Lennig's Ex'rs v. White

20 S.E. 831, 1 Va. Dec. 873, 1894 Va. LEXIS 91
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedDecember 22, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 20 S.E. 831 (Lennig's Ex'rs v. White) 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
Lennig's Ex'rs v. White, 20 S.E. 831, 1 Va. Dec. 873, 1894 Va. LEXIS 91 (Va. 1894).

Opinion

Richardson, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a decree of the circuit court of Rockingham county rendered on the 31st of October, 1892, in the suit in equity therein then pending wherein John E. [875]*875White was plaintiff and Clement B. Barclay and others were defendants. The object of the suit was to have partition, under the provisions of section 2562 of the Virginia Code of 1887, of a tract of 93,000 acres of land lying in the counties of Rockingham and Pendleton, the latter county now being in the state of West Virginia, but formerly in Virginia, which tract of land was granted by the commonwealth of Virginia, in the year 1796, to John Barclay, a citizen of the city of Philadelphia and state of Pennsylvania. The substantial facts appearing by the record are these: On the 5th day of March, 1796, there was granted by the commonwealth of Virginia to John Barclay, in his own right for one moiety, and as assignee of Matthew Gambill for the other moiety, a tract of 93,000 acres of land, lying partly in the county of Rockingham, in the state of Virginia, and partly in the county of Pendleton, now in the state of West Virginia, but formerly also in the state of Virginia. The tract of land thus granted to John Barclay in 1796 was in the year 1806 sold by Joseph Scott, marshal for the district of Virginia, in the name and as the property of John Berkeley, as delinquent for the nonpayment of the United States direct land tax due thereon ; and at said sale H. J. Gambill became the purchaser of said tract of land; and by deed dated the 1st day of June, 1806,-said marshal conveyed the said tract of land to said Gambill, the deed reciting the authority under which said sale and conveyance was made ; and said deed was recorded in December, 1806. Thereafter the said tract of land was conveyed by the successive deeds now to be referred to : By deed from H. J. Gambill and wife to Asher Waterman, dated December 16, 1806, and recorded December 16, 1806 ; by deed from Asher Waterman’s heirs to Augustus Waterman, dated June 8, 1827, and recorded June 8, 1827 j by deed from Augustus Waterman’s devisees to the appellants’ testator, Charles Lennig, dated July 9, 1859, and recorded July 9, 1859. All these conveyances are set forth in [876]*876the plaintiff’s bill, with the simple comment that all of them “are deeds of special warranty only” ; a circumstance of no significance whatever touching the real merits of this controversy. The bill sets out at great length the genealogical history of the Barclay family, and alleges that by deed bearing date the 8th day of May, 1890, from De Grasse Eox and Harriet Biddle, his wife, who is a remote descendant of said grantee, John Barclay, which.deed has been duly recorded in the clerk’s office of the county court of Buckingham county, the complainant is the owner of an undivided one-ninth interest in said tract of land, and is desirous of having a partition of same in kind, if such • partition can be had with due regard to the interest of all concerned, and, if this be not practicable, of having a sale of said land, or at least that portion of the same that lies in the state of Virginia, and a distribution of the proceeds. And the bill further alleges ‘‘that your con plainant finds, however, that by an agreement dated the 6th day of March, 1890, one Charles Lennig [the appellants’ testator] has undertaken to sell and convey to the J. P. Houck Tanning Company, a corporation under the laws of the state of Virginia, upon certain terms and conditions, all the tan bark to be found in and upon said tract of land; and the said company has, through its agents and employees, entered upon the same, and is now actively engaged in cutting down the chestnut trees and other growing timber upon the said tract of land from which said tan bark can be procured, and, unless restrained by the court, will utterly destroy said timber, to the irreparable damage of the freehold.” And a copy of said.paper is filed, marked “B,” as an exhibit with the bill. The bill further sets forth that from said agreement it appears that the contract in respect to the sale of the right to cut and carry away said tan bark was originally with J. P. Houck and J. C. Steigle, who assigned their interest in the same to England & Bryan, who in turn assigned the same to the said J. P. Houck Tanning [877]*877Company. And the bill further sets forth that the said Lennig, in said agreement, professes to have acquired said tract of land from the heirs of Augustus Waterman, deceased, and, tracing this claim of title, your complainant finds it is derived through Augustus Waterman and the heirs of Asher Waterman, deceased, by deeds, with covenants of special warranty only, from Henry J. Gambill, who bought the whole of said tract of land, for the sum of §8.09, from Joseph Scott, marshal, as aforesaid, under a sale made of the same as the property of John Berkeley (not Barclay), as delinquent, for the nonpayment of the United States direct land tax, and received a deed therefor ; and thus practically admitting a good title in Gambill and those claiming under him. But the plaintiff, in his bill, proceeds to negative this seeming admission, as follows : “That, as your complainant is informed and believes, these tax sales and deeds have been held to be illegal and invalid so often and so uniformly by the court as scarcely to constitute them sufficiently strong to make even a color of title to any lands referred to in them. That, as he avers in this case, the sale deed aforesaid were had and made, without the formalities required by law, as the property of John Berkeley (not Barclay), under a law itself unconstitutional and void, the same, and all deeds made in pursuance of and under said sale and deed, must be set aside, canceled, and annulled.” In this way, and only in this way, does the plaintiff in his bill attempt to assail the title of the appellants’ testator. Then, after reciting the several deeds of conveyance hereinbefore referred to, the bill proceeds: “That in addition to the claims asserted to said tract of land under said deeds, and under the agreement aforesaid with the £J. P. Houck Tanning Company,’ your complainant finds that the corporation known as the £Eoyal Land Company of Virginia’ has placed upon record a deed of trust or mortgage, bearing date the 2d day of October, 1876, and recorded on the 20th of January, [878]*8781877, under which it professes to convey said tract of land, as the owner thereof, to the Fidelity Trust, Insurance and Safe-Deposit Company of Philadelphia, also a corporation, in trust to secure certain bonded debts of said Royal Land Co. He also finds an agreement of record between Charles Lennig and the Potomac and Ohio Railroad Company, a corporation, dated April 20, 1881, and recorded on the 1st day of September, 1882 ; also an agreement between Charles Lennig and R. N. Pool, dated June 27, 1883, and recorded on the 3d day of March, 1885, under which certain interests in the title of said Lennig are conveyed to said Pool; also a contract between R. N. Pool and James Boyce, dated February 27, 1885, and recorded on the 30th of March, 1885, under which the said R. N. Pool conveyed to the said James Boyce the undivided moiety of his rights under his contract with the said Charles Lennig ; and also a further contract between the said R. N. Pool and Samuel E. Grriscom, dated the 1st day of September, 1888, and recorded on the 6th day of January, 1890, under which the said Pool conveyed to said Grriscom all interest then owned by him in the Lennig tract, among others.

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Bluebook (online)
20 S.E. 831, 1 Va. Dec. 873, 1894 Va. LEXIS 91, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lennigs-exrs-v-white-va-1894.