Powell v. Magee

60 S.E.2d 897, 191 Va. 315, 1950 Va. LEXIS 222
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 6, 1950
DocketRecord 3689
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 60 S.E.2d 897 (Powell v. Magee) 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
Powell v. Magee, 60 S.E.2d 897, 191 Va. 315, 1950 Va. LEXIS 222 (Va. 1950).

Opinion

Spratley, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This proceeding was instituted by Maggie Beverly Powell, hereinafter referred to as the complainant, against E. E. Magee, in his own right and as attorney in fact for E. A. LaFrage, seeking an injunction against the defendant, his agents, and servants from interfering with the complainant in the full use and enjoyment of a roadway extending from the lands of the complainant through the land of the defendants to a public highway. The bill alleged that the complainant was entitled to use the said road as an easement both by necessity and by prescription.

E. E. Magee, in his own right and as attorney in fact for E. A. LaFrage, answered denying all of the allegations of *317 the bill. The case was heard upon the bill, the answer and depositions, after which the trial court viewed and examined the premises. The relief prayed for was denied and complainant brought this appeal.

The parcels of land owned by the complainant and by Magee and LaFrage were each a part of a larger tract, formerly known as Ingleside, containing 597 acres, owned by R. T. Wilson. Wilson disposed of Ingleside by eight separate conveyances at different times. His last deed, dated August 1, 1903, conveyed a 52-acre tract, the land now owned by the complainant, to David Beverly, her father. This land is sometimes hereinafter referred to as the Beverly-Powell tract. Theretofore, by deed of December 6, 1899, Wilson conveyed to James C. Robinson a tract of 60 acres, lying immediately adjacent to the easterly side of the land conveyed to Beverly. On December 7, 1899, Robinson sold and conveyed his 60 acres to Sam White. The 60 acres were subsequently acquired by E. E. Magee, sometimes known as E. E. McGhee, by deed dated February 13, 1932. Magee conveyed the same land to E. A. LaFrage on December 11, 1933. On February 4, 1943, Magee, as attorney in fact for LaFrage, conveyed to Lester Roberts 35.75 acres of the 60-acre tract, lying to the extreme east and abutting on State Highway No. 615, retaining 24.25 acres, lying on the west and next to the eastern boundary of the land of complainant. In the deed to Roberts the grantor expressly reserved a roadway over the land conveyed, from a gate located on the division line between the land of the grantee and the land retained, running easterly in a straight line to State Highway No. 615, passing to the south of a house on the Roberts’ land. A plat of the land conveyed, showing the roadway, was recorded.

The 52-acre tract of complainant is located in Greensville county. It is bounded on the north and west by a lake known as Slagle’s Pond, on the south by the land of Sidney Robinson, and on the east by the lands of Magee or LaFrage, the 24.25 acres sometimes referred to as the Magee-LaFrage *318 tract. Both the latter tract and the 35.75 acres of Lester Roberts separate complainant’s land from State Highway-No. 615. The right of way claimed runs over the northern edge of the Magee-LaFrage tract. The lands of the complainant at no point touch a public highway, or a right of way connecting therewith.

The evidence shows that in 1899, when R. T. Wilson conveyed the 60-acre tract to Sam White, as one parcel of land, there was a roadway of sufficient width to accommodate ordinary vehicles running from the land retained by the grantor, the Beverly-Powell tract, across the 60-acre tract, a distance of about one-half mile to State Highway No. 615. This roadway served Wilson and the subsequent owners and occupants of the dominant tract, the Beverly-Powell land, as their only outlet until about 1940, when the present owner, or the attorney in fact for the owner, of the Magee-LaFrage land, the servient land, closed it by erecting across it a gate, on or near the western boundary line of the land of Roberts. Complainant was thereafter required to cross defendants’ land at another place, on a detour from the original roadway. There is some testimony that the detour is unsuitable for vehicular traffic.

Sidney Robinson, born in 1898, and who had lived all of his life on the farm adjoining complainant’s land on the south, testified that the road in dispute had been constantly used by the occupants of the Beverly-Powell tract as far back as he could remember until Magee closed it about two years ago; that it was the only roadway leading from the premises to the public road, and there was no other “possible way” for its occupants to get out; that the complainant and her father had helped maintain the road; that its course had never been changed; and that, 30 years ago, he had heard Sam White, who then owned and lived on the 60-acre tract obtained from James C. Robinson, say that he couldn’t close the road because David Beverly had a right to use it.

Maggie Beverly Powell testified^ that she was “raised up” on her tract and that there was no other roadway from it to *319 the public highway, save the one in dispute; that she and her family had travelled it until a gate was put across it by Magee; that her father sometimes helped to keep the road in condition; and that she had never heard any question about her right to use it until Magee objected.

Nick Avent, 64 years of age, who had lived all of his life • near the lands in question, said that the roadway had been in use “ever since I have been here;” that there never “had been any other roadway leading from the Beverly farm to the highway;” and that he had never heard any objection to its use until Magee bought the land over which it ran.

Three other witnesses testified that they had been familiar with the premises for 45 or 50 years, or more, during all of which time it had been used by occupants of the Beverly-Powell tract, and that they knew of no other roadway leading from it to the highway.

Several of the witnesses explained that in testifying that the owners of the Beverly-Powell tract had permission to use the road they meant that they had never heard of any objection to anyone using it before Magee erected a gate across it.

The roadway was established when both the dominant and servient estates belonged to the same owner. It was, according to the evidence, thé only outlet left to Wilson when he sold the 60-acre tract to White and retained the 52-acre tract for himself, later sold to David Beverly.

Magee testified that when he purchased his land in 1933, the Beverly-Powell farm was “dormant,” and while he knew of the existence of the roadway, little, if any, use was made of it by the occupants of complainant’s land; that in 1937 he constructed a fish pond near the roadway and thereafter persons using the road going to and from complainant’s land muddied the waters of his pond and damaged'his orchard; that neither complainant nor her father assisted him in maintaining the road; and that it had become unfit for use, so he arranged for a detour over other land about 40 feet from the original roadway. He admitted that the roadway, as *320 claimed by complainant, was used until 1940, at which time he erected a gate to stop passage over it. He did not know how the road had been originally established.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 S.E.2d 897, 191 Va. 315, 1950 Va. LEXIS 222, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/powell-v-magee-va-1950.