Williams v. Gordan

154 S.E. 538, 154 Va. 728, 1930 Va. LEXIS 244
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 12, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 154 S.E. 538 (Williams v. Gordan) 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
Williams v. Gordan, 154 S.E. 538, 154 Va. 728, 1930 Va. LEXIS 244 (Va. 1930).

Opinion

Holt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

■ This cause deals with the right to close an alley or walkway along the north side of Lot 7 in Block 19, extending from Atlantic avenue to Atlantic boulevard, in the town of Virginia Beach. For convenience, reference will be made to a plat showing its location here copied into this opinion.

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[731]*731Complainants, John D. Gordan and Charles G. Hume, were and are dealers in real estate who do business in Norfolk and Princess Anne county. In 1910, they were the owners of certain lots at Virginia Beach in what is known as blocks 32 and 41, fronting on Nineteenth street near its terminus on Atlantic avenue.

By deed of date August 10, 1910, duly recorded, Miss Lutie P. Blow, who then owned this lot 7, for the sum of 8200.00 conveyed to Gordan and Hume the strip of land in question, which is four feet wide, lying along the northern edge of the lot, and extending, as we have seen, from Atlantic avenue to Atlantic boulevard. In her deed she reserves the right “of herself and her assigns to overhang the said parcel of land with blinds from the first story of the building now upon lot No. 7 in square No. 19, and also overhang same with bay windows or porches from the second story of the present building or any to be erected upon said lot.”

The defendant, Lizzie D. Williams, owned lot 6 adjoining the Blow lot on the north. On May 1, 1918, she purchased from Lutie P. Blow lot 7, and so became the fee simple owner of these two lots with the exception of the four-foot strip sold to Gordan and Hume which divided them. In it she held an easement but not the fee. Afterwards, Gordan and Hume sold lots in blocks 32 and 41, now held mediately or immediately by Alice White, Sarah C. P. Jackson, Elizabeth M. Patch, Emma H. Dawson, Russell S. Dawson, Alice H. White, Willoughby T. Cooke and S. Camp Ashburn, all of whom took under deed executed between the date of the Gordan and Hume purchase in 1910 and of the Williams purchase in 1918, except Dawson, whose grantors derived title by deed of September 27, 1919. These owners were made defendants in the bill filed by [732]*732Gordan and Huiré in May, 1927. By decree of March 24, 1928, they were, on their motion, made co-plaintiff. This was after plaintiff’s evidence had been concluded.

Gordan and Hume took steps looking to the dedication of this walkway as a public alley. There was some hitch in the proceedings. They were not pressed and nothing was done. The defendant, however, was under the impression that this dedication had been accomplished, and undertook to have the walkway shifted from the northern edge of lot 7 to its southern side, that her holdings might not be divided and obtained the consent in writing of these lot owners to this change. She then took the matter up with the town, but found that she was in error in thinking there had been a previous dedication. The town had no interest in this strip, and here also the matter was dropped. She thereupon approached Gordan and Hume, record title holders, with the same proposition, but was told that they were not interested. They did offer to sell for $1,000.00 which was more than she was willing to pay. About a month later Mr. J. Rixey, as counsel for Mrs. Williams, called upon Mr. Gordan to see if any arrangements could be made for purchase satisfactory to Ms client. Mr. Gordan suggested that a price be fixed by arbitrators or appraisers. Mr. Rixey thought that it could be done provided Mrs. Williams was given the right to reject or accept the valuation so fixed. This proviso Mr. Gordan was not willing to agree to and there the matter rested for the time being. About two weeks later Mr. J. Rixey examined the Princess Anne county records to find out exactly what easements, if any, these Ninteenth street lot owners had, and ascertained that they had none except what appeared in a deed from Gordan and Hume to Harris, [733]*733which conveyed the southern 140 feet of lots 11 and 13 in block 41. In that deed is this provision:

“The parties of the first part agree to lay a granolithic walkway along the western side of Atlantic avenue from the one ending at Mrs. Shield’s cottage to the northernmost point of the land recently purchased by Mrs. Virginia Gatewood, and also to lay a granolithic walkway from the bluff on the ocean front on Atlantic boulevard, westwardly back to the above described walkway.”

These lots in block 41 Mrs. Williams now owns.

Mr. Rixey communicated the results of his investigation to Mrs. Williams, who directed him to again see Mr. Gordan and to accept his proposition. Mr. Rixey called Mr. Gordan over the ’phone and advised him that his client was then ready to accept. Mr. Gordan replied that he did not wish to have any verbal understanding with Mrs. Williams, but wanted an agreement in black and white, and that he would draw it and would attach to it a copy of the particular deed which he was willing to execute. Mr. Gordan did draw the agreement of arbitration and did attach to it the deed which was afterwards executed. The agreement bears date April 29, 1926. Arbitrators were appointed and ascertained and fixed the price to be paid at $633.33. The price so fixed was paid and a deed was executed wbieh contains this stipulation, and which is the only reservation there appearing:

“This conveyance is made subject to all easements contained in said deed and all easements granted by the parties of the first part to the purchasers of lots in the two blocks on the plat of the Virginia Beach property, in the rear of this property, to use said strip as a lane, reference being hereby made to all deeds executed by [734]*734the parties of the first part, duly recorded in the afore-, said clerk’s office, for the particular terms of said ease?ment.”

This recitation follows: “Subject to. the above easements, the parties of the first part covenant * * * ” and then follow the usual English covenants of title.

In April, 1927, Mrs. Williams closed this lane and on the May following this suit was instituted. It was brought by Gordan and Hume, who, in their bill, say that the lot owners were threatening to hold them responsible unless they secured for them that right to use the walkway which they had theretofore exercised. Plaintiffs ask that the deed from them to the defendant be reformed to conform to the intentions of the parties, that a mutual mistake be corrected, or that it be set aside as fraudulent; and finally, as a third possible relief, they pray that Mrs. Williams be requested to hold the lot as a purchaser with notice and to grant to the present plaintiffs the right to use it.

The court, in its decree, directed that the deed be rescinded, and that Mrs. Williams execute to Gordan and Hume a proper deed of reconveyance with special warranty of title upon the repayment by them to her of ■ the $633.33.

We do not think the claim either of mistake or of fraud warrants any extended discussion. It is not contended that Mrs. Williams made any mistake and if; is difficult to understand how Gordan and Hume failed to remember the facts. They were charged with knowledge of reservations appearing in the recorded deeds to these Nineteenth street lots, and, more than this, they had actual knowledge of their contents for they wrote them-—all of them—and it is- equally difficult to understand how they, are the victims of fraudulent practice. The agreement to arbitrate the value of this strip was [735]*735in writing; they wrote it. Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
154 S.E. 538, 154 Va. 728, 1930 Va. LEXIS 244, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-gordan-va-1930.