyed by John Wilson to Prior, defendants.

It seems from an endorsement on the copy of the deed from John Austin to Mosby Shepherd, filed as an exhibit, that the defendants in the court below objected to an office copy being read as evidence, as it did not appear that the deed had been recorded in the General court, or in the county where the land was situate.

The deed from John Wilson to Luke Prior for an undivided third part of the 3080 acres, recites that the same was deeded to John Wilson by Mosby Shepherd, by a deed of record in Kanawha county; and that deed refers to and recites the provisions of the deed from John Austin to Shepherd. The appellants claim .under Prior as heirs or alienees; Hannon files the exhibit as part of his evidence of title. In the deed to Brown, Prior conveys as assignee of Wilson, attorney for William Austin, and in his deed to Hannon recites that the land was deeded to Prior by John Wilson, attorney for said Austin. It thus appears that the deed from John Austin to Mosby Shepherd is the common source of title to both parties. And the deed to Prior, under whom they all claim, refers to and recites the terms of the deed to John Wilson, which describes the [150]*150deed objected to by its date and place of record. It is not therefore competent for these appellants, who claim to have entered into the land and to hold under this deed, to object to its validity for want of registry, the subsequent title papers having referred to it as being recorded in the county of Hanover. Where both parties claim under the same third person, it is sufficient to prove the derivation of title from him without proving his title. 2 Greenl. Evi., § 307. The recitals in the deeds subsequent to the deed objected to, direct attention to that deed: it is referred to in the deed of Shepherd to Wilson and Winn, by its terms, its date and place of record. These recitals are evidence against parties and privies in blood, in estate and law, and an office copy from the place described as the place of record is good evidence in controversies with them. Jackson v. Parkhurst, 9 Wend. R. 209 ; 4 Phil. Evi. 453, note 251; (Cowen & Hill’s notes.)

The answers of all the appellants allege that the interests of the other tenants in common have been forfeited to the commonwealth either for nonentry on the books of the commissioner of the revenue, or for nonpayment of the taxes. Of these allegations no proof whatever is adduced, and they may be dismissed from further consideration.

The tract, sold and conveyed to the appellant Brown by metes and bounds, has been assigned to him by the partition made by the commissioner and the final decree. As respects the land sold him by Prior as part of the 30S0 acre tract, he gets by the decree all that he claimed or was entitled to. In the first answer filed by him he alleged he had a claim to about 350 acres, which included the 100 acres purchased of Prior, being part of a tract that he had entered, but declined presenting his claim to the junior entry in this suit. In his amended answer, however, he does assert his claim to the 100 acres claimed under his purchase from [151]*151Prior as part of the large survey, and to so much of the tract of 3080 acres as was embraced in a patent to him for 590 acres, dated the 30th June 1847. His title, therefore, under this junior grant is directly in issue, and must be passed upon in order to a partition of the whole tract.

As he entered upon the tract under and by virtue of the common title, claiming under one of the tenants in common, he was a necessary party in a suit for partition ; and any other claim which he may have acquired to the common subject must be disposed of in order to a partition of the whole subject. His patent and the survey on which it was founded bear date after the bill was filed in this case. His answers admit that the 100 acres purchased of Prior was part of the 3080 acre tract, and that the residue of the land claimed under his recent patent was within the bounds of the larger tract.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
9 Va. 146, 9 Gratt. 146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hannon-v-hannah-va-1852.