Southall v. M'Keand

1788 Va. Ch. Dec. 95
CourtVirginia Chancery Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1791
StatusPublished

This text of 1788 Va. Ch. Dec. 95 (Southall v. M'Keand) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Virginia Chancery Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southall v. M'Keand, 1788 Va. Ch. Dec. 95 (Va. Super. Ct. 1791).

Opinion

IN 1767, William Byrd, by advertisements in the gazette, published his intention to dispose, by lotery, twenty nine improved tenements, of which one, called John M’Keands, valued at one hundred and forty four pounds, was demised to that tenent at the yearly rent of twelve pounds, and eight hundred and ten unimproved parcels of land, whereof one hundred contained one hundred acres each, others half an acre each, and some were islands, the estates lay at and near the foils of James river.

Before the lotery was drawn, William Byrd was preparing to survey the lands, designing to mark the boundaries of the tenements, and half acres, and so to delineate them as that they might form a town on each side of the river, with convenient streets for passage.

Some of the tenents opposed the execution of this design, alledging it would derange their tenements, and threatening,, if William Byrd persisted in it, to return the tickets which they had taken to sell for him.

Whether John M’Keand, the holder of the tenement called by his name, joined in the opposition doth not appear, that he did not join is most probable, because he neither occupied nor clamed more ground than the area of his dwelling house.

The survey was not then prosecuted, if begun.

Some time afterwards, whether the tenents who had heeif adverse to the mensuration and delineation were now reconciled to it, or whether they knew not oí it, or connived at it, William Byrd procured the lands to he surveyed, laying oif for John M’Keands tenement half an acre, and plans of the towns to be drawn, which were hung up, exposed to public view, in one part of the old capítol in Williamsburgh, and remained so exposed during the time the managers superintended the drawing’'of thelotery, in another part of the same house, in november, 1768.

A ticket owned by the plaintiff won the prize marked 327, Which by recurrence to the plan appeared to be John M’Keands tenement. /

How much-land, more or less than half an acre, was contained in this tenement, before he was a tenent of it, does not appear, he did not cultivate any part of it, as hath been observed-if all the parts occupied by the preceding tenents, with some other ground not actually cultivated but situated so that it could not have been excluded, were included in. one figure, the area would be more than half an acre-but such a figure would not coincide with any street, or with the lines of [97]*97coterminous grounds drawn prizes by other ad venturers — must have been an irregular polygon, inconvenient to the fortunate adventurer himself, as well as to his neighbours — moreover, if the tenement had been surveyed in such a manner as to include the grounds only which had been actually occupied by any one tenent, before John M’Keand, that it would have exceded half an acre doth not appear — neither doth the part, which had. not been actually occupied, but which is included in the survey, appear to be less than the occupied part, which is excluded— iinaiy, the plaintiff intitled confessedly to John M’Keands tenement, for which a rent of twelve pounds was annualy paid, actualy possessed), lor his prize, all the tenement which John M’Keand ever occupied or ever clamed, and for which he paid that rent, and almost half an acre more.

Nevertheless, the plaintiff, 14 years and a half so many months, after the lotery was drawn, and almost as long after the land now clamed by him, for part of John M’Keands tenement, was possessed and improved by other men, and had been transferred for valuable consideration oflcuer than once, brought a bill, in the county court of Henrico in chancery, to vindicate his title, and to compel the defenders Charles Carter, in whom the legal estate rested, to convey it to the plaintiff.

The defendents John M’Keand and John Mayo, at that time the only interested defendents, answered the bill; and many witnesses were examined, their testimony was chiefly to prove the situation of the ground in dispute which had been cultivated by three men, Letcher, Woodson, and Gunn, tenants who had lived in the house which, in 1767, and for the two next preceding years, was the dwelling house of John M’Keand, before it was called his tenement, — that a horse-rack was on the land in dispute, on the pins of which people, who frequented this place where a tavern was then kept, and those who came to a public tobacco inspection, called Byrds warehouse,’in the neighbourhood, used to hitch the bridle reins of their horses — that a cockpit was dug by Gunn, whilst he kept the tavern, on part of the land in dispute — to prove that a tree stood some where or other, upon the warehouse ground, or the ground in dispute, or between them, where the inspectors used to prize tobacco, — -to prove the situation of the place which the people, bringing tobacco to the warehouse, used lor a way — to prove that the plaintiff gave notice of his title to M’Keand when he bought the land in dispute from William Byrd, and that he had, some time before the war, applied to couusil to assert his title.

The county court dismissed the bill.

The high court of chancery, to which the plaintiff appealed,, [98]*98directed an issue to he tried, in order to determine the boundaries of John M’Keands tenement, and a survey of the land in controversy to he made and reported to the court before which the issue should be tried, and also directed the copied plan of Richmond, to which the plaintiff excepted, to be admitted in evidence at the trial.

The jury who tried the issue by their verdict found the boundary of the tenement to he that which agreed with' the survey and plan of the town of Richmond, which was in effect a verdict in favour of the- defendents.

The court, before which the issue was tried, certified the weight of evidence to be in favour of the plaintiff, and that the only evidence offered at the trial.was the written testimony (that is the testimony which was before the court of chancery) and! the oral testimony of James Vaughan- and James Price', whose written examinations were Likewise‘before the court of chancery, and who are not alledged to have deposed any thing more when they were examined viva voce-..

The high court of chancery,-on. the first day of march, 1791,. delivered the following opinion and- decree :

‘ The court is of opinion, that a survey and plan of the parcels of land, to be prizes in the lotery, from which this controversy arose, was a necessary part of that scheme,- as- well for laying off the ground in convenient figures-, as for indicating the situations, ascertaining the quantities, and defining the boundaries-of them ; that the survey and plan thereof, made for those purposes, was not fraudulent as to any purchasers of tickets ; especially as probably all those tenements, exceeding half acres, the holders of which objected to divisions of them, were .laid off intire ;

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Bluebook (online)
1788 Va. Ch. Dec. 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southall-v-mkeand-vachanct-1791.