Nos. 85-1715(l), 85-1716

792 F.2d 1278
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 8, 1986
Docket1278
StatusPublished

This text of 792 F.2d 1278 (Nos. 85-1715(l), 85-1716) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nos. 85-1715(l), 85-1716, 792 F.2d 1278 (4th Cir. 1986).

Opinion

792 F.2d 1278

Doris Kay DEVERS, Appellee,
v.
CHATEAU CORPORATION, C.F. Prospect, Inc., Co-partners d/b/a
Prospect House Associates; Prospect House Unit Homeowners
Association; John Does One (1) through Three Hundred (300);
Lots Numbered One (1) to Sixty-Two (62), (except Lots 34
and 1/2 of 35) Inclusive, in Block Numbered Seven (7); and
Lots Eighteen (18) to Twenty-Six (26), Inclusive, in Block
Number Eight (8) Radnor Heights Subdivision, as the same
appears duly dedicated, platted and recorded among the land
records of Arlington County, Virginia, in Deed Book 110, at
Page 576; Theodore A. Adams; Jeanie M. Adams; Unified
Industries; Elizabeth Tulos, Appellants,
v.
John DALONAS, Third-Party Defendant.
Doris Kay DEVERS, Appellant,
v.
CHATEAU CORPORATION, C.F. Prospect, Inc., Co-partners d/b/a
Prospect House Associates; Prospect House Unit Homeowners
Association; John Does One (1) through Three Hundred (300);
Lots Numbered One (1) to Sixty-Two (62), (except Lots 34
and 1/2 of 35), Inclusive, in Block Numbered Seven (7);
and Lots Eighteen (18) to Twenty-Six (26), Inclusive, in
Block Number Eight (8) Radnor Heights Subdivision, as the
same appears duly dedicated, platted and recorded among the
land records of Arlington County, Virginia, in Deed Book
110, at Page 576; Theodore A. Adams; Jeanie M. Adams;
Unified Industries, Appellees,
v.
John DALONAS, Third-Party Defendant.

Nos. 85-1715(L), 85-1716.

United States Court of Appeals,
Fourth Circuit.

Argued Jan. 9, 1986.
Decided June 17, 1986.
Rehearing and Rehearing En Banc Denied Sept. 8, 1986.

Samuel W. Hixon, III, Richmond, Va. (Channing J. Martin; Williams, Mullen & Christian, P.C., Richmond, Va., David G. Fiske, John P. Corrado, Thomas & Fiske, P.C., Alexandria, Va., on brief), for appellants Chateau Corp. and C.F. Prospect, Inc.

Peter K. Stackhouse, Tolbert, Smith, Fitzgerald & Ramsey, Arlington, Va., on brief, for appellants Theodore A. Adams, Jeanie M. Adams and Unified Industries.

Jeffrey Rosenfeld and James G. Smalley (Falcone & Rosenfeld, Ltd., Fairfax, Va., Gwendolyn S. Whipp, Fairfax, Va., Patricia A. Smith, Donald G. Ferrell, on brief), for appellee Doris Kay Devers.

Before MURNAGHAN and WILKINSON, Circuit Judges, and HAYNSWORTH, Senior Circuit Judge.

WILKINSON, Circuit Judge:

This case involves one scoundrel and several innocent parties. The scoundrel, Malcolm Devers, conveyed his substantial interest in a property without the knowledge or consent of his wife, and with the intent to deceive the purchasers as to his marital status. The question, as it often is in commercial conveyances, is how to do justice among the innocents. Here, that path lies in assessing as accurately as possible the value of that to which the wife's admitted dower rights attach and the true nature of what Malcolm Devers held during coverture.

Doris Devers brought this action for assignment of her dower rights in a piece of property known as Radnor Heights against Chateau Corporation, C.F. Prospect, Inc., and the individual owners of apartments built on the land (hereinafter "Chateau"). The district court found that the greatest interest held by Malcolm Devers during his marriage to Doris was a fee simple subject to a 99-year lease. We agree with that characterization of Doris Devers' dower interest. The second question raised by the lawsuit concerns the value of the reversion at the end of that lease, in 2062. The district court valued the reversionary interest in 1974 at $8,000,000. We believe this figure substantially overstates the worth of the long-term reversionary interest in the property, and we reverse that portion of the judgment of the district court.

I.

Malcolm Devers owned a piece of real estate in Arlington County, Virginia, known as Radnor Heights. In 1962, Devers leased the property for 99 years to Congressional Apartments, Inc. for $5,000 a month. Congressional Apartments assigned the lease to Lawrence Brandt and Donald Brown, who built an apartment building on the land. Devers retained a reversionary interest in both the land and the apartment building.

In 1963, Malcolm married Doris. In 1971, he conveyed the Radnor Heights property to Devers Properties, Inc., a Virginia corporation in which he was the sole stockholder. In 1972, Devers Properties conveyed the property to Brandt and Brown for $705,000, and cancelled the 99 year lease. Doris was not a party to, and was not aware of, either the 1971 or the 1972 conveyance. Brandt and Brown later conveyed the Radnor Heights property to Chateau Corporation and C.F. Prospect, Inc., which subsequently converted the apartment building to condominiums.

Malcolm Devers died in 1974. In Virginia, a surviving spouse is entitled to a dower interest in one-third of any real estate of which his or her spouse was seised during coverture. Va.Code Sec. 64.1-19 (1973). When Doris married Malcolm in 1963, he had a fee simple interest subject to the lease in the Radnor Heights property, or in practical terms, the right to receive $5,000 in rent every month, and the reversion of the land and the building in 2062.

II.

We wish to make clear at the outset the interest to which dower attached. Doris Devers contends that Malcolm had a fee simple absolute interest in the property during coverture. She claims it was improper for the district court to limit her dower to the right to receive rents and the right to the reversion. We disagree. After 1963, Malcolm Devers had no greater estate than the fee simple subject to the 99 year lease.

Under Virginia law, a "surviving spouse shall be entitled to a dower or curtesy interest in fee simple of one-third of all the real estate whereof the deceased spouse ... was at any time seized during coverture of an estate of inheritance." Va.Code Sec. 64.1-19. In 1963, Malcolm was seised of the Radnor Heights property in fee simple absolute; a lease for a term of years does not interrupt a landowner's seisin for purposes of determining dower. 1 R. Minor, The Law of Real Property Sec. 261 at 330 (2d ed. Ribble 1928). However, the description of seisin does not define the interest in which the surviving spouse has dower. Minor continues with the following illustration at 331:

[S]hould the man lease only for a term of years, then marry and die before the term has expired, the wife is dowable, for the husband has never parted with the freehold or with the inheritance. She does not indeed oust the tenant for years whose claim is paramount to hers, but she is dowable in the reversion of which the husband is seised during the coverture, and as the owner of one-third of the reversion for her life she has one-third of the rent, which follows the reversion.

See also C. Scribner, A Treatise on the Law of Dower, Vol. 2 at 776 (1883); Campbell v. Lynch, 81 W.Va. 374, 94 S.E. 739, 744 (1918).

Had Malcolm died without conveying the property to Brandt and Brown, Doris would thus have been entitled to a life estate in one-third of the reversion and the rent.

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792 F.2d 1278, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nos-85-1715l-85-1716-ca4-1986.