Rhymer v. Government of the Virgin Islands

176 F. Supp. 338, 4 V.I. 63, 1959 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2790
CourtDistrict Court, Virgin Islands
DecidedJuly 27, 1959
DocketCivil No. 20-1959; Civil No. 32-1959
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 176 F. Supp. 338 (Rhymer v. Government of the Virgin Islands) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, Virgin Islands primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rhymer v. Government of the Virgin Islands, 176 F. Supp. 338, 4 V.I. 63, 1959 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2790 (vid 1959).

Opinion

HASTIE, Circuit Judge

Two actions are consolidated in this proceeding. Civil No. 20 is an action by Isaac Rhymer against the Government of the Virgin Islands and two of its senior officers who are concerned with the allocation and transfer of homestead plots. The plaintiff asks that the Government be required to transfer to him by proper deed legal title to homestead Plot No. 7 Estate Anna’s Fancy. In the action Valeria Quetel has been joined as a third-party defendant and an adverse claimant to the same homestead plot. In her pleading Mrs. Quetel also asks for the adjacent Plot No. 6. In the second action the Government of the Virgin Islands has sued both Isaac Rhymer and Valeria Que-tel asking a declaratory judgment to adjudicate various issues and questions which have arisen in the interpretation of homestead laws and restrictions incorporated in the deed under which the Government acquired the Anna’s Fancy land for resale as homesteads. Most of these questions are also involved in Civil No. 20, so that the two cases call for decision on essentially the same issues.

The area involved here is a subdivision of Estate Anna’s Fancy. Ordinance (Bill No. 311) of the Municipal Council of St. Thomas and St. John, approved November 18, 1953, authorized the Governor of the Virgin Islands to purchase parcels 1 and 2 of Estate Anna’s Fancy for subdivision and resale through the Municipal Land Authority in manner consistent with the provisions of the then existing homestead laws. Thereafter the Governor purchased the tract from its private owner under a deed which incorporated restrictions upon resale derived from the Ordinance of November 18, 1953 and the antecedent homestead laws. Although there has been argument here whether the [66]*66deed or the statute determines the status and priority to be accorded applicants for plots within the tract in question, this question is academic because, as concerns the problems here involved, the restrictions of the deed and the requirements of the statute are consistent and to an extent overlapping, and both are applicable.

There is no significant conflict in the evidence concerning the circumstances which give rise to the present claims of Isaac Rhymer and Valeria Quetel. Indeed, most of the facts have been stipulated. The Court now finds the essential facts to be as follows:

FINDINGS OF FACT

1. On November 27, 1953 Elisa Margarita Rosa Morch conveyed parcels 1 and 2 of Estate Anna’s Fancy to the Municipality of St. Thomas and St. John by a deed which provided as follows:

“AND the Grantor does restrict this conveyance by the following terms and provisions which it shall be binding upon the Grantee, its successors and assigns, without exception:
“1. That it is the understanding of the parties that the land conveyed herein shall be placed under the jurisdiction of the Municipal Land Authority or a like municipal agency for the purpose of immediate resale to citizens of the Municipality on terms not in conflict with the Land and Home Act or the terms and conditions hereafter enumerated;
“2. That the first opportunity to purchase the land of Anna’s Fancy from the Municipality, or the municipal agency in charge of the land, shall go to those persons currently owning and living in superficiary buildings located on Anna’s Fancy or leasing land upon which no buildings have been erected. Thereafter, those persons living in rented houses located on the realty shall be given an opportunity to purchase a plot of land of Anna’s Fancy;
“3. That the Municipality, or the municipal agency in charge of the property, shall, in the sale of land at Anna’s Fancy, give due consideration to requiring the purchasers to relocate buildings, where necessary, for health, sanitary and safety reasons, and with a view to eliminating the present over-crowded con[67]*67dition so as to benefit the community by reason of the improved appearance and atmosphere of the areas;”

2. After purchasing this land the Government of the Virgin Islands, acting through the Municipal Land Authority, undertook to subdivide the tract into homestead plots and to sell them to qualified purchasers in accordance with the restrictions of the Morch deed and the requirements of the homestead laws.

3. When the Municipality acquired the land, and for many years prior thereto, Henry Charles Solomon lived on the site now in controversy as a tenant of the owner. He had constructed there two superficiary houses, one occupied as a home by himself and the other, a house of three rooms, rented to his tenants. Under the recent subdivision of the tract by the Government of the Virgin Islands the house occupied by Solomon as his residence shares Plot No. 6 with a superficiary house owned by Joseph McBean, who is not a part to this litigation. The other house owned' by Solomon stands on Plot No. 7.

4. Isaac Rhymer has rented one of the three rooms of the superficiary house on Plot No. 7 from Henry Charles Solomon, and more recently from his heir, for a period of approximately eight years. He continues so to rent and occupy that property. This occupancy is pursuant to an oral agreement originally made between Solomon and Rhymer under which Rhymer has paid and is paying a monthly rental of $6.00.

5. On December 4, 1953 the Municipal Land Authority wrote to Mr. Solomon advising him of the first priority as purchasers accorded to persons owning and living in superficiary houses, and inviting him to execute and return a questionnaire concerning his occupancy of Anna’s Fancy property and his interest in purchasing land there. On December 15, 1953 Solomon executed and returned this questionnaire, affirmatively stating his desire to buy the land on which his houses stood. Before further action could be taken in this matter, Solomon died January 11, 1954, leaving his niece, Valeria Quetel as his heir.

6. Valeria Quetel has applied to the Municipal Land Authority to purchase Plot No. 6 and Plot No. 7, reciting that she is the heir of Henry Charles Solomon, the late occupant of the property in question. Mrs. Quetel has also deposited with the Government of the Virgin Islands the selling price of each lot. This money is being held by the Government pending determination of her right to a homestead allotment.

[68]*687. In 1950 Valeria Quetel purchased from the Municipality homestead Plot No. 266, Estate Hospital Ground, and in 1956 she sold this lot. Mrs. Quetel presently owns other real property in St. Thomas.

8. The Virgin Islands Land Authority has recognized Isaac Rhymer as one of the class entitled to second priority in the purchase of homestead plots at Estate Anna’s Fancy. Accordingly, the Land Authority and Isaac Rhymer have executed an agreement for the sale and purchase of Plot No. 7 Estate Anna’s Fancy for a consideration of $209.42 which Rhymer has paid. The delivery of a deed has been withheld pending determination of the questions of Rhymer’s entitlement which are raised in this suit.

DISCUSSION

Henry Solomon owned two superficiary houses in the Anna’s Fancy area and lived in one of them. He and more recently his heir Valeria Quetel claim to be in the first priority group for the purchase of Anna’s Fancy homestead plots, and particularly Plots 6 and 7 of the Land Authority subdivision, on which Solomon’s houses stand.

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Bluebook (online)
176 F. Supp. 338, 4 V.I. 63, 1959 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2790, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rhymer-v-government-of-the-virgin-islands-vid-1959.