Miller v. Miller

37 S.E. 792, 99 Va. 125, 1901 Va. LEXIS 18
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 17, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 37 S.E. 792 (Miller v. Miller) 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. Miller, 37 S.E. 792, 99 Va. 125, 1901 Va. LEXIS 18 (Va. 1901).

Opinion

Cardwell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

In March, 1898, Beuben Miller filed his bill in the Circuit Court of Buckingham county ag’ainst Hubbard Miller, in which the following averments are made: That .the plaintiff and his brother, the defendant, in the year 1819 purchased together, at the price of $391.81, a tract of 1311 acres of land situated in Buckingham county, sold at public auction by commissioners of the court in a certain chancery cause; that while the said land was purchased by him and his brother together, the bid was made in the name of his brother, Hubbard, and the sale reported and confirmed in his name, and the deed to the land made to him; that plaintiff was npt only a party to the purchase, but he paid the sum of $65.60 as a part of the purchase money, it being agreed and understood between him and his brother that he should be interested in the land to that extent; that plaintiff has always resided on said land with his brother, and shared with him in the cultivation and profits thereof, and a few years theretofore his brother laid off to him thirteen acres of the said land as his part, and put him in possession thereof, Avhicli said thirteen acres lies next to Little George’s creek, adjoining the lands of Bobert Bowling, Blanton and others, and was laid off by a regular line of partition, and plaintiff is now in possession of said thirteen acres, and has built upon and improved the same; that his brother now refuses to make plaintiff a deed of conveyance to the said thirteen acres, or to recognize in writing his right thereto, and is disposed to dispute his right to the same. The prayer of the bill is that the defendant be required to convey to the plaintiff the said thirteen acres of land.

The defendant answered the bill, and filed two special pleas thereto; the one setting up as a defence the statute of frauds, and the other the statute of limitations.

In his answer, the defendant admits that the plaintiff paid $60, as a part of the purchase money for the land in question, but [127]*127claims that he has no interest in the land, because of the fact that he had cut and sold from it railroad ties and tan bark in excess of the amount of the purchase money he had paid. He further admits that he once agreed to an arbitration by certain persons named to determine what interest the plaintiff had in the land; but claims that the arbitration was never completed, and that therefore he is not bound by anything the arbitrators did.

At the hearing of the cause on the pleadings, the depositions of witnesses and documentary evidence offered by the parties, the Circuit Court decreed “that the contract set ont in the bill and the proof to sustain the same are too vague, indefinite and uncertain to justify a decree for the enforcement of the said contract,” and dismissed the bill, requiring each party to pay his own costs. From this decree the plaintiff appealed to this court.

It is perfectly clear from the evidence in the cause, indeed, from appellee’s admissions, that, before the sale of the land in question, there was an agreement between him and appellant that they would buy the land together, the same to be bid in by appellee; that the two were to take and hold the land in the proportions that each paid for it; that, pursuant to this agreement, the appellant went into the possession of a certain portion of the land, paid a certain portion of the purchase money therefor—about one-tenth of the whole, including interest, taxes, etc.—and erected buildings, and made other improvements on the portion in his possession. Just when appellant made the payments, that he did make, does not fully appear, but they were made pursuant to the agreement that the two would buy the land together, and before the whole of the purchase money was paid, and appellee had taken a deed for the land to himself. The appellee, being the more prosperous of the two, paid much the larger part of the purchase money for the land. Owing to the fact that they are both illiterate and without business expe[128]*128rience, they conducted their transactions in an unbusiness-like manner; but appellee, at the start and down to the early part of 1897, a period of nearly eighteen years, fully recognized that appellant had an interest and an ownership in the land, and had the right to occupy that portion of it upon which he had built houses and made other improvements. The relations existing between them up to that time seem to have been harmonious, in fact, confidential; and in order to avoid trouble and difficulty, as appellee states, they, in the early part of 1897, mutually agreed that three persons of their own race and color, selected by them, and who were also unlettered, should go upon the land, and ascertain and determine all matters in dispute between the parties concerning the land, and that their decision should be accepted as final by both parties. These arbitrators, so selected, met on the premises, and, after hearing the statements and admissions of both appellant and appellee, determined that of the entire purchase money for the land, including interest, costs, etc., appellant had paid one-tenth—$67.50—and appellee the residue, and accordingly decided that one-tenth of the land, 18f acres, more or less, including the buildings and improvements put thereon by him,, belonged to appellant, and should be laid off to him, of which findings both parties were then apprised by the arbitrators. A short time afterwards, two of the arbitrators stepped off, as near as they could, as they testify, the appellant’s 13f acres, and laid off a line between his and appellee’s land, though the latter was not present when this line was laid off. • After all this had been done the appellee seems to have concluded that he would not acquiesce in the settlement of the matter by the arbitrators, whose decision he had agreed to abide by, but would deny appellant’s right to any portion of the land.

"While these proceedings by the arbitrators are not in strict compliance with chapter 143 of the Code, providing for an arbitration and award in such controversies, what then took place not only corroborates thoroughly the statements of the appellant [129]*129as to his contract with appellee concerning the purchase and ownership of the land, but appellee should be held bound thereby as to the amount of the purchase money for the land paid by appellant and as to how the dividing line separating his part of the land from that of appellee should be located.

In Jones v. Dewey, 17 N. H. 596, it was held that parties may agree to settle by arbitration the division line between their lots of land, and an award, made in pursuance of a submission for that purpose, will bind the parties, although the arbitrators make a parol award, where the submission does not require it to be in writing. The opinion in that case further says: “ It is wholly immaterial whether the submission that was entered into in this case was by deed or by parol, written or unwritten; and, unless the terms of submission required the award to be in one or the other of the forms indicated, the arbitrators were at liberty to make it in such form as they might see fit to adopt.”

Under the circumstances of this case, neither the statute of frauds nor the statutes of limitations can avail appellee.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
37 S.E. 792, 99 Va. 125, 1901 Va. LEXIS 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-miller-va-1901.