Snead v. Snead

92 Va. Cir. 320, 2016 Va. Cir. LEXIS 34
CourtAmherst County Circuit Court
DecidedFebruary 24, 2016
DocketCase No. CL15009367-00
StatusPublished

This text of 92 Va. Cir. 320 (Snead v. Snead) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Amherst County Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Snead v. Snead, 92 Va. Cir. 320, 2016 Va. Cir. LEXIS 34 (Va. Super. Ct. 2016).

Opinion

By

Judge Michael T. Garrett

This letter is to set forth the Court’s ruling in the above-referenced matter after consideration of the testimony as presented as well as the legal authority submitted by counsel.

Facts

The Plaintiffs herein own land adjoining a larger parcel owned by the Defendant. The male Plaintiff is the nephew of the Defendant. The male Plaintiff testified that, in 2005, he wished to add an addition to the side of his home. Upon contacting the County for a Building Permit, the male Plaintiff learned that such an addition would violate the fifty-foot setback line. Therefore, it would be necessary for him to acquire property from the Defendant.

The Plaintiff testified he approached the Defendant and asked him to sell a portion of Defendant’s land to allow them to add onto their home without violating the setback requirements. Plaintiff testified that the Defendant told him he would not sell it to him, but rather he would give it to him. Plaintiff testified that he and the Defendant discussed a boundary line adjustment for the gift. Thereafter, the Plaintiff contacted a surveyor who came to the property and installed pins. The Plaintiff obtained a Building Permit from the County of Amherst, which was issued on September 9, 2005. (Plaintiff’s Exhibit 2.) Plaintiff testified that he began construction of the foundation immediately after the Building Permit was obtained and before the final plat was completed.

Plaintiff testified that, after the initial pins were set, the Defendant was not satisfied and directed that the proposed boundary lines be adjusted. [321]*321The Plaintiff had the surveyor adjust the boundary lines, and the plat was completed on October 21, 2005. (Plaintiffs Exhibit 1.) Plaintiff testified that, in October 2005, he asked the Defendant to sign the plat. The Plaintiff acknowledged that the Defendant refused to sign the plat and a deed was never prepared. The construction continued until the addition was completed the middle of 2006.

The Defendant disputed the Plaintiffs recitation of the facts. The Defendant testified that the male Plaintiff approached him about purchasing land and that the Defendant told the Plaintiff that “he might end up with it.” He further testified that he thought about leaving the land to his Nephew in a will. The Defendant testified that, at no time, did he say he was going to gift it to him.

The Court finds that, based upon the testimony of the witnesses, the Defendant made a vague promise to give the land in question, but did not specify when. The Plaintiff interpreted Defendant’s statement to mean an immediate definite gift.

Opinion

Plaintiffs seek enforcement of a parol gift or promise to make a gift of land and request the Court enter an order directing the Defendant to execute and deliver a deed of conveyance to complete the promised gift of land. Plaintiffs assert that, in reliance on the promised gift, they had a survey conducted, a plat prepared, and built an addition to their land. The Plaintiffs allege that the Defendant his breached the “agreement.”

The decision in this case is governed by the holding in Wohlford v. Wohlford, 121 Va. 699 (1917). In Wohlford, the plaintiff alleged that his father induced him to leave and sell his own farm, move to land owned by his father known as the Nye Place, and apply the proceeds from the sale of his, plaintiff’s, farm to the Nye Place together with his labor to make improvements thereupon, all in exchange for a promise that the father would give the Nye Place to him upon his death. The court, in Wohlford, stated:

Prior to May 1, 1888, the date upon which the Code of 1887 took effect, a parol gift or a promise of a gift of land, to be consummated by deed, if followed by improvements on the land, was enforceable under the doctrine of such cases as Halsey v. Peters, 79 Va. 60. . . . But in view of the history and apparent purpose of section 2413 of the Code of Virginia, which first made its appearance in the Code of 1887, no such contract is now enforceable. That section provided that no right to a conveyance of an estate of inheritance or freehold, or for a term of more than five years in lands, shall “accrue to the donee of the land, or those claiming under him, under [322]*322a gift or promise of gift of the same hereafter made and not in writing, although such gift or promise be followed by possession thereunder and improvement of the land by the donee, or those claiming under him.”

Wohlford at 703.

The court held in Wohlford that the prior law permitting enforcement of an oral promise to gift land was abolished by statute, Va. Code of 1887, and held that, without a writing, the promised gift was unenforceable despite very compelling facts.

The Court finds that the matter now before the Court is controlled by a Statute with almost identical language as the Statute of 1887 construed in Wohlford. The current version of § 55-2 of the Code of Virginia provides:

No estate of inheritance or freehold or for a term of more than five years in land shall be conveyed unless by deed or will, nor chair any voluntary partition of land by coparceners, having such an estate therein, be made, except by deed, nor shall any right to a conveyance of any such estate or term in land accrue to the donee of the land or those claiming under him, under a gift or promise of gift of the same not in writing, although such gift or promise be followed by possession thereunder and improvement of the land by the donee or those claiming under him.

(Emphasis added.)

In the instant case the Plaintiffs argue that the Defendant agreed to give them land and in reliance thereupon they had a survey conducted and plat prepared. Plaintiffs did make improvements to land, however, this was the construction of an addition to Plaintiffs’ house (on Plaintiffs’ own land) rather than on the land that they claim the Defendant promised to gift to them. Therefore, based upon the holding in Wohlford, the court finds that enforcement of the oral promise to gift land is barred by § 55-2 of the Code of Virginia.

The Plaintiffs also argue that, because the completed addition to their home violates the county setback, that to avoid this harsh result that they are entitled to equitable relief of specific performance of the oral promise of gift notwithstanding the provisions of § 55-2. However, the decisions in Wohlford, supra; Brooks v. Clintsman, 124 Va. 736 (1919); and Clarkson v. Bliley, 185 Va. 82 (1946), make it clear that, even in equity, courts are not granted the authority to force the donor to complete an incomplete gift unless the promise to make the gift is in writing § 55-2.

In the alternative, the Plaintiffs argue that, if a writing is required by § 55-2, they have satisfied that requirement, because of the preparation of the plat. However, the Plaintiffs presented the plat to the Defendant, and he [323]*323refused to sign. No deed or other writing was prepared. The Plaintiffs argue that the unsigned plat satisfies the writing requirement of § 55-2. In support of their position, the Plaintiffs cite Creed v. Goodson, 153 Va. 98 (1929), dealing with a promised gift of real estate.

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Related

Halsey v. Peters'
79 Va. 60 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1884)
Wohlford v. Wohlford
93 S.E. 629 (Court of Appeals of Virginia, 1917)
Brooks v. Clintsman
98 S.E. 742 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1919)
Creed v. Goodson
149 S.E. 509 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1929)
Clarkson v. Bliley
38 S.E.2d 22 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1946)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
92 Va. Cir. 320, 2016 Va. Cir. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/snead-v-snead-vaccamherst-2016.