Thompson v. Thompson

198 S.E. 897, 171 Va. 361, 1938 Va. LEXIS 286
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedOctober 7, 1938
DocketRecord No. 1957
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 198 S.E. 897 (Thompson v. Thompson) 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
Thompson v. Thompson, 198 S.E. 897, 171 Va. 361, 1938 Va. LEXIS 286 (Va. 1938).

Opinion

Browning, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a ease of dual aspects. It first found its way into a court of law by means of an action of ejectment, but was subsequently wrested therefrom by a decree in a court of chancery, which came of the filing of a bill on the equity side of the court praying that the action of ejectment be enjoined and the rights of the defendant in the action at law be determined and adjudicated therein.

Prior to the year 1897, R. D. Thompson was the owner, or one of the joint owners, of a tract of land in Campbell county, Virginia, near Six Mile Bridge, located along the highway between Lynchburg and Concord. In a sawmill operation, he became involved in debt, and being the head of a large and, at that time, dependent family, he undertook to provide for them by conveying his landed estate to his wife for her life, with remainder to their children. This was in the year 1897. It should be said in this connection that he subsequently paid off his indebtedness, but the title to the land remained as it was fixed by the deed referred to, until February, 1926, when their children, the remainder-men in the aforesaid deed, united, with the possible exception of one, in a conveyance to Judy C. Thompson, the wife [364]*364of R. D. Thompson, and their mother, of their right, title and interest in the land referred to.

In May, 1933, Judy C. Thompson and her husband executed a deed of trust on a part of the land, which included the identical portion which is the subject of this controversy, to secure the payment of six hundred dollars, Contemporaneously therewith, they conveyed the same tract of land to J. S. Thompson, a son, the actual consideration being the assumption of the payment of the deed of trust indebtedness and the maintenance and care of the grantors, during their lives. They reserved a life estate in the said land.

In November, 1927, Judy C. Thompson and husband conveyed to their son, Herman C. Thompson, a tract of land of 4.65 acres, which was a portion of the land which was conveyed in 1897 by R. D. Thompson to Judy C. Thompson for life, etc. This tract was acquired by Herman C. Thompson from his father in, perhaps, the year 1914. He built a house and a storehouse on it and conducted a mercantile business there until his acquisition of the small tract which is the subject of this controversy, and on which he built another storehouse, which was operated by Herman C. Thompson and his wife, Edna C. Thompson, until their separation, and after that by Edna C. Thompson alone.

This tract of 4.65 acres, referred to, has nothing to do with the issues here save as the manner of the acquisition of its title sheds light upon the business habits and methods which obtained among members of this family when dealing inter sese.

The trial court decreed that the contract relied upon by the appellee, Edna C. Thompson, was “too vague and uncertain, the proof thereof too doubtful, and the description of the land to be conveyed, too indefinite to enable the court to compel specific performance.” But it further decreed that the defendants, J. S. Thompson and Judy C. Thompson, should pay to her the sum of nine hundred dollars as compensation for the improvements which her husband and grantor, or assignor, had put upon the land. This latter [365]*365was an exercise of the court’s sense of equity, based, of course, on the facts.

We think that the action of the court in denying specific performance of the contract was error. This being our conviction, it becomes needless to discuss or make comment as to any other ruling of the trial court.

We think the alleged contract was sufficiently definite and certain in its terms, and the proof convincing and certain enough to have warranted a decree for specific performance.

A careful consideration of the evidence reveals the lamentable fact that there was a feeling of unfriendliness in the atmosphere of the Thompson family toward the appellee. T. R. Thompson was the only one who seemed not to share this feeling. It appeared to have had its beginning about the time of the separation of Herman and his wife. Its intensity is expressed with greater emphasis by the mother of Herman and mother-in-law of Edna C., Judy C. Thompson, than any of the others. It may have had its origin in the fact that Theron Thompson, a son of Judy C. Thompson, was bound over to keep the peace at the instance of Edna C. Thompson, or it may have been that the interference of Mrs. Bernice Jones, a sister of Herman C. Thompson, in his family affairs, was answerable for its presence, or it may be ascribable to the proverbial in-law attitude of criticism and sometimes hostility. But however it arose it resulted, in our judgment, in the repudiation by Judy C. Thompson of a solemn contract made between her husband and herself and her son, she having not only had actual notice of the transaction, but participating in it by acquiescence, consent and approval.

We will now note some of the testimony which seems to present a sound basis for the above statement—testimony and facts which unequivocally establish the existence of the contract—and other incidents to which we have referred.

R. C. Worley was a witness for the plaintiff and he built the store room at the rear of the new storehouse. When he was asked if he ever heard Mr. R. D. Thompson say any[366]*366thing about the land on which the store was built, he answered in part as follows: “Old man Dick told me then that he had let Herman have the land to build on but he wasn’t going to put anything in it.”

T. R. Thompson, another witness, said that he had heard his father say many times that' he intended giving Herman the acre of land that the store was on, and that he knew that Herman was to get a deed to that plot of land. He further said that his mother refused to give a deed to Edna and when he was asked “Why?” he replied, “Because she didn’t like her, I reckon.”

B. H. Drinkard, another witness, who worked for the contractor who built the new storehouse, said that Herman Thompson told him that his father told him to move up there and build anywhere and cut off the land, and he would give him a deed to it.

W. R. Giles, another witness, who was a section foreman for the C. & 0. Railway, and who had lived for twenty-two years at Six Mile Bridge, said that he was at Herman’s place before the store was built and that he asked him if he had the deed, and he replied that his father would give him a deed to the piece of land which would be about an acre, and that east of the store there was a garage built and the land was to go above the garage, back to the pasture fence, behind the store and back to a small building that he had erected on the west side of the store, to the highway, and that would be about an acre.

Preston Cox, another witness, who had lived at Six Mile Bridge since 1892, said that Mr. R. D. Thompson had said to him that he gave his son the land. The witness said that he helped clear the space and that it contained about an acre.

John Wade, another witness, who lived in the vicinity, said that on one occasion when he and Mr. R. D. Thompson were sitting on the store porch waiting for Herman Thompson to come and open the store, 'the father said that he wished Herman would get the deed straightened out because he was not going to live always.

[367]*367Edna C. Thompson, testifying in her own behalf, said that the new storehouse was built in 1927 and that Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
198 S.E. 897, 171 Va. 361, 1938 Va. LEXIS 286, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-thompson-va-1938.