McFaddin v. McFaddin

129 S.E. 248, 143 Va. 90, 1925 Va. LEXIS 249
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 17, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 129 S.E. 248 (McFaddin v. McFaddin) 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
McFaddin v. McFaddin, 129 S.E. 248, 143 Va. 90, 1925 Va. LEXIS 249 (Va. 1925).

Opinion

West, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The bill in this ease was filed by Mary E. McFaddin,. appellee, against Abel A. McFaddin, appellant, for the purpose of enforcing specific performance of a parol contract for the sale of appellant’s interest in 200 acres of land, known as the home place, in Washington county, Yirginia. The court granted specific performance and appellant is here complaining.

Under the will of their father, J. B. McFaddin, who died in 1910, Mary E. McFaddin took in severalty the mansion house, on the home place, with yard and garden, one-half of the barn and one-half of the spring, “in consideration of money which I am due to her and which was paid into the place.” Abel A. McFaddin took in severalty under the will the house he built thereon, including yard and garden, and the other [92]*92one-half of the barn and the other one-half of the spring. All the remainder of the farm was devised to Mary and Abel jointly, subject to the payment of a legacy of $900 to their married sister, Edna J. Fleenor, and a legacy of $900 to the infant children of their deceased brother,. Charles McFaddin, namely, James, Rhuby and Ada McFaddin.

Upon the death of their mother, Mrs. J. B. McFaddin, her “mountain farm” in Russell county descended to .appellant, appellee and the children of Charles MeFaddin, deceased, the children taking one-third and appellant and appellee one-third each.

The appellant complains first that the decree under review is not sufficiently definite and positive.

The decree is more general in its terms than is usual in such eases, but it is sufficiently specific to afford the relief prayed for. This assignment is, therefore, without merit.

The remaining assignment of error, and the one principally relied upon, is that the court erred in not ■denying the prayer of the bill and dismissing the same at the cost of the complainant.

As decided by this court in Wright v. Pucket, 22 Gratt. (63 Va.) 370, and East v. Atkinson, 117 Va. 490, 493, 85 S. E. 468, and sustained by authorities there cited, in a suit for specific performance of a parol contract for the sale of lands, where the statute. ■of frauds is applicable, the court will not grant relief, unless the following facts appear:

1. The parol agreement relied upon must be certain and definite in its terms.

2. The acts proved in part performance must refer to, result from, or be made in pursuance of the agreement proved.

[93]*933. The agreement must have been so far executed that a refusal of full execution would operate as a fraud upon the party and place him in a situation which does not lie in compensation.

The opinion of the learned judge, Hon. Henry W. Holt, who decided this case in the lower court, a copy •of which is filed with the record, expresses so nearly •our views that, with some slight modifications, we hereby adopt it as the opinion of this court, as follows:

“1st. The contract must be certain and definite -in its terms. Was it?
“Plaintiff’s version thereof is set forth on page 3 of her deposition and is that she bought from her brother, .A. A. McFaddin, his interest in the home place, and it was to pay him therefor her one-third interest in certain lands in Russell county (afterwards to be sold) and two-ninths of the interest of the three children of their dead brother, C. J. McFaddin, therein, or to ; state it differently, A. A. MeFaddin, who owned this land, together with his sister, and the children of C. J. .McFaddin, was to receive the entire proceeds thereof, less the interest of one of the C. J. McFaddin children. She was to pay two legacies of $900 each, one to Edna Fleenor and one to the children of C. J. Mc-Faddin. There, two bequests were given in the father’s will and plaintiff and defendant who took thereunder were required to pay them. They were made charges upon their interest in their father’s estate given them by the will. It thus appears that of the $1,800 assured, plaintiff would have had to pay $900 anyhow.
“Defendant’s statement as to what the contract was is set out on page 17 of his deposition. He says that he was to get the entire proceeds of the Russell county land and was to pay the plaintiff for their nephew, Jimmie, son of C. J. McFaddin, $400. Plaintiff was [94]*94t.o pay the legacies of Edna Fleenor and to O. J. MeFaddin’s children noted above.
“When sifted down, the only difference between these litigants is that the defendant claims he was to get the entire proceeds arising from the sale of the Russell county land, less $400, while the plaintiff' says that he was to get the proceeds therefrom, less a one-ninth interest. There is little difference between-a parol contract admitted and a contract in writing.
“That there was a contract is certain. That the-terms agreed upon were certain is also true. Both the plaintiff and defendant testify to a definite contract and their statements differ from each other only in respect to one item.
“A. A. McFaddin says that his sister repudiated it just before the sale of the Russell county land, and that this repudiation was made with ‘bitterness.’ See page 6 of his deposition.
“If this bitterness has been manifested and the contract broken by Miss McFaddin in the manner'testified to by her brother, it is hardly probable that she-would then have loaned to him without security all that came to her from the sale and that she should never thereafter have demanded interest, and that he should never have offered to pay any.
“The court is, therefore, led to the conclusion that the contract of sale was the contract testified to by Miss McFaddin, and that it has never been abrogated.
“2nd. Were the acts of part performance relied' upon made in pursuance of the contract? They were. The sale of the Russell county land was on its face-made upon petition of infants by Miss McFaddin, their aunt, who owned as we have seen a one-third, interest therein, but she also was interested in it that she might apply her interest in the proceeds to amount. [95]*95due her brother on her purchase. Payments made by her to her brother and credits taken were made directly .in pursuance of the contract and such possession was taken as the nature of the ease permitted.
“In the argument the question of possession was presented ably and in great detail. It was said that change of possession is necessary in order to support :a suit for specific performance and that as between joint tenants there could be no such change where the tenant purchasing was already in possession of an undivided interest. This is the general law. In this case the sister was given under the will the mansion house, yard, etc., of the father in fee. She was given a one-half interest in a barn and a one-half interest in a spring and she was given an undivided one-half interest in the remainder of the home place jointly with her brother, the defendant. The defendant on his part was given the home which he had built on a part of this McFaddin home place in fee. He was given also a half interest in said barn and said spring and in the residue of their father’s Washington county farm he was given a joint interest with his sister, the plaintiff.

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Bluebook (online)
129 S.E. 248, 143 Va. 90, 1925 Va. LEXIS 249, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcfaddin-v-mcfaddin-va-1925.