White v. Stuart, Buchanan & Co.

76 Va. 546, 1882 Va. LEXIS 59
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJuly 27, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 76 Va. 546 (White v. Stuart, Buchanan & Co.) 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
White v. Stuart, Buchanan & Co., 76 Va. 546, 1882 Va. LEXIS 59 (Va. 1882).

Opinion

Staples, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The first appeal in this case was taken by White’s heirs from the decree of the 18th October, 1877, and from the decree of the 17th February, 1879. The second, a cross-appeal, was taken by Stuart and Palmer from the decree of the 17th February, 1879, and the third by Wyndham Bobertson from the decree of January, 1880.

The questions arising under these appeals will now be considered in their regular order.

It may be proper to premise that there are two large coterminous estates, each containing valuable salt wells, lying [549]*549in Smyth and Washington counties. One of these estates, that in Smyth, formerly belonged to Thomas L. Preston, and by his trustee was sold and conveyed to Stuart, Buchanan & Co. The other estate, known as “King’s Salt Works,” was owned by a number of tenants in common among them, the heirs of James White, who were entitled to an interest of seven forty-eights acquired by purchase. Thomas L. Preston was also entitled to an interest of one-seventh in the same property. It seems that many years ago the two estates were sometimes worked by a single tenant under separate leases from the different properties, sometimes separately by different tenants, and not unfreqnently any of the owners of the King estate who were inclined so to do entered therein and exercised the privilege of making salt, as their inclination or necessities suggested. This condition of things proving extremely detrimental to all concerned, a bill was filed in the circuit court of Washington for the purpose or having the “ King estate ” rented out by a receiver. This was finally done, and the property was leased to Wyndham Robertson for five years, commencing the 1st of January, 1851, at an annual rent of $16,000. Upon the termination of this lease Thomas L. Preston became the lessee for five years, commencing the 1st of January, 1856, at an annual rent of $22,000. Preston being thus the owner of the Preston Salt Works, the lessee of the King Salt Works, and having also an interest of one-seventh in the latter, in the year 1858 executed to Spencer, Ackerman & Co. a lease of both estates, at an annual rent of $30,000 for the Preston estate and $20,000 for the King estate. This lease was made with the approbation of a portion of the heirs and representatives of James White, deceased. It was, of course, invalid as to those who had not given their consent to it, so far as it extended beyond the 1st January, 1861. Stuart, Buchanan & Co., who had become the owners of the Ackerman lease, continued in [550]*550the exclusive possession of the King Salt Works, operating the same in connection with the Preston estate from the year 1861 to 1868, inclusive. After the termination of the Ackerman lease, a protracted controversy arose between them and the appellants, White’s heirs, who had not united in the Ackerman lease, touching the liability of Stuart, Buchanan & Co. for a just share or proportion of the rent for the years mentioned.

Under the decree of the district court, it was left to the circuit court of Washington county to determine whether it would confirm the Ackerman lease or treat Stuart, Buchanan & Co. as being in possession of the property under the terms of the Preston lease, or whether it would hold them liable for such other reasonable rent as the court should deem to be right. The circuit court, discarding the first two modes suggested, adopted the third, and determined that S., B. & Co. should be held accountable for a reasonable rent of the premises.' This court, upon an appeal taken, affirmed that decree, thus recognizing the correctness of the rule laid down by the court for ascertaining the liability of the occupying tenants. The accounts were accordingly referred to a commissioner, who made two reports, each of which was excepted to by both parties. Some of these exceptions were sustained and others were overruled by the circuit court, and a decree was there entered in favor of White’s heirs, which, however, it seems was not satisfactory to either party. It is conceded by all that the case is one of very great difficulty, involving many perplexing and embarrassing questions. The chief difficulty grows out of the want of some reliable data or basis for ascertaining what constitutes a reasonable rent for the use and occupation of the King Salt Works during the greater part of the war.

After the most careful examination, I am satisfied that no conclusion will ever be reached by any court which will [551]*551be satisfactory to the parties, for it may be safely said that no contestants ever differed more widely with respect to the measure and extent of recovery. All that can be done is to deal with the question as best we may, endeavor as far as we can to approximate the justice of the case, and terminate this protracted and expensive litigation.

We come then in the order of time, first, to the rent for the year 1861. The circuit court held that this rent had been settled, and could not therefore enter into the account before the commissioner. The appellants insist that this decision is in direct conflict with the previous decree of the circuit court, which declared that Stuart, Buchanan & Co. should be accountable for a reasonable rent from the 1st January, 1861,- to the 1st January, 1869. It must not be forgotten, however, that it was provided in the same decree that the commissioner should ascertain also what payments? if any, had been made by Stuart, Buchanan & Co. to White’s heirs on account of rents for said period. The court, of course, would not in that stage of the controversy undertake to say whether the rent for any year, had or had not been paid.

All it could do was to direct an account of rents for each year of the occupation, and leave the question of payment open for inquiry and future adjudication. If, in taking the account, it appeared that the rent for any one year had been settled, any further inquiry for that year would be superfluous and improper, for then the parties themselves had determined what was a reasonable rent for such year by making and receiving payment. I think, therefore, the appellees were not precluded from showing the settlement of the rents for 1861. The only question then is, Have they succeeded in doing so ?.

In the original bill of Stuart, Buchanan & Co. filed in 1862, they aver that they had paid the rent of 1861 to White’s heirs, and that the latter by the receipt of the [552]*552money and by other acts, had ratified the Ackerman lease, and were therefore entitled only to a rent of $20,000 per annum during the whole period of the tenancy. The only persons who ever answered this bill were Kewton White and William T. C. White. Whilst both these defendants emphatically deny that there had been any ratification of the Ackerman lease, I do not understand that either of them seriously controvert the fact of the payment for the year 1861. There is no doubt that from the beginning William T. C. White, acting for himself and the other heirs of James White, collected the rents from the various lessees of the King’s Salt Works. He collected them for five successive years from Col. Cummings, who obviously thought he was authorized to receive them. And when in March, 1862, Mr. Stuart paid Col. White the share of rent for 1861, to which King’s representatives were entitled under the Ackerman lease, both parties must have believed that Col. White’s authority to receive payment had not been revoked or questioned. The receipt given by Col.

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Bluebook (online)
76 Va. 546, 1882 Va. LEXIS 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-stuart-buchanan-co-va-1882.