112 Va. 731 | Va. | 1911
delivered the opinion of the court.
Arabia Martin died in 1894, leaving eleven children. Among them were Lewis J. Martin and Thomas H. Martin, the parties to this litigation. Thomas H. Martin had spent four years of his life in the West, where he had saved some money, and upon his return to his home in Roanoke county he purchased sixty acres of land adjoining his father’s farm, for which he paid the sum of $1,000. The land wag bought, paid for and’the "deed executed to him before his father died. Arabia Martin, at the time of his death, was the owner of a farm containing about two hundred and four acres, and Lewis and Thomas Martin agreed to purchase the interest of their brothers and sisters in the lands of their father. In execution of this arrangement they succeeded in purchasing all of their father’s real estate except the interest of two of their sisters, paying for the interests thus purchased the sum of $2,750. This money was obtained from sale of crops raised on the lands purchased by them together with the crops raised on the sixty acres of land belonging to Thomas H. Martin.
During the progress of these transactions, Thomas and Lewis Martin lived together, and the proceeds of the crops, after deducting their living expenses, were used in paying for the land which they had jointly bought. From time to time temporary loans were negotiated to make payments as they fell due. Some of them were secured by deed of trust on the land jointly owned by Thomas and Lewis Martin, and some upon the individual land of Thomas Martin; but all were paid from the proceeds of the crops, and no money from any other source was used in making pay
Thomas Martin answered the bill and denied all the material allegations. Proof was taken, and the circuit court decreed that the “contract of partition heretofore made
This case presents something more than a bill for the partition of lands. As is set forth in the petition for an appeal, “Partition is the division between two or more persons of lands which they jointly own as coparceners, joint tenants or tenants in common,” and before the sixty acre tract which was purchased by Thomas Martin before his father’s death, for which he paid, and to which he held title, can be brought into the partition suit along with the lands jointly owned by Thomas and Lewis Martin as purchasers from their brothers and sisters, a' state of facts must be established which will entitle Lewis Martin to a specific performance of the verbal contract between him and Thomas Martin, that the sixty acre tract should be considered as belonging jointly to Thomas and Lewis Martin.
“Agreements to make partition can only be enforced in equity where a similar agreement to convey land could be enforced.” 1 Minor on Real Property, sec. 901.
Under the statute of frauds, section 2840 of the Code, no action shall be brought upon a contract for the sale of real estate unless some memorandum or note thereof be in writing and signed by the party to be charged thereby or his agent.
Mo such memorandum or note appears in this record, and none in fact existed. To maintain the decree of the circuit court, therefore, the case must be brought within the influence of Wright v. Puckett, 22 Gratt. 370; Plunkett v. Bryant, 101 Va. 818, 45 S. E. 742, and Reed v. Reed, 108 Va. 790, 62 S. E. 792. Those cases are to the effect, that “in order to justify a court of equity in the enforcement of a parol contract for the sale of land on the ground of part
Let it be admitted that such a contract is averred in the bill as should be specifically executed if maintained by proof. We are clearly of opinion that the proof falls far short of that which is required by a court of equity for the enforcement of a parol contract for the sale of land. The only acts of performance upon the part of the plaintiff were the furnishing of his share of the money for the purchase of the interests of his coparceners, the cultivation of the land and the raising of crops, the proceeds of which were devoted, first, to his own support and that of his brother; and the surplus constituted the source of payment of the purchase price of the land.
It must be observed that Thomas Martin is making no objection to the partition of the shares purchased by him jointly with Lewis Martin from their brothers and sisters. Those purchases were the act of Lewis as well as of Thomas. Thomas and Lewis agreed with their vendors upon what the interests purchased were fairly worth, and those interests have been paid for out of crops raised by their joint labor, belonging to them jointly, and that joint interest must be taken to compensate the joint purchasers for their outlay, and Lewis and Thomas must be considered to have had a sufficient quid pro quo for what each of them has paid. If, in addition to an equal share with Thomas in the land jointly purchased, Lewis is to be held entitled to one-half of the sixty acre tract bought and paid for by Thomas, and which is shown to be worth about $2,500, then the result would be that Lewis would be the owner of at least
We are, for these reasons, of opinion that the decree of the circuit court should be reversed and the cause remanded to the circuit court, with direction to exclude from the partition the sixty acre tract, the title to which is in Thomas Martin, and, as to the other lands mentioned in the bill and proceedings, to make partition of them between the plaintiff and the defendant.
Reversed.