85 Va. 448 | Va. | 1888
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is a sequel to a former writ of error to the circuit court of Rockingham county, lately pending and adjudged in this court, in the name of Emily Hollingsworth, plaintiff in error, against John W. Sherman and others, defendants in error (81 Ya. 668), in which the decision and judgment of this court, rendered on the 17th day of December, 1885, was that “the judgment of the circuit court of Rockingham, rendered on the 25th day of April, 1884, appealed from here, is wholly erroneous. • It is therefore considered by the court that the said judgment be reversed and annulled, and that the plaintiff in error recover against the defendants in error her costs by her expended in the prosecution of her writ of error and supersedeas here. And this court proceeding to render such judgment as the said circuit court ought to have rendered, it is further considered by the court that the defendants are guilty of unlawfully withholding from the plaintiff the possession of the parcel of eighteen and three-quarter acres of land m the plat and survey described, etc., etc.; and that the plaintiff is entitled to recover of the defendants the said eighteen and three quarter acres of land in fee in these actions. Therefore, it is considered by the court that the plaintiff recover against the defendants, etc., a certain tract or parcel of land containing eighteen and three-fourth acres situated, etc. etc., together with the damages assessed as aforesaid, and her costs by her about her suits, respectively, in this behalf expended in the said circuit court of Rockingham; whereupon the plaintiff prays a writ to the sheriff of the county of Rockingham .to be directed to cause her to have possession, etc., etc. But this writ shall not issue within thirty days from the entry of this order in the said circuit court, and this order is to be without prejudice to any petition the defendants in error may be advised to file under the provisions of chapters 131 and 132 of the Code of 1873.”
On the 21st of April, 1886, the appellees, Jacob Eunkhouser and ninety-eight others, filed their petition in the said circuit court, claiming that they are entitled to. compensation for the permanent improvements made by them upon the said land, as aforesaid, under the said chapters 181 and 132 of. the Oode of 1873; and praying that they be allowed compensation for their said improvements over and above the value of the use and occupation of said land, according to the said statutes, etc.
Upon the next following day after the filing of the said petition, to-wit: on the 22d day of April, 1886, Emily Hollingsworth, the defendant to the said petition, filed her petition in the said cause, in accordance with the Act of Congress in such case made and provided, in due form and accompanied with a sufficient bond, praying for the removal of the cause at that term—being the first term at which it could have been tried—to the circuit court of the United States for the western district of Yirginia. But the court, “ being of opinion, that the petition is in due form, and that the bond tendered is sufficient, but being also of opinion that this cause cannot now be removed to the United States court upon said petition', doth overrule the motion to remove the same, and doth refuse to enter the order that is usual and proper in cases of removal.”
And the court “ordered that a jury be impannelled at the bar of this court to assess the damages of the said Emily Hollingsworth for the use and occupation of the said land by the
Upon the trial of the cause, the jury found “the compensation which the petitioners, Jacob Funkhouser and others, are entitled to for their improvements, over and above the value of the use of the land in the petition mentioned, according to the statute in such case made and provided, to be $986.” And, thereupon, the appellant, Emily Hollingsworth, moved the court to set aside the said verdict and to grant her a new trial, upon the grounds of the misjoinder of improper parties, and the omission of proper and necessary parties to the petition; and upon the ground that the verdict was contrary to the law and the evidence, and that the allowance of compensation for the improvements was excessive. This motion the court overruled, and gave judgment upon the verdict for the petitioners.
The appellant excepted to the rulings of the court, as aforesaid, and filed proper bills of exception.
Without deciding upon the errors assigned, of the misjoinder of improper parties—persons having no interest or affinity in the cause—and the failure to join necessary parties; and the refusal of the motion to remove the cause to the circuit court of the United States for the western district of Virginia, under the United States Statutes at Large, Vol. XVIII, part 3, page 470, we are of opinion that, upon the merits of the case, the verdict of the jury is clearly contrary to the law and evidence in the record; and that the circuit court erred in refusing to set the verdict aside and grant a new trial. See Muse v. Stern, 82 Va. (7 Hansbrough) 33, and cases there cited. There is not only no evidence in the record to warrant the verdict, but it is directly contrary to the testimony of the appellee’s own
Thus, leaving out of view all the clear, positive, and explicit testimony of the seven intelligent witnesses for the plaintiff in error that the so-called improvements were really worthless in themselves, and had added no value whatever to the property, the jury, in the face of the total absence of any proof, even by the defendants in error’s own witnesses, as to any value whatever being added to the property by these so-called improvements, and in the teeth of the testimony of their own witnesses that their use and enjoyment of the property for only five years would be equal to and ought to balance any possible enhancement of value of the property by the alleged improvements, find a verdict and “upon their oaths do ascertain the compensation which the petitioners, Jacob Funkhouser and others, are entitled to for their improvements, over and above the value and use of the land in the petition mentioned, according to the statute in such case made and provided, to he $986,” for nearly half a century. And the court, overruling the motion to set this verdict aside, entered judgment that “the plaintiffs recover against
At common law the occupant of other people’s property lost all his improvements, they went with the freehold. Effinger v. Hall, 81 Va. (6 Hansbrough) 95.
Sedgwick & Waite on Land Titles, sec. 690, quotes from Wood’s Mayne on Damages as follows: “The improvements may be valuable, but they may be quite unsuited to the use which the plaintiff intends to make of his land. Even if they are such as he would have wished to make, they may also be such as he could not have afforded to make. To compel him to pay for them or to allow for them in damages, which is all the same, is quite as unjust as it would be to lay out money in any other investment for a man and then compel him to adopt it nolens volens.”
The policy of the law still forbids that the real owner of property shall be improved out of his property by volunteers or wrongdoers; and, although the statute allows bona fide occupants to recover as against the true owner for permanent and valuable improvements made upon the land when there was reason to believe that the title under which he or they were holding the' premises to be good, yet the statute, being in derogation of the common law, is to be strictly construed to promote the ends of justice, and to allow of such recovery only in excess of the clear annual value of the premises during the time the occupant was in possession (exclusive of the use by the tenant of the improvements thereon made by himself, or those under whom he claims), and only to the extent and upon clear and full proof of the amount to which the value of the premises is actually increased thereby at the time of the assessment. In this case there is no evidence of any such enhancement, and the defendants in error’s own witnesses expressly testify that even five years’ usufruct of the property, without the improvements, would balance the claim for improvements.
The verdict in favor of the petitioners in the court below, is
Judgment reversed.