Spruill v. Shirley

28 S.E.2d 705, 182 Va. 342, 1944 Va. LEXIS 183
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 24, 1944
DocketRecord No. 2724
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 28 S.E.2d 705 (Spruill v. Shirley) 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
Spruill v. Shirley, 28 S.E.2d 705, 182 Va. 342, 1944 Va. LEXIS 183 (Va. 1944).

Opinion

Spratley, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

W. W. Spruill, sixty-eight years old, had been a farmer in Princess Anne county, Virginia, for twenty years. Although he was unable, to read and writé,. he had operated a merchandise store and had had many business dealings. In 1940, he married for the third time, and moved to Norfolk city. He then decided to sell the ninety-acre farm on which he had been living in Princess Anne county. His first wife had been dead for some years and he had been divorced from his second wife. He had six children by his deceased wife, [344]*344Ellora Spruill, all of whom were adults, married, and lived apart from him.

After some negotiations and much haggling as to the purchase price, he agreed to sell the farm to John C. Shirley for $3,000, and signed by his mark a memorandum to this effect, dated October 7, 1940. Under this agreement, $25 was paid in cash; $475 was to be paid when the deal w;as to be closed on October 9th; and the balance of $2,500 was to be paid on January 1, 1941.

Shirley employed F. E. Kellam, a prominent attorney in Princess Anne county, to examine the title to the farm. The examination disclosed that the property had been conveyed to Spruill and his deceased wife, Ellora, jointly, and that, therefore, Spruill owned only an undivided one-half interest in the land and the right of curtesy in the other one-half, and the remaining interest was owned by his six adult children.

• On October 9, 1940, the date on which the transaction was to be completed, Spruill signed a letter directed to Shirley, advising him of the result of the examination of the title. He stated that he was not aware of the situation disclosed and could not that day give the purchaser a good title; but hoped to be able to do so within a short time after he had gotten in touch with his children. Spruill claimed that he had paid the purchase money for the property, and had overlooked the fact that it had been conveyed to him and his deceased wife jointly.

The necessary deed was • then prepared by Mr. Kellam from the information given to’him by Spruill as to the names and addresses of his children. The deed was a general warranty deed, and W. W. Spruill, Margaret Spruill, his wife, and the six children of Spruill with their' respective consorts, were named as the grantors of the land.

None of the children of Spruill knew that they had any interest in the property. When they were informed of their interest therein, and requested to sign the deed, they demurred. Three of them said they wanted $100 each for their respective interests, which Spruill, after some negotiations, agreed [345]*345to pay them under the conditions outlined in the following letter, prepared by Kellam, dated November 20, 1940:

“I hereby agree to pay each of you the sum of $100 each for you to sign the deed to Cecil Shirley for property in Blackwater, title in the name of my former wife and myself, as soon as suit can be consummated for a sale of this property and a good title delivered to Mr. Shirley and the purchase price collected from Mr. Shirley.”

Three of the children, their wives and husbands, signed the deed; but with the understanding that it was to be signed by all of the children before it should become effective. Three of the children declined to sign. Mr. Kellam, who represented both Spruill and Shirley, then advised his clients that Spruill could not give Shirley a good title to the property; but that a good title could probably be obtained in a partition suit.

On November 19, 1940, Spruill signed a letter written by Kellam and directed to Kellam, authorizing him to proceed with such a suit.

On November 5, 1941, Kellam filed a memorandum for the issuance of process in this suit, the proceeding being styled W. W. Spruill and Margaret Spruill and John C. Shirley against the three adult children of Spruill, who had not signed the deed.

On November 29th, Kellam altered the instrument of conveyance by striking out the names of the children who had not signed the deed and the acknowledgment forms which had been prepared for them, and placed the deed on record in the clerk’s office of Princess Anne county.

The bill, signed by the attorney for the complainants, was filed December 17, 1940. It was a simple partition suit, in which it was stated that its object was to secure, through the court, a partition of the farm in the manner prescribed by statute, preferably by a sale of the whole and a division of the proceeds of the sale among the owners according to their interests.

On April 7, 1941, Spruill and his wife, having repudiated their contract of employment with Kellam, moved the court, [346]*346through another attorney, to transfer them from complainants to defendants in the pending suit. This motion was granted and the change was made.

Spruill then filed an answer and cross-bill admitting that he had entered into a contract with Shirley to sell the farm at $3,000; but claiming that the contract was made under the mistaken impression that he owned the whole property. He alleged that there had been no meeting of the minds of the parties, and asked that he be relieved from the contract. He also denied that he had authorized Kellam to bring the partition suit in his name.

On their application the three children who had signed the deed were permitted to intervene and were made parties defendant, and signed cross-bills asking to have the deed declared void as to them, upon the ground that it had been signed by them with the understanding that it was not to be delivered unless all of the children signed. The three children who had not signed the deed filed answers denying Spruill’s right to compel partition of the property.

To the answer and cross-bill of Spruill, Shirley filed an answer, in which he alleged, in part:

“And the plaintiff states in answer to the cross bill of W. W. Spruill that there was a meeting of the minds of the parties, that the entire transaction was thoroughly understood between W. W. Spruill and John C. Shirley and that the said W. W. Spruill should be required to secure the interest of the other parties in said land as he agreed to do, or pay to the said John C. Shirley any and all damage and cost by reason of his failure to deliver deed for said farm as agreed.”

The testimony was heard ore tenus by the trial judge on June 18, 1941. The learned chancellor, on November 5, 1941, entered a decree holding that: (1) The deed from Spruill and wife was sufficient to convey Spruill’s interest in the property to Shirley, that is, an undivided one-half interest and the right of curtesy in the other one-half; (2) the deed was executed without a valid consideration by the three children who had signed it, and as to them the deed [347]*347was without effect; (3) since Spruill was the owner of an undivided one-half interest in the land which was not susceptible of division in kind, it should be sold; (4) appointed commissioners to make sale; and (5) reserved “all other matters.”

From that decree Spruill and his children applied to this court for an appeal, assigning numerous grounds of error. We refused the appeal on February 25, 1942, thereby affirming the conclusion of the chancellor on all of the matters above determined.

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Bluebook (online)
28 S.E.2d 705, 182 Va. 342, 1944 Va. LEXIS 183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spruill-v-shirley-va-1944.