114 Va. 745 | Va. | 1913
delivered the opinion of the court.
The subject of this controversy is a lot of earth, dust and rock, from the smallest particles to rock weighing several hundred pounds, distributed over about two acres of land, in various depths from a foot or two to eight or ten feet; and the facts out of which the controversy arises are as follows:
In 1903 and 1904 the Southern Railway Company was engaged in double-tracking its railroad through the county of Culpeper, and in so doing it became necessary for it to excavate a very deep and long cut just south of the town of Culpeper, a portion of the right of way for the new track having been purchased by the company of S. Russell Smith. In the construction of its new track it became necessary for the company to temporarily change a county road, and to provide a place on which to deposit the earth and other materials to be removed from the new cut. For these purposes the company entered into a written contract with Smith, through A. FT. Peyton, one of its agents, whereby, in consideration of the sum of §1,100 paid him, Smith granted to the company the privilege of using a strip of his land to be used by the public as a road during the construction of the company’s work, and also the right to use and occupy certain other portions of the lands of Smith upon which the company’s contractors and employees might dump the stone and dirt to be taken from the cut near his land, and for other purposes in carrying out the company’s work of double-tracking its roadbed. This con
In making the cut the first material taken was principally earth, which was hauled by cars and dumped in part, at Smith’s request, so as to fill and somewhat grade an old road upon Smith’s land, and the residue of the earth was placed upon the side of a hill. After working down into the cut those engaged in its excavation came to a stratum of almost solid rock, which had to be blasted with dynamite, and after being so blasted was hauled out by means of tram cars, drawn by mules, and evenly spread or dumped in a little valley between two hills below where the earth taken from the cut was deposited, upon Smith’s land, the earth and rock together covering about two acres of the land adjacent to the company’s right of way, and filling certain hollows and low places in the land, the rock at som'e points in the hollows and low places being piled above the original surface of the land eight or ten feet, while at other places the material was so scattered or placed that it was only one or two feet deep, the top of all presenting a comparatively level surface.
The work on the cut was completed in 1904, and the rock and earth therefrom has remained where placed upon the land of Smith without being disturbed, a great deal of the rock having disintegrated, and over which vegetation has grown, finding root in the earth mingled with the rock and soil by the disintegration of thie rock itself.
In 1909 Smith executed a deed of trust to John B. Miller, trustee, on the tract of land on which the waste material taken from the railway company’s cut had been deposited, Securing certain of his creditors, but no reservation of the material so deposited was made in this deed of trust, which deed covered the entire tract of land, containing about sixty acres, and certain other property of Smith’s located
On the morning of this sale Smith executed a deed to his wife, M. E. R. Smith, in which he claimed said waste to be his personal estate and undertook to convey it to her, which deed was not recorded until four days after the sale, and Smith, although he knew the land was to be sold that day, gave no notice of the deed from himself to his wife, and allowed the land, with the deposit of rock, etc., thereon to be sold; nor did he intimate to anyon'e interested in the sale his intention to claim the rock as personal property. At the sale of the land John M. Colvin became the purchaser, but afterwards assigned his purchase to the Culpeper National Bank, to which the trustee made a deed. Afterwards, on April 12, 1912, the said bank conveyed said land to E. J. Eggborn.
Mrs. Smith, to whom her hsuband, S. Russell Smith, undertook to convey said rock on November 20, 1909, made no effort to remove the same, or assert any claim thereto,
The question presented is one of the first impression in this State, and has been passed on in only a few cases by the courts in other jurisdictions, so far as the reported cases show.
It has been put beyond question by the authorities, with little or no dissent, that rock naturally is a part of land, just as are all other substances from which the earth in its comprehensive sense is formed; therefore, the precise and controlling question to be considered in this case is whether the rock in dispute has lost its character as real estate by being blasted and taken from the particular land where placed by the hand of nature, and deposited, commingled" with earth, upon other land.
The contract between the railway company and S. Russell Smith, under which the former acquired the right to place the waste material from its cut upon the latter’s land, reserved no interest in this waste or any part thereof to the railway company, nor is there anything in the contract to indicate that the use to be made of the land as a dumping ground for this material was to be temporary only; the word “temporary” being used in the contract only with reference to the road Secured under the contract over Smith’s land for the use of the public until the work of the railway company double-tracking its road at
That Smith could not by a mental process make such material real estate or personal property at his option, as seems to be contended by the plaintiff, is'too clear to admit of argument.
It is the contention of the plaintiff that in order that the rock, etc., deposited on Smith’s land may become annexed thereto as a part of the land, the annexation must have been made by Smith and not by the railway company; that the appearance of the rock was such that purchasers of the land would be affected with notice of the facts which .an inspection of the property disclosed, as well as of such facts as by the use of ordinary care and diligence they might have obtained knowledge of; that it was a question for the jury to decide whether or not the character and .appearance of the rock itself was sufficient to put Miller, trustee, and purchasers claiming under him, on notice; it being conceded that even though it was intended by Smith that the rock should be personal property and he talked with the railroad officials about selling it to the railroad,
On the other hand, the defendant contended in the lower court, and contends here, that the doctrine as to constructive notice has no application to the case; that when the railway company placed the rock in question, which in its nature was real estate, upon Smith’s land, with no intention of ever reclaiming it, it became thereby a part of the real estate on which placed; and that as Miller, trustee, did not have actual notice, or notice appearing of record, that the rock was claimed by Smith as his personal property, the title to the rock passed with the land to Miller, trustee, and by successive conveyances to the defendant.
The trial court adopted the view of the case contended for by plaintiff, rejecting that of the defendant on all material points, and instructed the jury accordingly.
We do not deem it at all necessary to review here the instructions given for the plaintiff or those asked by the defendant and refused.
In Blowett v. Tregonning, 111 Eng. Rep. (Ad. & El. Reprint) 524, the opinion by Patterson, J., says: “I am of opinion that when anything in the nature of soil is blown or lodged upon a man’s close, it is a part of his close. * * * It can, we think, make no difference whether by evulsion or alluvion, or other actions of the elements, the soil of one person is transferred to the land of another, or is placed there by the voluntary act of the former owner, with the consent of the other party, with the intention of leaving it there permanently.”
The only cases to which we have been cited or have been
In the first-named case the subject of the controversy was a deposit or bank of marl which had been excavated in making a channel to turn the water of the Canandaigua river for canal purposes through the land of one Torrey, which marl had been deposited on his land. The marl underlaid a stratum of muck about four feet in depth, and in removing the soil from the excavation, the mnck was thrown out, and the underlying marl was afterwards excavated and deposited over the muck on the banks of the cut, and the mounds of muck and marl made by the deposit remained undisturbed until 1865, when Torrey, who had remained owner of the land, on January 6, 1865, conveyed his farm, including the land on which the marl had been deposited,' to one Spaudling, by warranty deed containing this exception: “Excepting the bed or deposit of marl on both banks of the Canandaigua river which passes through said land; and it is an express stipulation and agreement between the parties hereto that the said marl may remain on said land for ten years from the date of this indenture, and that the party of the first part may, at any time, within said ten years, remove a part or the whole of said marl.”
The opinion in that case, in disposing of the question involved in the case we now have in judgment, said: “When this conveyance was made the marl was part of Torrey’s land. It was a part of the soil when excavated, and its character as land was not changed by reason of its displacement from the bed it originally occupied, and its deposit on the land of Torrey. It was not deposited with a view to removal. The value of the marl as a fertilizer was not known until about the time of.Torrey’s conveyance to Spaudling. It was not severed from the land as timber trees cut by the owner, or as coal or minerals mined and deposited on the surface, with a view to sale
The opinion further says: “The position and rights of Torrey under the deed were, we think, precisely similar to what they would have been if Spaudling had owned the land and had granted to Torrey the beds of marl, with the same right of removal as is contained in Torrey’s deed. The' exception was of an interest in the land conveyed, but it was an interest terminable at the expiration of the ten years. It was in legal effect a reservation to Torrey of so much of the marl as he should remove from the premises within that time. If the right of removal was not exercised within the time limited, the right was gone, and Torrey’s grantee would thereafter hold the land and the marl, relieved from the burden created by the exception.”
In other words, the court held that the marl not having been removed within the ten years it became and thereafter remained a part of the land itself, as though there had been during the ten years a severance of the title to the marl from that to the land itself. So that, if there was, as Smith testifies in this case, an agreement between him and Peyton that the railway company might take and remove a part of the rock in question for use as ballast in the completion of the work it was then doing in the cut,
It is true that Smith also testifies as to certain efforts he made to sell the rock to the railroad company, and as to certain uses he had in his own mind purposed to make of the rock as personalty; but if all this be true it could not by any process of reasoning avail to affect the rights of Miller, trustee, or those claiming under him with respect to the rock in question, since it is not pretended that they or either of them had any knowledge of Smith’s efforts to sell the rock, or of any purposes evolved in his own mind as to what uses he would make of it.
In Ellis v. Wrenn, supra, the controversy was with respect to the stones which had been in large quantities picked from the land of the testator and moved from their original location and placed in long piles or heaps and there remained. The stones afterwards became valuable, and the executor undertook to sell them as personal property, and the right to do so was by the heir contested, and the court held the stones to be a part of the real estate upon which they were piled or heaped, and therefore the property of the heir.
The learned counsel for the plaintiff cite cases to support the proposition that Smith alone could have annexed the rock in question to his land so that it Avould have
When the land in this instance was conveyed to Miller, trustee, for the benefit of Smith’s creditors, he was at that time in a position to protect Miller and subsequent purchasers of the land by reserving title to the rock in question; but this he did not do; nor did he disclose to Miller then, or to those claiming title under Miller thereafter, a purpose on his part to treat the rock as personalty until this suit was brought.
The authorities are in unison that the law cannot prefer the claims of those who take no care of themselves to those who have faithfully used all diligence. If a loss is to be sustained, it is more reasonable that he who neglected the" means the law puts into his power should suffer, rather than he who has used those means. Lacustrine, &c., v. Lake G. Co., supra, Prince v. Case, 10 Conn. Rep. 375, 27 Am. Dec. 675; Powers v. Dennison, 30 Vt. 752; 13 Am. & Eng. Enc. L. 627.
As opposed to the view taken in the cases of Lacustrine, &c., v. Lake G. Fert. Co. and Ellis v. Wren, supra, Fulton v. Norton, 64 Me. 410, is cited for the defendant; but the facts in that case are wholly dissimilar to the facts in this case. There the owner of the freehold had sold the loose rocks on his land, and they had been gathered and piled near a navigable water course for the purpose of transportation. They had been severed from the freehold and the title thereto had passed from the owner of the freehold, thereby working an actual as well as a constructive severance, and had been converted into personal property of
With respect to the contention that this rock was not adapted to use as real estate, but was adaptable for macadamizing and concrete purposes, the answer is that this is true of all rock, whether naturally imbedded in the land or lying loose upon its surface. Bock of itself will not support vegetation, and has no agricultural value; yet upon land it is a part of it and passes with the title of the land. This rock was no more adapted to macadamizing purposes than any other like rock. It, according to the testimony of Smith, the leading witness for defendant and the former owner of the land, would have to he re-quarried, crushed and graded before it could he utilized for macadam, concrete, or ballast, which is true of all rock, and, therefore, it cannot be said that this rock was more adapted to use as personal property than as real estate. •
It may he asked in this connection for what was the $1,100 paid by the railway company to Smith, if not, in large part, for the right to deposit the earth, rock, etc., upon Smith’s land, there to remain permanently, thus changing the surface of the two acres of the land upon which the deposit was made, and rendering it less adaptable to the uses that had been made of the land theretofore? The record does not disclose an answer to this question and none occurs to us.
We are of opinion that the trial court erred in giving-instructions for the plaintiff opposed to the views expressed in this opinion, and also erred in refusing instruc
Reversed.