Ward v. Baylor

153 S.E. 894, 154 Va. 669, 1930 Va. LEXIS 239
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 12, 1930
StatusPublished

This text of 153 S.E. 894 (Ward v. Baylor) 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
Ward v. Baylor, 153 S.E. 894, 154 Va. 669, 1930 Va. LEXIS 239 (Va. 1930).

Opinion

Campbell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

On December 1, 1926, appellant filed his bill of complaint seeking a construction by the court of two certain deeds of conveyance from Joseph Blair to Bettie Ann Blair and others, and also praying for a partition of the lands conveyed. Appellees were made parties defendant and filed their answer denying the right of appellant to have a partition of the land as contended for in the bill of complaint. The cause was heard by the chancellor upon the bill and answer and the following agreed statement of facts:

[671]*671“Joseph Blair was an old illiterate negro, being totally unable to read and write. On July 5, 1905, he owned seven (7) acres of land more or less; this was all the land he then, or at any time, owned. Five of these seven acres the said Joseph Blair had purchased April 22, 1874, from Travis Glasgow and his wife, and on this five acres were all the buildings. Approximately two acres he had purchased June 6, 1879, from F. A. Shackleford and on this tract were no buildings. The lot purchased from Glasgow was a long narrow lot less than thirty yards wide, while the lot purchased from Shackleford was more nearly a square shaped lot, and though adjoining the Glasgow lot, only extended a short distance along the western boundary of the Glasgow lot. Both the lot purchased from Glasgow and wife and the lot purchased from Shackleford were bounded on the north by the public road from Warsaw to Tappahannock ferry, said public road being commonly called the front of said lots. The boundaries of said two lots were, on July 5, 1905, as well as on August 10, 1906 (as indeed they still are), as follows: The lot bought of Glasgow and wife was bounded on the north by the public road from Warsaw to Tappahannock ferry, on the east by the land of Travis Glasgow, on the south by the lands of R. Carter Wellford and on the west by the lot bought of Shackleford, the lands of George Saunders, Thomas Dates and Moore Baylor; the lot bought from Shackleford was bounded on the north by said public road, on the east by the said lot bought from Glasgow and wife, on the south by the lot of George Saunders, and on the west by the lands of R. Carter Wellford (the private road to Sabine Hall). A diagram of said lots is hereto attached. Letters A, B, C, D represent lot bought from Glasgow and wife; letters D, E, F, G, tfce [672]*672lot bought from Shackleford. Joseph Blair occupied, used and treated the lot bought from Shackleford as one tract of land; all of the front of both of these lots represented by the letters A, H, F, G was fénced off and cultivated as one lot or field. There was another fence (dotted line O, N across the lot bought from Glasgow); this fence and fence H, E were the south and north fences respectively of his yard and curtilage where his dwelling and other buildings were, and south of the fence O, N, was the remainder of the lot bought from Glasgow and wife, which was in woods. Between fences H, E, and O, N, were located the dwellings and outbuildings of said Blair, and the letters H, 0, N and E, represent his yard and curtilage. As will be seen from the above, Joseph Blair had seven acres of land subdivided into three lots, (1st) the lot on the public road; (2nd) the lot' (in the rear and south of the lot on the public road) on which stood his dwelling and other buildings; (3rd) and south of the dwelling lot a wood lot.

“In August, 1926, complainant employed A. L. Garland, a surveyor, to mark off his land, and this surveyor, after examining and comparing the deed of July 5,1905 and August 10, 1906 (Plaintiff’s Exhibits C and D), surveyed and marked off three acres of land as complainant’s part, the stakes of which survey now stand, giving complainant nearly all of the land on the public road, and leaving only a wide lane paralleling the line A, H, and leading from the said public road to the land claimed by the respondents in this suit, the land so surveyed being represented on the diagram by the letters X, Y, F, G. Joseph Sydnor and Joseph Sydnor Blair were one and the same person. The deed of [673]*673September 10, 1926, from tbe heirs of Joseph Sydnor to complainant was for only a nominal consideration.”

Attached to the above agreement and made a part thereof is this diagram:

After a personal inspection of the land, the chancellor held that it was impossible to partition the same in accordance with the directions and descriptions contained in the two deeds from, Joseph Blair and carry out the manifest intention of the grantor in disposing of the property, and further held that the true rule to be applied in the construction of the conveyances in issue was to look to the facts and circumstances, and adopt that conclusion which in the light of such facts and circumstances would most effectually carry out the intention of the parties. State Savings Bank v. [674]*674Stewart, 93 Va. 447, 25 S. E. 543. Thereupon, a decree was entered as follows:

“On consideration whereof, the court being of the opinion, after viewing the land in controversy, that it is impossible to divide the said land in accordance with the directions and descriptions in the deed of July 5, 1905, from the late Joseph Blair to Bettie Ann Blair, Willie Jackson, and Joseph Sydnor Blair (said deed being of record in the clerk’s office of this court in Deed Book No. 39, page 456, and a certain copy of which is filed with complainant’s bill as Exhibit C), if the land conveyed and embraced in said deed of July 5, 1905, is limited to the land conveyed to Joseph Blair, the grantor in said deed, by Travis Glasgow and wife, by deed dated April 22, 1874, and of record in said clerk’s office in Deed Book No. 31, page 486 (Complainant’s Exhibit A), the court is of the opinion, that the general description in the aforesaid deed of July 5, 1905, to-wit, the reference therein to the said deed of April 22, 1874, from Travis Glasgow and wife to said Joseph Blair, must therefore give way to the particular description of the land embraced and conveyed in said deed of July 5, 1905, and doth so decide, adjudge, order and decree.

“And the court being further of the opinion that the said Joseph Blair, now deceased, who was an old illiterate negro, intended to dispose of, and did describe-, dispose of and convey in said deed of July 5, 1905, not only the land conveyed to him in said deed of April 2, 1874, from Travis Glasgow and wife, but also the land conveyed to him in deed of June 5, 1879, from F. A. Shackleford, of record in the clerk’s office of this court in Deed Book No. 32, page 423 [675]*675(Complainant’s Exhibit B), making the aggregate amount seven acres, doth so decide, adjudge, order and decree.

“And the court being further of the opinion that the land described in the deed of August 10, 1906, from said Joseph Blair to Joseph Sydnor (who is one and the same person as Joseph Sydnor Blair), of record in said clerk’s office in Deed Book No. 40, pages 203-4 (Complainant’s Exhibit D), is a part of the land previously described and conveyed to said Joseph Sydnor Blair in said deed of July 5, 1905, from said Joseph Blair to Bettie Ann Blair, Willie Jackson and Joseph Sydnor Blair, doth so decide, adjudge, order and decree.

“And the court doth further adjudge, order, and decree that the said seven acres of land, more or less, conveyed as aforesaid to said Joseph Blair by Travis Glasgow and wife, and by F. A.

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Related

State Savings Bank v. Stewart
25 S.E. 543 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1896)
Lindsey v. Eckels
40 S.E. 23 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1901)

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Bluebook (online)
153 S.E. 894, 154 Va. 669, 1930 Va. LEXIS 239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ward-v-baylor-va-1930.