Stowers v. Harman

104 S.E. 703, 128 Va. 229, 1920 Va. LEXIS 102
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 16, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 104 S.E. 703 (Stowers v. Harman) 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
Stowers v. Harman, 104 S.E. 703, 128 Va. 229, 1920 Va. LEXIS 102 (Va. 1920).

Opinion

Sims, J.,

after making the foregoing statement, delivered the following opinion of the court:

[1] In our opinion the court below had no jurisdiction of the case before us and for that reason we must dismiss the action, so that none of the other questions raised in the case are before us for adjudication and none of them can be decided by us on this appeal.

[2, 3] The statute relating to actions of ejectment (Code [232]*2321887, section 2724), so far as material, provides as follows: ‘•‘Every such action shall be brought in the circuit court of the county * * * in which the real estate or some part thereof is.”

This refers to the real estate in controversy in the action. The plaintiff cannot, by including in his declaration land to which his title is uncontroverted, put that portion of his land in controversy in the suit. While it is permissible for a declaration to claim all the land embraced within certain designated boundaries, a portion of which may prove not to be in controversy at all, in which case a verdict and judgment for the whole of the land is not an error by which the defendant is injured, where he interposes no disclaimer (Carrington v. Goddin, 13 Gratt. [54 Va.] 587), yet only that portion of the land which does prove to be in controversy is in fact involved in the action. To hold otherwise would be to allow a plaintiff who owns land in more than one county, a portion of which only, lying in one of the counties, is in. controversy, the power to confer upon the court of his choice jurisdiction of his action of ejectment, contrary to the express provision of the statute, if he should choose the court of the county in which he may own land but. in which none of the land in controversy lies.

[4] The modem action of ejectment is a statutory action (Burks’ Pl. & Pr., p. 192; Graves Notes on Pl., p. 26), as to which the statute aforesaid prescribes not the venue merely, but what courts shall alone have jurisdiction of the action.

[5, 6] Section 3214 of the statute (Pollard’s Code 1904), providing for the venue of certain actions or suits, as expressly stated therein, does not apply “when it is otherwise • expressly provided;” and, as we have just seen, the statute (Code 1887, section 2724) does otherwise expressly provide what courts shall have jurisdiction of actions of ejectment. Section 3215 of the statute (Pollard’s Code 1904) has no [233]*233application to actions of ejectment, as that statute applies only to personal actions of which any court of the State in Whose jurisdiction the cause of action or any part thereof arose has jurisdiction if it obtains jurisdiction of the parties.

[7] Nor is the action of ejectment a transitory personal action, of which any court in the State would have jurisdiction under section 3058 of the Code (Pollard’s Code 1904), if it obtains jurisdiction of the parties. Moore v. N. & W. Ry. Co., 124 Va. 628, 98 S. E. 635.

The case is one in which no other court in the State has jurisdiction than that in which the land or some part thereof lies, which shall prove on the trial to be in controversy; and the principles announced in the case of Blankenship v. Blankenship, 125 Va. 595, 100 S. E. 538, are controlling.

The general rule is the same elsewhere, and the statute in Virginia, except in its feature of permitting the action to be brought in the county where any part of the land in controversy lies, is but declaratory of the common law.

As said in Thompson on Title to Real Property, section 654: “The general rule is that actions affecting the title to land, to recover possession thereof, and to recover for injuries thereto, must be brought in the county where the land is situated. * * * The general doctrine is carried very far by many of the cases, for it is held that if a local action is brought in the wrong county all the proceedings are void, no matter what the defendant may do.”

And in Sedgwick & Wait on Trial of Title of Land (2d ed.), sections 465, 468, 469, 470, the following is said:

Section 465.' “Actions for the recovery of real property, or for the determination of an interest therein, are local, and must be instituted in the county in which the premises are situated.” (Citing a number of English and American cases.) * * *” Lord Mansfield stated in 1774, that ejectment was a local action, and in its nature a proceeding [234]*234in rem, in which possession was to be delivered by' the sheriff of the county, and that, therefore, the judgment could have no effect if the action was not laid In the county in which the lands were situated. * * * In Casey v. Adams, 102 U. S. 66, Chief Justice Waite, in delivering the opinion of the United States Supreme Court, said: ‘Local actions are in the nature of suits in rem, and are to be prosecuted where the thing on which they are founded is situated.’ The court further said that the distinction between local and transitory actions was as old as the actions themselves, and that no one had ever supposed that law which prescribed generally the place where a party could be sued, included actions which were local.in their character, either by statute or at common law, unless the statute so declared.”

Section 468. “The rule at common law was that only lands lying within the county in which the ejectment was instituted could be recovered by the judgment; and when the lands were situated within the borders of several counties, it was necessary to make several entries and bring as many ejectments, as the recovery in one county did not extend to another. This inconvenient practice, has been practically abrogated by statute in this country. * * *”

Section 469. “Questions as to the correctness of the venue” (the word “venue” being used in the sense of local venue, as distinguished from transitory venue) “are raised by answer, demurrer, motion, or at the trial, * * * it was held that when * * * the venue was untrue on the face of the complaint, the defendant could demur.' If the venue is apparently correct in the title, the question of want of jurisdiction must be raised by answer. * * * It has been held in Maine that when an action, local in its nature, is commenced in the wrong county, the defendant is not obliged to plead that fact in abatement: If the objection appears on the record it may be raised by demurrer. Otherwise the defendant may avail himself of it at the trial under [235]*235the general issue. In an action which arose in Tennessee, the court decided that the venue must be proved. * * *”

Section 470. “Actions necessarily local differ from actions naturally transitory, * * * in respect to questions of jurisdiction, for when the objection raised is that the court has no jurisdiction over the subject matter or the parties, to issue the process, the proceeding is void.”

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Bluebook (online)
104 S.E. 703, 128 Va. 229, 1920 Va. LEXIS 102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stowers-v-harman-va-1920.