Shield v. Peninsula Land Co.

133 S.E. 586, 147 Va. 736, 1926 Va. LEXIS 286
CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedApril 29, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 133 S.E. 586 (Shield v. Peninsula Land Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shield v. Peninsula Land Co., 133 S.E. 586, 147 Va. 736, 1926 Va. LEXIS 286 (Va. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

Crump, P.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

John A. Shield, the appellant, filed his bill in equity-in the lower court in which he prayed for an injunction to restrain the defendants from erecting, or allowing the erection of, a certain building or structure near the beach or bank of York river, adjacent to the town of York, or Yorktown as commonly known. He alleged that he was the owner of certain lots in the plan of the town, on one or more of which residences had been built and leased to tenants; that three of these lots faced the river and fronted on Water street; that this street had been dedicated as a highway or street for the benefit of all the lot owners specially and for use by the public generally; that Water street included all the space between the line upon which Ms lots abutted and the river’s edge, giving it a varying width at some points nearly 200 feet, and that a lease or license by the trustees of Yorktown to the defendants proposing to erect a structure for amusement purposes on a part of this space was invalid.

Malcolm McAvoy, trustee, and Charles Warner, the persons about to erect the structure, and also the trustees of Yorktown were made parties defendant. The bill states three of plaintiff’s lots, Nos. 139, 144, and 149, front on Water street, and it is alleged:

“That your complainant has, on lots numbers 149 and 148, houses wMeh are used as dwelling houses and [739]*739if the said. Charles Warner is allowed to erect his said building as he is now commencing to do it would cut from complainant’s premises the view of the river-and interfere with his access to the said Water street as a street, and the access of said complainant and his agents to the York river, and if said structure is allowed to be erected that your complainant will suffer great and irreparable damages.”

The prayer of the bill is:

“That an injunction be granted enjoining the said Malcolm McAvoy, trustee, and .Charles Warner, their agents, servants and employees, from erecting any structure or building upon the said portion of Water street lying in front of and between York river and your complainant’s property as above set out; that the aforesaid attempted leases between those claiming to act as trustees for the town of York as above set out and the Investment Corporation be declared null and void and of no effect.”

The Investment Corporation was the original lessee to whom the privilege of using the space in question had been granted, and from whom the above named .two defendants derived their, right.

The defendants, Warner and McAvoy, demurred to the bill upon several grounds, and also filed a joint answer of considerable length. In the answer it is denied that the complainant is the owner in fee simple of the lots claimed by him; and it is insisted that Water street is only a street of ordinary width, and that the title to and control of the portion of land between the proper width of Water street and the river, including the space to be occupied by the building in question, was and is in the trustees of Yorktown.

So far as the record shows the trustees of the town did not answer, nor otherwise plead to, the bill.

[740]*740The final decree, from which the complainant in the ease appealed, denied the injunction and dismissed the bill, the trial court expressing its views upon the case as follows:

“Then this cause came on this day to be again heard upon the papers formerly read, the joint and separate answer of the defendant, Charles Warner and Malcolm McAvoy, trustee, and exhibits therewith, with general replication thereto, the depositions of witnesses and the exhibits therewith, and was argued by counsel. On consideration whereof and the court having considered the pleadings, exhibits and all the evidence in the case, is of opinion that the plaintiff’s basic contention that he, by reason of his ownership of the lots set out in his bill, owns in fee simple from the edge of said lots through Water street to York river, subject to the use of the said street by the public, is not sustained by the evidence and is hereby overruled, and doth adjudge that the legal title to that part of the commons marked on the said plat filed with the plaintiff’s bill as Water street, lying between Ballard and Buckner streets and the northeast edge of the plaintiff’s said lots and York river to be in the trustees of the town of York, subject to an easement in the public to a forty foot strip in width running along immediately in front of the plaintiff’s said lots as a street and that the said trustees had a legal right to lease all of that portion lying northeast of the said forty-foot street to the investment corporation.

“The court is further of the opinion that the lease executed on January 5, 1910, by the then trustees of the town of York to the Investment Corporation is valid and that the said Investment Corporation had a legal right to convey the said property mentioned in the said lease to the defendants, the Peninsula Land Com[741]*741p’any, Incorporated, and tliat the said defendant, the Peninsula Land Company, Incorporated, had a legal right to convey the same to the defendant, Malcolm McAvoy, trustee, and the said Malcolm McAvoy, trustee, had a legal right to lease to the defendant, Charles Warner, that portion of the said land upon which the building described in the plaintiff’s bill was to have been erected.

“The court is further of opinion that the said plaintiff has not established by his evidence that the erection of the building, set out and described in his bill, by the defendant, Charles Warner, would affect his, the said plaintiff’s, right of access, air, light and view.”

The material facts in the case should be stated:

Towards the end of the 17th century it became the policy of the colonial government of Virginia to encourage the settlement and growth of towns, and to fix the ports of entry, as the population of the colony was scattered over such a wide area. In the year 1691 the Colonial Assembly passed an act entitled “an act for ports, &c.” 3 Hening’s Statutes, page 53. This act was of considerable length, its general purpose being to provide for the acquisition of fifty acres of land at different points along the tidewater rivers in the colony, these several locations being designated in the act. The stated number of acres was to be conveyed to feoffees or trustees to be designated by the county court, and they were to hold the property in fee simple for the purposes named in the act, and were directed to convey the tract of land, in half-acre lots, to such persons as might accept them, upon the terms and. conditions named in the act. In fixing the places for the ports it is provided:

“That these several nominated ports, wharfes, keyes and places hereafter named and set downe, be and shall [742]*742be the severall and respective ports, wharfes, keyes, and places constituted and appointed by this act for the uses, intents and purposes before named, that is to
“For Yorke county upon Mr. Benjamin Read’s land beginning at the lower side of Smith’s creeke, and so running downward by the river toward the Ferry.”

Benjamin Read conveyed the tract of fifty acres to two trustees named by the county court, and the land was divided into lots upon a plat made by Lawrence Smith the county surveyor. This survey and plat still exists upon the records of York county.

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Bluebook (online)
133 S.E. 586, 147 Va. 736, 1926 Va. LEXIS 286, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shield-v-peninsula-land-co-vactapp-1926.