150 Va. 166 | Va. | 1928
delivered the opinion of the court.
On March 22, 1926, B. N. Codd and Harry L. Carpel, hereafter called defendants, entered into a written contract with L. P. Matthews, hereafter called plaintiff, to purchase a certain parcel of land in the town of Virginia Beach, Virginia, at the sum of $9,000.-00. Defendants paid $1,240.00 on the purchase price, and plaintiff offered to deliver a deed upon defendants’ full compliance with their contract. Defendants then informed plaintiff that they would not comply with the terms of the contract because the plaintiff was not in a position to convey to them a marketable title, for the reason that the title, which was acquired by the Norfolk Southern Railroad Company, or its predecessors in title, in a condemnation proceeding, would revert to the original owners, or their heirs, or assigns.
In June, 1926, defendants brought action by notice of motion against the plaintiff to recover the $1,250.00 with interest. Plaintiff thereupon filed the bill against the defendants in the instant case, praying that they be enjoined from proceeding further in the suit at law, and be required to specifically perform their written contract of purchase.
By consent, both cases were heard together, and the court enjoined and restrained defendants from prosecuting the action at law, refused to compel specific performance of the contract, and decreed that the defendants recover of the plaintiff the $1,250.00 with interest and costs. From that decree this appeal was allowed.
It appears from the agreed statement of facts that the property mentioned in the written contract is improperly described therein, and that the property intended to be conveyed under its terms consists of the
It is not controverted that the right of way of the Transit Company and the right of way of the Norfolk and Southern Railroad Company were each fifty feet wide and were situate parallel with and contiguous to each other; nor that the railroad company unintentionally located its rail lines on lots 40 and 41, in the same block, instead of on lots 38 and 39 which had been condemned for that purpose.
It further appears from the statement of facts that lots 38 and 39 are not being used for railroad purposes; that the Transit Company used the same lot, which it first used for railroad purposes, up to the time the Norfolk and Southern Railroad Company took it over; that upon the merger of the two companies the Norfolk and Southern Railroad C ompany removed the tracks of that company and has since used the tracks of the Transit Company; that in 1908, receivership proceedings were instituted in the United States District Court against the Norfolk and Southern Railroad Company, and in 1910 the Norfolk Southern Railroad Company
L. P. Matthews acquired his title to the lands involved here by deed from John D. Gordon and wife and Charles G. Hume, bearing date April 27, 1926.
The major question to be decided is: Has the title-which the Transit Company, Incorporated, acquired to lot number 39, by condemnation, and which the Norfolk and Southern Railroad Company acquired, by condemnation, to lot number 38, reverted to the original owners, their heirs or assigns? The answer to this question involves the construction of sections 1079 and 1089 of the Code of 1887, under which the condemnation proceedings were conducted.
Section 1079 of the Code of 1887 (now section 4369 of the Code of 1924), provides: “The sum so-ascertained to be a just compensation may be paid to the persons entitled thereto, or into court. Upon such payment, the title to that part of the land for which such compensation is allowed shall be absolutely vested in the company, county, city, town, institution, or asylum, in fee simple, except in the case of a turnpike company, where a sufficient right of way only for -the-purposes of such company shall be vested.”
Section 1089 of the Code of 1887 (now section 4379' of the Code of Í924), provides: “Notwithstanding a-company may have made a location of lands for its. purposes, * * * the company may afterwards change its location from time to time, as often as it.
Under the plain and unambiguous language used in section 1079, it is certain that the condemning companies acquired absolute fee simple titles to the rights of way in question, which could be defeated only by the action of the company, or its successors, in changing its location. Until such change of location is made, the condemning company, and its successors, are vested with a good marketable title to the property and can convey an unqualified fee simple title thereto, which will be unaffected by any subsequent change of location.
Courts of equity look with disfavor upon forfeitures and will not hold, in cases like the one now under consideration, that the title has reverted to the original owners, their heirs or assigns, unless it clearly appears that there has been a change of location within the meaning of the statute. The statute contemplates that there must be a renewal from the old to the new location; and provides for the ascertainment of just compensation for the lands taken for the new location. Where, as in the instant case, the company has secured no new location but simply dispensed with one of the tracks on the old location, it cannot be said that there has been a change of location, and the reverter clause of the statute has no application.
In Blondell v. Gunter, 118 Va. 11, 86 S. E. 897, which involved the construction of the same statutes, Keith, P., at page 14 (86 S. E. 898), disapproves the contention of counsel that the company acquired only a conditional or limited fee, and that as soon as the rail
In Southern Railway Co. v. Commonwealth, 128 Va., at page 191, 105 S. E. 70, the court, considering the same statute, as amended, says: ‘‘The changes of location authorized by this section are plainly removals of a road from one right of way to another, and not elevations or depressions of the level of the tracks, and it is to changes of this character that the words, “change of location of the line of any railroad refer.”
Defendants contend that they should not be made to specifically perform their contract of purchase for the reason that the description of the property as set forth therein is too vague and indefinite.
The answer is that if the description of the land in the contract is too indefinite, that defect has been cured by the defendants failing to object to the sufficiency of the contract and submitting the case to the lower court upon an agreed statement of facts in which the land is accurately and sufficiently identified.
For the reasons stated, we are of the opinion that there has been no change of location within the meaning of section 1089; that the plaintiff was in a position,, ready and willing, on or before May 5, 1926, to convey to the defendants a fee simple, non-defeasible and marketable title to the land in question, and that he is now entitled to have the defendants specifically perform their contract.
A decree will be entered here reversing the decree complained of and requiring the defendants to specifically perform their contract of March 22, 1926.
Reversed*