Pasley v. English

10 Va. 236
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedAugust 23, 1853
StatusPublished

This text of 10 Va. 236 (Pasley v. English) 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
Pasley v. English, 10 Va. 236 (Va. 1853).

Opinion

Lee, J.

This is an action of ejectment upon the demise of George, Elizabeth and Julia English, originally instituted in the Circuit court of Franklin county, and thence transferred to the Circuit court of [237]*237Roanoke county. Upon a previous trial of the cause there was a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for the land in controversy, and a motion was made by the defendant for a new trial, upon the ground that the verdict was contrary to the evidence. This motion having been overruled, the defendant excepted to the opinion, setting out in his bill of exceptions, all the evidence on both sides, instead of stating the facts proved on the trial; and the court having rendered judgment upon the verdict in favor of the plaintiff, the case was brought to this court by a supersedeas. This court was of opinion that the Circuit court had erred in refusing the new trial, and accordingly the judgment was reversed, the verdict set aside and the case remanded to the Circuit court for a new trial to be had. The case will be found reported in the 5th volume of Grattan’s Reports, commencing at page 141.

In the j udgment of this court certified to the Circuit court, it was declared that the parol testimony of the plaintiff in error ought to be excluded from consideration ; but that notwithstanding such exclusion the defendants in error had failed to show that Gwin Dudley under whom they claimed, acquired title to the land in controversy from William Mead under whom the plaintiff in error claimed; and that they had also failed to show that they and those under whom they claimed, had at any time a sufficient adversary possession thereof to sustain their action; and therefore that the Circuit court had erred in refusing to grant to the plaintiff in error a new trial of the cause.

After the case went back to the Circuit court a new trial took place, upon which the defendants in error gave in evidence the deed from William Mead to Gwin Dudley, the will of Gwin Dudley and the deed from Gwin Dudley and wife and Lewis Dudley to the defendants in error; all of which had been read on the [238]*238former trial. They also gave the plat and certificate survey of the premises in controversy made by Bernard under an order of the court, in evi,jence) together with the parol testimony of witnesses substantially the same as that given upon the former trial. No material difference whatever, is perceived between the parol testimony introduced upon this occasion and that upon the former trial. A reason is assigned why Dudley bought the same land of Ryan which had been assigned him in the partition with Mead, which was not alluded to on the former trial ; and there was some proof that the line between the white oak at F and the pine had been marked several times; and one of the witnesses spoke of having seen aman, who .said he was processioning, go along part of said line; but there was'no proof of any notice of such processioning either to Mead or to the public. The defendants in error also gave some proof as to the course of the line of the deed from Mead to Dudley from the red oak at Gr and as to the growths of the timber over the marks upon that and other lines on the plat. But there was no other or additional testimony offered by them in support of 'the adversary possession claimed to have been taken and held by them of the land in controversy. Upon this material question the evidence given on the first trial on the -part of the defendants in error, was fully as strong, and in substance just the same as that given on this occasion. The plaintiff in error on his part deduced Ms title regularly from William Mead the common source, and gave evidence tending to prove that while the conveyances from Mead under which he claimed did embrace the land in controversy, that of the defendants in error derived from the common source, did not. He also gave evidence that Grwin Dudley the elder acknowledged the blazed line from the black oak at H to the red oak at I to be the division line between [239]*239himself and Mead, and that after the death of Gwin Dudley the elder, between the years 1830 and 1834, Gwin Dudley the younger, who then claimed the land under the will of Gwin Dudley senior, only claimed to the old blazed line HI, and did not claim any part of the land in controversy. And he gave other testimony strongly conflicting in some respects with that offered by the defendants in error, and tending to overthrow their pretensions. But in the view that I take of this case it is unnecessary to go into the details of the testimony on the part of the plaintiff in error, or to notice it further than to say that its tendency certainly was directly to impugn the title set up by the defendants in error, and to weaken the case of claim of title and adversary possession upon which they had necessarily to found themselves to recover in this action.

After the evidence had been closed the plaintiff in error moved the court to instruct the jury:

1st. That they must disregard all the parol evidence introduced by the defendants in error to prove their right to land not embraced within the boundaries of the deed from William Mead to Gwin Dudley for the two hundred acres of land, which they had given in evidence in support of their title.

2dly. That if they believed from the evidence that the boundaries of the deed from William Mead to Gwin Dudley did not include the land in controversy, and that the boundaries of the deed from Carper and wife to the plaintiff in error did include the land in controversy, they must find for the latter.

These instructions the court gave, but with the following modification, moved by the counsel for the defendants in error:

Unless the jury should be satisfied from the evidence that a division line was marked and agreed upon as the boundary between their lands by William Mead [240]*240and Gwin Dudley, under whom the parties claimed, respectively, and that the said Gwin Dudley had taken and held up to said line, and that he and those claiming under him had so held peaceable and uninterrupted possession up to said line, exercising open and notorious acts of ownership over the land on their side, including the land in controversy, for a period of twenty years and upwards before the bringing of this suit, and that the said William Mead and those claiming under him, had acquiesced in such their possession : in which event they ought to find for the plaintiff, (the defendant in error,) although they might be satisfied from the evidence that the deed under which Gwin Dudley and those claiming title under him asserted title, did not in fact cover or embrace the land in controversy: But at the same time instructed the jury that merely constructing saw pits would not amount to an adversary possession against William Mead and those claiming under him, sufficient to entitle the plaintiff to recover by force of an adversary possession.

To this modification of the instructions moved, by him the plaintiff in error excepted ; and a verdict and judgment having been rendered against him, he applied for and obtained a supersedeas from this court.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 Va. 236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pasley-v-english-va-1853.