Reusens v. Lawson

31 S.E. 528, 96 Va. 285, 1898 Va. LEXIS 90
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 15, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 31 S.E. 528 (Reusens v. Lawson) 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
Reusens v. Lawson, 31 S.E. 528, 96 Va. 285, 1898 Va. LEXIS 90 (Va. 1898).

Opinion

Riely, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action of ejectment to recover two hundred and six acres of land, which the plaintiff asserts is a part of a large grant to General Henry Lee, assignee of John Miller, and within the survey for Miller upon which the grant was founded.

The case is before us for the second time. It was here before mainly upon matters of law. Reusens v. Lawson, 91 Va. 226. It is now before us chiefly upon questions of fact.

The defence was twofold: First, that the land was not within the Miller survey; and second, that, if covered by it, the defendants and those through whom they claim were purchasers for value, and had held adverse possession under color and claim of title beyond the statutory period of limitation.

Upon the plaintiff devolved the burden to prove by satisfactory evidence his title to the land; and to establish his right to recover possession thereof from the defendants.

One of the principal difficulties encountered by the plaintiff in making out his title was in establishing satisfactorily the beginning corner of the Miller survey. Unless this corner was established, he could not locate correctly or satisfactorily the Miller survey, and prove that the land in controversy is within its boundaries.

[288]*288It is not proposed to go into a minute discussion of the evidence, but merely to advert to some of its principal features.

The original survey for Miller and the grant to Lee describe the land embraced therein as follows : “ Beginning at a poplar and persimmon on the north side of Big Dan river, thence new lines N. 23 degrees E. 1280 poles to a chestnut tree, If. 40 degrees E. 500 poles to a black walnut tree, If. 40 degrees E. 1600 poles to a black walnut tree and hickory near a path, S. 45 degrees E. 1300 poles down the Mayo river to Magruder’s corner white oak, thence his line If. 20 degrees W. 36 poles to a white oak, &c., &c.”

The plaintiff claimed as the beginning corner of the Miller survey the point at A on Big Dan river, on the map made by Surveyor Branseome.

Ho witness introduced on the trial ever saw the poplar and persimmon which are described as the beginning corner, and there was no direct testimony to fix their particular location on the river. The plaintiff claimed to fix the point at A as tho beginning corner by reference to the deed from Henry O. Middleton, a grantee of the larger and northern part.of the Miller survey to Stephen Goings for 238 acres of the Lee grant. This deed was made in 1831, thirty-six years after the Miller survey. It describes the land conveyed to Goings as a part of the large survey of Russell (Miller), in Patrick county, on the Blue Ridge mountain, and as beginning at a large poplar on the North side of Big Dan river, “ the beginning corner of the said Russell survey.” The plaintiff claimed that a poplar stump at or near the point at A on the river was the poplar referred to as the beginning corner of the Russell survey. It was a “large poplar” in 1831, when the deed from Middleton to Goings was made, and stood near where the road crosses the river, but so far as the record discloses, no witness introduced ever saw the tree when standing, and there was no evidence that there was any mark on it, or on the log after the tree had fallen, or on the stump, to identify the tree as the [289]*289corner of a survey, or that it was a marked tree. The plaintiff contended that its identity was established by the ability to begin at it and run the lines of the Goings land according to the courses and distances given in the deed. This, according to the testimony, was not free from doubt.

On the other hand, there was much in the evidence to cast great doubt upon the poplar stump as the beginning corner of the Russell (Miller) survey. It is not on the north, but on the east side of the river. Surveyor Pedigo did not agree that it was the beginning corner, but commenced his survey thirty, seven poles farther down the river. The Ternan grant adjoins the Lee grant, and the McLean survey upon which the Ternan grant was issued was made by the same person (Surveyor Stovall) who made the Miller survey, and at the same time. Both surveys have the same beginning corner. The McLean survey and Ternan grant begin at John Miller’s corner poplar on the north side of Big Dan river, and- thence run down the river “ as it meanders 640 poles to Wm. Carter’s corner beach at the mouth of Buzzard branch.” The branch, like the river, is a fixed natural monument. The corner trees (poplar and persimmon) at the beginning of the Miller survey not being found, and the location of the corner being in great doubt, it ought to be reached and located by running up the river as it meanders 640 poles from the mouth of Buzzard branch; but the testimony shows that a line so run would stop far short of the point at A; would not in truth go over half the distance.

If the point at A be in fact the beginning corner of the Miller survey, and the courses and distances thereof he thence run, the result should correspond with the requirements of the calls, but so far from this being the case, it appeared, on running from A the calls of that survey, that there was much in the result to negative the claim that the point at A was- the beginning of that survey.

The first call is IT. 23 degrees E. 1280 poles to a chestnut tree. Being run from the point at A, no corner was found [290]*290at B, the end of the call; chestnut timber was found there, hut no marked chestnut tree. The next call is hi. 40 degrees E. 500 poles to a black walnut tree. ISTo walnut tree or corner was found at the end of the line. The next call is if. 40 degrees E. 1600 poles, to black walnut tree and hickory, near a path. The distance of this call, if run out, would have gone down the Blue Ridge, and on the north side of Bull mountain, and away from Mayo river and the requirement of the next call. The plaintiff did not run out the distance, but stopped at Witt’s Spur path at the point at X), five hundred and sixteen poles short of the call. JSTo evidence of any corner was found at the path at D, and though the call was for a walnut tree, none was found, and the testimony was that at D the soil is not adapted to the growth of walnut timber, and that none was ever known to grow there. The fourth call is S. 45 degrees E. 1300 poles, down Mayo river, to Magruder’s corner white oak. The Magruder survey calls for several white oak corners in this vicinity, and to reach the “ fallen white oak,” which the plaintiff contended was the one referred to, the course and distance had to be changed. Instead of running S. 45 degrees E. 1300 poles, the line had to be run S. 35 degrees E. 1543 poles, in order to reach the “ fallen white oak.” Whether this white oak was the one referred to or the one farther South, marked “ white oak stump ” on the map, the evidence was contradictory, there being testimony before the jury that Middleton, in looking up the boundaries of the land, claimed the “ white oak stump ” as the Magruder white oak referred to in the Miller survey.

In addition to the discrepancies between the calls of the survey and the courses and distances which were run by Surveyor Branscome by direction of the plaintiff, there was much in the evidence to throw doubt upon his right to the parcel of land in dispute.

Starting at the point at A, which was contended for by the plaintiff as the beginning corner of the Miller survey, and [291]

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Bluebook (online)
31 S.E. 528, 96 Va. 285, 1898 Va. LEXIS 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reusens-v-lawson-va-1898.