1 Va. Dec. 165 | Va. | 1879
delivered the opinion of the court.
That decree decides : 1st. That the contract of substitution, of the 15th of October, 1859,'and the deed made in pursuance thereof on the 14th of September, 1860, and now deposited with Jos. Gr. Steele, as an escrow, having been long acquiesced in by James A. Frazier, after attaining his majority, and having been confirmed, ratified and accepted by him, by solemn act of record, in his bill for partition in one of these cases, cannot now be repudiated and discovered by him, but must be and is hereby ad judged, to be firm, stable and binding upon him, and all the other parties thereto.
2nd. That it appearing that the title of James A. Frazier to the Poage tract was inferior to that of the persons claiming under the Grrubb patent or Cope survey, the said Frazier was justified in surrendering the same without awaiting a final judgment at law.
3rd. That, although the title to the Poage tract has failed by claim of paramount title in another, James A. Frazier is not, under all the circumstances of the cause, entitled to rescission of the contract of substitution of October 15th, 1859, said Frazier having confirmed and accepted the deed of September 24th, 1860, which gives effect to that contract, and having for seven or eight years, since attaining his majority, and for a long time after the defect in the title to the Poage tract was known to him, continued in the use, occupation and possession of the Dunlap and Ailstock tracts, cutting large quantities of timber from those tracts, so that it would be impossible now to place the parties in statu quo, as they stood at the date of the contract, were the court now to decree a rescission of the same.
The court is of opinion that there is no error in this decree of the circuit court.
1. Although at the date of the contract of substitution and of the deed pursuant thereto, made and entered into on behalf of the appellant, he was a minor, yet after attaining full age, in the bill filed by him and Porter and wife, he expressly and distinctly ratified said deed and said contract in the following language : ££On the 14th day of September, 1860, the heirs of said James Campbell made a conveyance, which your orator understood is now on deposit with James Gr. Steele of Eockbridge, -as an escrow to be delivered when the purchase money shall all have been paid, b}r which they convey to your orator, James A. Frazier, six hundred and fifty-two acres of land originally agreed to be conveyed by James Campbell as aforesaid, embracing-the Eockbridge Alum Springs and its improvements, and sundry other tracts mentioned in said deed, and amounting in quantity and quality to about the number of acres originally agreed to be sold by the said James Campbell, with the consent of Wm. Frazier, John T. Eandolph and Stephen A. Porter, the husband of the widow of John W. Frazier, in full discharge of the said contract of the said James Campbell, deceased, provided your orator, James A. Frazier, then a minor, shall ratify the said arrangement at his arrival at full age, and your orator does • hereby ratify and confirm the same, and doth accept the said deed of the'14th of Sep
This deliberate act of the appellant made the deed of the 14th of September, 1860, as obligatory upon him as if it had been formerly and solemnly executed by him in proper person in the first instance, and he had then been sui juris. Besides this express ratification, there was subsequent acquiescence for several years. Mere acquiescence without anything- else is not generally sufficient evidence of a promise, but any ratification or affirmance of a clear and equivocal character, showing an intention to affirm the deed is enough. Ervine v. Ervine, 9 Wall. 617. The question of disaffirmance is considered and discussed in the opinion of the court delivered by Judge Moncure in Mustard v. Wohlford’s heirs, 15 Gratt. 329.
2. There is no doubt that Randolph had a paramount title to the Poage tract of land, and it was therefore competent for the appellant to surrender possession to him without awaiting eviction by judgment at law. Merryman v. Bourne, 9 Wall. 592.
3. This is not a case for the rescission of the contract. The application to a court of equity to rescind or cancel contracts for lands, like that for their specific execution, is addressed to the sound judicial discretion of the court; and in the exercise of that discretion, the court not unfrequently refuses to rescind, when it would also refuse to decree the contract to be performed. 2 Minor’s Inst. 811. The rule being, that he who seeks equity must do equity in matters. arising out of the transaction in respect of which he seeks relief, the court will not rescind a transaction, unless the party against whom relief is sought can be remitted to the position in which he stood antecedently to or at the time of the transaction. The court proceeds on the ground that as the transaction' never ought to have taken place, the t
A contract cannot be rescinded, if the circumstances have in the meantime so far changed that the parties cannot be restored to the position in which they stood before or at the time of the contract. Kerr on Fraud and Mistake, 328, 334, 335.
Manifestly the returning to the Campbell heirs of the Ailstock and Dunlop tracts of land, stripped as they have been, since the deed of September, 1860, of their timber, which alone rendered them of any value, would not be a restoration of the former status.
4. Rescission being properly denied, and the appellant being without adequate remedy at law, equity will grant relief by making compensation. The standard adopted by the court by which the loss should be measured, namely, the value of the Poage tract as of the 15th of October, 1859, the date of the contract of substitution, is, in our opinion, the correct one under the circumstances. It is impossible to determine with any decree of certainty where the four hundred and ninety-eight acres, the deficiency in the quantity of land originally contracted to be sold, are located. It cannot be ascertained from the written contract of 1847 between Campbell and Doyle, nor from the contracts between Campbell and the Fraziers, nor from the contract and deed of substitution, nor from any papers or documents or other evidence in the case. It is very clear, that when the contract of substitution was entered into, the heirs of Campbell were in a condition to make up the deficiency either out of the moiety of the original tract sold to Doyle, or the moiety retained by their father, or out of both, as might be proper, the heirs having by purchase acquired Doyle’s interest. But the
What that value is, or rather was, at the date of the contract of substitution October, 15th, 1859, is matter of fact, and is the only question of much difficulty in this case. It was not settled by the decree already referred to, but was reserved, and was finally determined by the decree appealed from, which was rendered on the 18th day of June, 1877.
On the several references to a commissioner for enquiry as to the value, many witnesses were examined and there was great diversity of opinion among them, the estimates varying from twenty-five cents to §25.00 per acre. Of the sixteen witnesses examined, for the appellee, one only put the value as high as §1.00 per acre. Some of, the others put it at §2.00 per acre, others at §1.00 and the others at less. The average is between §1.00 and §2.00 per acre. Three witnesses only on the part of the appellant fixed a value. Two of these were the appellant himself, and Mr. Wm. Frazier, and the other a Mr. Withrow. The last named thought the timber on the land was worth §1,500.00 or rather he said he would give that sum for it. The estimates of the Fraziers were with reference to the land, as an appendage to the Alum Springs. An examination of the depositions will show that the estimates of these gentlemen were more or less speculative. Mr. Wm. Frazier says he was influenced in the acquisition of the land by its value, and use as an appendage to the Springs. One of the elements in his estimate was the timber on the land. Another was the spring upon it, and the use he proposed to make of it. He considered it a splen
Although this opinion is already at greater length than was anticipated at its commencement, we deem it proper to give some extracts from the depositions of these witnesses, because of their important bearing on the case.
Mr. Wilson, after stating that he and Sterrett, went on the land, and that the appellant and appellee met them, and showed them the lines, corners and line trees, about which there was no disagreement, says, “We went through the tract, and examined it thoroughly. This tract, which is known, as the Bubbling Spring or Poage tract, lies in the mountains, or, rather between two hills, which are parts or spurs of the mountains, and forms a little valley, with the Bubbling Spring, between the middle of the tract and the upper end. This is a very beautiful spring, and a bold stream flows from it through the remainder of the land. The quality of the land is rather better than ordinary mountain land. A portion of the tract is considerably better, say two-thirds, but the remainder is very inferior. The average, however, is somewhat better than ordinary mountain land. For agricultural purposes, my opinion is that the land will not pay for its cultivation.
“The tract is tolerably well timbered for mountain land. The timber consists of oak, some few poplars, a few large-white pines, and a very few locust; the balance is undergrowth, scrub oaks and dwarf pines. Most of the white-oak timber would be suitable for railroad ties, but is hardly large enough for saw timber. I think the whole tract would not, in 1859, have furnished more than seven hundred to one thousand hewed ties, which at that time, standing in the woods, were worth about four cents each. About that time, I was engaged in the tie business, and both bought and sold ties, about the same distance from
‘ ‘I can not see how this tract has any special value as an appendage to the Rockbridge Alum Springs property. There is no way of getting to it from the Springs except by crossing a mountain. The only road practicable for vehicles is circuitous, and the distance some three or four miles. It is also over the mountain. A nearer way, but a mere path, we were informed, leads directly across the mountain. On account of the distance, etc., from the Springs, the tract could not be specially valuable to the Springs as a place from which to obtain firewood. A large amount of firewood might be obtained, but I don’t think it would pay to get it out.
‘ ‘There is a good road from the tract to the railroad, some three or four miles, but in 1859, and since, there has been no demand for firewood on the railroad to justify the cost of obtaining it from this tract.
‘ ‘As to any other especial value of the tract as an appendage to the Springs, the idea of making a bathing place there, and a fishing place, etc., we took them all in consideration, and my judgment is that the proprietor would never be repaid the costs of making such improvements and keeping them up. ’ ’
Sterrett concurred in Wilson’s testimony in every particular.
Mohler examined the land in company with the appellee, the day after it was examined by Wilson and Sterrett. He
After speaking of his examination of the land, he says: ‘ ‘I am satisfied that I saw the whole tract. There is not and has not been for years, or, indeed, ever, any saw timber there in sufficient quantity to justify the expense of getting it out. It would be preposterous to take a saw mill there to get out the small quantity of good saw timber on the land. In my judgment there is white pine enough to make 20,000 shingles, and white oak enough to make from 1,000 to 5,000 tight barrel staves. The remainder of the timber suitable for railroad ties would yield probably a thousand ties and no more. There is a larger yield of ties than the land would have afforded fifteen or twenty years ago, owing to the growth and improvement of the trees. My belief is that the timber is much better now than it was fifteen or twenty years ago. I consider the whole value of the tract of land consists in the value of the shingles, barrel and tie timber found on it. I think the value of these kinds of lumber per thousand is about what it was twenty years ago, viz. : shingles about seventy-five cents per thousand, barrel staves about $2.00 per thousand and railroad ties five cents (5c.) each. The land of this tract is not worth anything for agricultural purposes — it is not worth fencing. Mr. Randolph, the owner of the tract, had put up a summer residence on the tract at considerable expense, but the whole property with its present improvements, can have no great value to any one except a rich man, who can afford to indulge in such a place of resort.
We have omitted to state a fact appearing in the record, which is deemed of some importance in determining the value of this Bubbling Spring or Poage tract of land. It was purchased by the appellee, Campbell, on the 7th day of September, 1859 (a little more than a month before the contract of substitution was entered into), at a public sale under a decree of the court. The sale was made in front of the hotel, at the Rockbridge Alum Springs, by public auction, after advertisement in the county newspaper and by hand bills, and, as Campbell testifies, in the presence of Mr. Wm. Frazier. This statement is contained in what is called “the replication” of Campbell to the appellant’s petition, which is referred to in Campbell’s deposition and made a part of it. The price at which it was purchased was sixty-two dollars and fifty cents for the tract. Campbell says that he thought he paid its value when he bought it, but that he might have given a dollar an acre, if he could not have bought it for less, that he did not think he would have given any more than one dollar per acre at that time.
Upon the whole case, we are of opinion that there is no error in the decree complained of, and that it should be affirmed.