Williamson v. Paxton

18 Va. 475
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedApril 15, 1868
StatusPublished

This text of 18 Va. 475 (Williamson v. Paxton) 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
Williamson v. Paxton, 18 Va. 475 (Va. 1868).

Opinion

MONCURE, P.,

stated the case, and then proceeded:

I have been thus full in my statement of the testimony in the case in order that the questions arising in it may be the better understood, and I will' now proceed to consider those questions, which are' presented, as I have already said, by two bills of exceptions taken by the defendant to opinions given by the court during the progress of the trial. I will first notice the second bill of exceptions, which was taken to the opinion and action of the court in giving certain instructions of its own,instead of others asked for by the parties respectively. It will be unnecessary to take any notice of the instructions asked for by the plaintiff, as he took no exception, and the case was decided in his favor; but I will notice in detail the instructions asked for by the defendant, and those which were given by the court.

The instructions asked for by the defendant are four in number. The first asserts, that it was'necessary to join Mrs. Williamson in the suit as a co-defendant with her husband. But it was certainly not necessary. The contract was made by the husband in his own name, though for the benefit of his wife. She, being a married woman, could not herself make a contract binding upon her at law, nor could she make such a contract through the agency of her 'husband or anybody else. He was put in possession of the land, and has ever since continued to hold it, and was the proper, and only proper, person to be made a defendant in the action.

The second instruction asked for by the defendant is in these words: “That notwithstanding the stipulation in the contract with regard to said Williamson’s obtaining, at the then next term of the Circuit Court of Campbell or city of *Eynch-burg, a decree authorizing him to appropriate the trust property of his wife, derived from Mrs. Tabb, to the payment of said purchase money for said land, it was competent for the vendor to waive a literal compliance with said stipulation; and such waiver, if made, left the contract to stand as though the stipulation had not been inserted; and further, that the acceptance of the sum of $275 on the 9th January, 1862, as shown by exhibit C D; the demand from time to time thereafter made of the said Williamson for the instalments of purchase money due up to the bringing of the plaintiff’s first chancery suit in August, 1862, as all detailed by the witness A. M. Trible, Esq., if the jury believe his statements in relation thereto to be true; the bringing of the said suit by the plaintiff in August, 1862, claiming a. specific performance of the contract, &c. ; and his second suit for restraining waste in November, 1862; and the prosecution of both suits down to the present time; constituted a waiver of said stipulation, and was a continued assent and claim made by the plaintiff as vendor to hold the contract binding on the defendant as vendee and as a sale of the land; that under these circumstances, and while seeking to enforce the contract as a sale, the defendant, as trustee for his wife, was by its terms entitled to possession of the land, and the plaintiff has no right to disturb that possession by this proceeding.”

This instruction asserts, in point of fact, that at the time of the institution of the action, the defendant was in possession of the land in controversy by consent of the plaintiff under an executory contract of sale between them, which was then in full force and operation; and affirms, in point of law, that under these circumstances, the defendant, as trustee for his wife, was entitled to possession of the land, and the plaintiff has no right to disturb that possession by this proceeding.

*If the assertion of fact thus made had been true, the legal proposition thus affirmed as the consequence thereof would have been erroneous. A vendor of land, while the contract of sale remains executory, and before a deed is made to the purchaser, continues to be invested with the legal title, and (unless the provision in the Code ch. 135, '& 20, applies to the case, as it does not to this), may recover possession by an action at law, at least after making a demand of the possession, even though the vendee may be entitled in equity to a specific execution of the contract, and to have the action at law in the meantime enjoined. If it be said that there can be no such recovery at law without a previous demand of possession, it is a sufficient answer to say, that the absence of such a demand is not embraced as a term in the legal proposition affirmed, though there is abundant evidence in the record proving, [691]*691or strongly tending to prove, that such a demand was made.

But the fact asserted as the foundation of this legal proposition is untrue. The fact asserted is, that a literal compliance with the stipulation in the contract in regard to said Williamson’s obtaining, at the then next term of the Circuit Court of Campbell or city of Eynchburg, a decree authorizing him to appropriate the trust property of his wife, derived from Mrs. Tabb, to the payment of said purchase money for said land, was waived by the plaintiff, which waiver left the contract to stand as though the stipulation had not been inserted. It affirms that it was competent for the vendor to make such a waiver, and that the acts detailed in the instruction constituted a waiver of said stipulation, and amounted to a continued assent and claim of the plaintiff as vendor to hold the contract binding on the defendant as vendee, and as a sale of the land.

It is not pretended that there was an3' written waiver of *the said stipulation, or any other waiver than what is imported by the acts detailed in the instruction. Even if there had been a parol agreement, however express, for such a waiver, it would have been of no effect at law, and could have been enforced in equity only on the ground of part performance.

But do the acts detailed constitute such a waiver, and amount to a continued assent and claim of the plaintiff as vendor, to hold the contract binding on the defendant as vendee and as a sale of the land? I think not.

By the express terms of the contract, the sale was conditional only, the condition being that the defendant should obtain at the next term of the Circuit Court of Campbell county, or of the city of Eynchburg, which terms it seems were in May and June, 1860, a decree authorizing him so to change and invest the fund in his hands as trustee aforesaid, as to guaranty and carry into full and legal effect the agreement on his part; and it was agreed between the parties, that should the (Jefendant fail to obtain such a decree at the time aforesaid, then and in that event the defendant should occupy and use the property as tenant of the plaintiff, trustee as aforesaid, for the period of one year, from the 1st day of May, 1860, and the cash payment of $260 was to be retained as rent for that year. The defendant having failed to perform the condition, he became tenant of the plaintiff for a single year; at the expiration of which, to wit, on the 1st of May, 1861, the plaintiff was entitled to the possession of the land and to recover it in an action of unlawful detainer. Although the plaintiff was so entitled, yet Mrs. Buckner, the beneficiary for life under the deed by which the land had been conveyed to him as trustee, was still anxious that the sale should be made, notwithstanding the breach of the condition by the defendant; and the latter was just as anxious to make the purchase.

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Bluebook (online)
18 Va. 475, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williamson-v-paxton-va-1868.