Holleran v. Meisel

21 S.E. 658, 91 Va. 143, 1895 Va. LEXIS 14
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedFebruary 14, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 21 S.E. 658 (Holleran v. Meisel) 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
Holleran v. Meisel, 21 S.E. 658, 91 Va. 143, 1895 Va. LEXIS 14 (Va. 1895).

Opinion

Riely, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a writ of error to a judgment of the Circuit Court of the city of Richmond, in an action of ejectment, and involves the title to a piece of land, containing three and eighty-four hundreths acres, in the county of Henrico, near the said city. The suit has been here before on a writ of error to a judgment of the said court, and the decision of this court is reported in 87 Va. 398.

The plaintiff, James Ilolleran, claimed title to the land under a grant made to him by the Commonwealth bearing date on the 12th day of February, 1887; and the defendants, Phillip Meisel, Sr., and Phillip Meisel, Jr., endeavored to show an outstanding title in a third person under one Joshua R. Stapps, to whom they claimed that the land had been patented by the colonial govei nment in 1687. On the trial, a verdict was rendered by the jury for the defendants, and judgment entered by the court according to the verdict. To [145]*145this judgment a writ of error was awarded by one of the judges of this court.

Several bills of exception were taken by the plaintiff to the rulings of the court made during the progress of the trial; and also to the refusal of the court, after the verdict was renderd, to grant him a new trial, in which last bill of exception all the evidence, and not the facts, was certified.

The rulings of the court, to which exceptions were taken by the plaintiff during the progress of the trial, and which are embodied in the bills of exception, was as to the admission of documentary and other evidence tending to prove that a patent for the land in controversy had been issued to Joshua R. Stapps previous to the grant to James Holleran. In that view, the evidence excepted to, so far as we are able to judge from the bills of exception, was admissable. It is the office of a bill of exception to set forth a specific and definite allegation of error, and so much of the evidence as is necessary to a clear apprehension of the propriety or impropriety of the ruling made by the court, and if it fails to do this, the exception will prove unavailing. 4 Minor’s Institutes, Pt. T, p. 827, and 1 Barton’s Law Prac. 664. The bills in this case are not separate and distinct, but each seems to contain a number of “objections and exceptions,” and they are so intermingled as to create confusion and prevent a proper understanding of them. It is, therefore, doubtful whether the exceptions could be properly disposed of; and as it is unnecessary to the decision of the case to do so, it will not be at1 empl ed. While this court held vs Brown v. Hall, 85 Va. 146, that more than one objection may be certified io the same bill, provided that each objection, where there is more than one, “is therein distinctly set forth with the necessary circumstantiality and not confused with others therein contained,” it is also added that, as a general rule, the better practice is to take separate bills of exception, as least likely to lead to confusion and uncertainty; which [146]*146expression of opinion we would emphasize, especially in view of the contrary practice adopted in this case.

The plaintiff, after the evidence was all in, asked the court to give to the jury eight instructions, and the defendants asked it to give two instructions. The court rejected all of the instructions asked for by the plaintiff, and the second instruction asked for by the defendants, and gave the first of the instructions asked for by the defendants, and two instructions of its own in lieu of those rejected. To the action of the court in refusing the instructions asked for by the plaintiff, and in giving the first instruction asked for by the defendants, and the two instructions of its own, the plaintiff excepted.

The first instruction asked for by the defer dants, and which wras given by the court, accurately propounded the law, and the court committed no error in giving it.

It is only necessary in the disposition of the writ of error awarded in this case, after what has been said, to notice the first instruction given by the court in lieu of those rejected. It is as follows:

“The court instructs the jury that if they believe fiom the evidence that the land in controversy was embraced within the lines of Stapp’s patent of October 21, 1687, and they shall further believe that the said alleged patent was executed and delivered by the proper authorities of the Colonial Govern-. ment of Virginia, and that possession was held by Stapp or parties claiming under him title derived from such alleged patent, they are instructed that the land claimed was not subject to grant by the Commonwealth when the plaintiff’s patent was-issued, and such patent being therefore void, they should find for the defendant. But if the jury shall not so believe, they are instructed that the patent exhibited by the plaintiff in evidence passes to him the title of the Commonwealth, and they shall find for the plaintiff. That the opinions of the witnesses, Carrington and Redd, are not proper evidence to [147]*147be regarded by the jury, except so far as the jury may believe them to be correct inferences from the evidence in the case.5 ’

On the trial, at which the judgment was rendered, from which the former writ of error was taken, the defendants, in support of their contention of a prior grant by the Commonwealth of the land in controversy, offered in evidence a certified copy of an entry or memorandum contained, in one of the books in the office of the Register of the Land Office, labelled “Patents,” which entry was without seal or signature, and’ claimed that such entry or memorandum was a patent from the government to one Joshua R. Stapps for the said land; and that therefore the said land was not thereafter open to further grant by the Commonwealth to James Holleran as waste and unappropriated, and consequently his patent was void. On that trial, the Circuit Court did not leave to the jury the question whether upon the evidence a patent had been issued to Joshua R. Stapps, but in an instruction to the jury, which was duly excepted to, assumed and instructed the jury, in effect, that the entry or memorandum, of which the copy aforesaid was given in evidence by the defendants, was in itself a patent. The legal character and effect of the entry or memorandum, so relied on by the defendants to defeat the claim of the plaintiff, was thus directly and necessarily drawn in question on the former hearing, and this court then expressly pronounced upon it. It decided that standing by itself, it was a nullity as a grant, and only admissible in evidence as “a memorandum from the Colonial Records, tending to prove that proceedings had been taken, looking to an execution and issuing of a grant, to be followed up, if possible, by evidence tending to show that the grant so contemplated and begun was actually executed, issued, and delivered. ’ ’ This court, in consequence of such erroneous instruction, reversed the judgment of the Circuit Court, and granted the plaintiff a new trial. It thus appears that this court then construed the [148]*148entry or memorandum in the records of the Colonial Government in the Land Office, and held that it was not a patent or grant, and was therefore inoperative in itself to take the land out of the category of waste and unappropriated land. "When such decision was made and certified to the Circuit Court, the legal character and effect of said entry or memorandum was henceforth res adjudieata, and not further open for question or reconsideration by the Circuit Court, or even by this court.

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Bluebook (online)
21 S.E. 658, 91 Va. 143, 1895 Va. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holleran-v-meisel-va-1895.