Stark v. Stark

112 S.E. 680, 133 Va. 310, 1922 Va. LEXIS 100
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 15, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 112 S.E. 680 (Stark v. Stark) 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
Stark v. Stark, 112 S.E. 680, 133 Va. 310, 1922 Va. LEXIS 100 (Va. 1922).

Opinion

Burks, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is one of those unfortunate family differences that sometimes find their way into the courts and which the courts find it so difficult to solve in accordance with legal and equitable principles and at the same time do justice between the parties. It is one of a series of four suits, all more or less connected with the same subject matter, and the evidence in two of which is reproduced in the record of this ease. It is [312]*312a suit brought by a father and mother against their four children, and, in order to get a clearer understanding of the situation, it will be necessary to make a statement of the facts prior to and leading up to the present litigation.

H. Mason Stark and his wife, Bettie C., were married in November, 1870, and the next year he worked on the farm of his father-in-law, in Hanover county, where the first child was born in December, 1871. His father had died a few years previous to that time and there was assigned to him a tract of 132 acres of land, and some years thereafter he acquired 110 acres additional, making a total holding of 242 acres in 1901. This 132 acres of which we are now to speak is located in Culpeper county and is described as very poor, with no improvements of any kind on it, “nothing but weeds, huckleberry bushes and grapevines,” or as put by another witness, “nothing on God’s earth on it except pines, bushes, etc.” Stark was then in his early twenties. He was a strong, industrious, sober young man, with a resolute will, and he determined to move upon this unpromising piece of land, make a home for himself and family, and extract from it a living. He left his wife and child with her father the next year and went upon the 132-acre tract, and cut and hauled the logs to the sawmill, and had them sawed, and built upon it a dwelling house twenty-four by sixteen feet, “the best his means would afford,” and also “put up some temporary outbuildings out of logs, temporary hen-house and a few other such things.” To this home in the wilderness Stark carried his wife, who was not less resolute and courageous than her husband. Her father aided them in procuring farming implements, and moderate household equipment, and all of the personal property then and thereafter stood in her name. With [313]*313this equipment, the young couple who had pledged themselves to take each other “for better or for worse” set to work to make a home and rear a family. We hear but little of their struggle during the intervening years, but after the lapse of thirty years from their marriage, we find that they have had seven children, three of whom had died, that the surviving children had all received such education as the schools of the neighborhood afforded, that the personal property on the farm had greatly increased in value, and that all of the children were still at home and together with the father and mother constituted a happy and united family. Such was the situation in 1901.

At this time the family consisted of Mr. and Mrs. Stark, and four children, Bruce, Lottie, Frank and Elba. Mr. Stark was somewhat crippled by rheumatism as a result of his hard life and exposure, was given to occasional outbursts of passion and intemperate language, and like many another pioneer had the gift of “cussing.” The family, however, were accustomed to these frailties and did not permit them to mar their peace and happiness, but lived “harmoniously and contentedly together.” At this time, Bruce, the oldest son, then about twenty-three years of age, seeing no future before him on the old farm, announced his intention of going West to better his condition. His mother describes the situation thus: “He said that he was not making anything there- He was very delicate, I had to nurse him like a baby, and of course, like a mother would, I was afraid if he would go away from me, or away from home, he would die, and just a mother’s love, I was willing to give him almost anything to keep him there.” His father and mother were anxious to have him remain at home, and offered him inducements to do.so, and as a result [314]*314of these negotiations an oral agreement was entered into between the father and mother, on the one side, and Bruce Stark, on the other, and in pursuance of that agreement he remained on the farm. What were the terms of that agreement is the most controverted fact in this case. The father and mother insist that the agreement was that Bruce should have possession immediately of all the personal property, including the farming implements, and operate the farm. They speak of it as going into parternership in conducting the farm; that Mr. Stark was to work on the farm as he had always theretofore done; that Bruce was also to work on the farm; that he was to have charge of the financial affairs for the concern, and after furnishing a comfortable support for the family and the payment of all taxes and costs of supplies and other necessary expenses incident to the proper management and conduct of the farm, Bruce was to have any profits that arose from the conduct of the farm. They insist that no one was present when this verbal contract was entered into except the parties thereto; that no time was specified for its continuance and nothing was said about permanent improvements. Mrs. Stark testified that only the parties to the contract were present; that some of the children were at school and others too small to attend school. On the other hand, Bruce Stark insists that the contract was a family arrangement and that all the members of the family were present when it was entered into; that under the terms of the contract the personal property on the place should become immediately his; that he was to conduct the farm and furnish a support for his father and mother and such members of the family as remained there; that his father was to work on the farm whenever he felt like it, without pay, and that the [315]*315arrangement was to continue during the life of his father and mother and the survivor of them, and that upon the death of the survivor the property was to be divided among their children except that he was to have a preferred lien for any permanent improvements he might put on the place. We do not need to stop to consider this contract ahy further at present, but will advert to it later. It is mentioned now simply to show what the contention of the respective parties was with reference to this contract.

Whatever may have been the true contract between the parties, it is. conceded in the application for an appeal that the parties “all lived up to the spirit of their contract; things moved smoothly, and they lived harmoniously and contentedly together up until the year 1914.” The only disagreement between the parties on this question is that Mr. and Mrs. Stark say that the friction began in 1913. In the spring of the year 1914, Mr. Stark was in a highly nervous condition and became greatly excited and agitated over what he seemed to think was improper conduct on the part of Bruce Stark, and especially about laying off some corn rows. As a result of his excitement and consequent conduct, his son, Bruce, swore out a warrant of lunacy against him and the commission met and examined into his sanity. The justice of the peace on the commission was a brother of Mr. Stark, and one of the doctors was the family physician. Mr. Stark himself admitted that he was in a serious nervous condition and needed treatment. The commission found him to be insane and committed him to the Western State Hospital for treatment. He was accompanied to the hospital by his daughter, Elba, one of the defendants in this suit, who made frequent visits to him while there.

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Bluebook (online)
112 S.E. 680, 133 Va. 310, 1922 Va. LEXIS 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stark-v-stark-va-1922.