Miller v. Armentrout

82 S.E.2d 491, 196 Va. 32, 1954 Va. LEXIS 197
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 21, 1954
DocketRecord No. 4189
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 82 S.E.2d 491 (Miller v. Armentrout) 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
Miller v. Armentrout, 82 S.E.2d 491, 196 Va. 32, 1954 Va. LEXIS 197 (Va. 1954).

Opinion

Buchanan, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a suit in chancery for the partition of a tract of 143 acres of land alleged to have been owned by Fielding P. Sizer at the time of his death in 1895. The bill was filed in 1948 by Marion Armentrout and H. F. Wright. It averred that by his will, copy of which was exhibited with the bill, Sizer devised the land, after the life estate of his wife, to his three daughters, namely, Diana J. Arritt, Martha A. Whiting and Mary M. Lowry, and to his granddaughter, Emma Miller, and that “by successive conveyances” one-half of the one-fourth interest of Diana J. Arritt vested in complainants and the other one-half thereof in Floyd J. Arritt, her son.

^ The bill further alleged that the heirs of Mary M. Lowry, without naming any of them, conveyed their one-fourth interest in said land to John D. Bowen, who died after the death of his wife leaving three children who inherited this one-fourth interest, one of whom was Ellen Bowen Miller, the wife of John Miller, the appellant. It was alleged that Ellen Bowen Miller and John Miller lived on the property for some time and then separated, but John Miller remained thereon and now claimed the 143-acre tract by adverse possession; that his possession was not in fact adverse but had been taken and held in the right of his wife. The bill averred that the land could not be divided in kind and prayed for a sale thereof and division of the proceeds.

Two amended bills were filed, the first alleging that in view of the ambiguity of the Sizer will it was possible that the devisees therein took only a life estate with remainder to the heirs of Sizer,, who were made parties defendant. The second amended bill, after reciting that in the first two inadvertently no relief had been asked against John Miller, alleged that Miller’s claim constituted a cloud on the title of the real owners; that Miller did not own and never had owned any interest in the land and prayed that his claim [34]*34be removed as a cloud on the title and that Miller be removed from the property.

Miller filed his answer to the bill as amended denying that Sizer or any of the parties to the cause claiming under him had any title to the land, and alleging that in March, 1931, he had taken possession of the land, which was then open and unclaimed, had fenced and improved it, paid the taxes on it and had ever since held it adversely to all claimants and now claimed the fee simple title thereto by adverse possession.

Depositions were taken by both sides, those for the complainants attempting to identify the Sizer heirs and to show that Miller’s possession of the property was not adverse, and those for Miller attempting to prove that he had complete title by adverse possession.

By the decree appealed from the court held that Miller had failed to acquire title to the land by adverse possession, and that the fee simple title thereto was owned in undivided shares under the will of Fielding P. Sizer, as follows: One-eighth by complainants; one-fourth by John D. Bowen’s three children; one-eighth by Floyd J. Arritt; one-fourth by Martha A. Whiting, if living; and one-fourth by Emma Miller, if living. It was decreed that the land was not divisible in kind and it was ordered sold.

Miller made several assignments of error to this decree but we find it necessary to consider only the charge that the trial court erred in overruling his motion to dismiss the complainants’ bill after the proof was taken.

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Bluebook (online)
82 S.E.2d 491, 196 Va. 32, 1954 Va. LEXIS 197, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-armentrout-va-1954.