22 S.E. 498 | Va. | 1895
delivered the opinion of the court.
The question here is as to the right of the appellee to the injunction that was awarded it against the appellants to restrain
It appears from the record that the appellee claims title to a large body of land under a grant from the commonwealth to Thomas Rustin, bearing date December 11, 1795, and that the appellants claim through one John Porter, who obtained a grant from the commonwealth for the said 109 acres on January 10, 1856. The claimants under the Rustin grant claimed that this parcel of land was within their grant and survey. They brought a suit in ejectment against John Porter, and the declaration was served on him on February 10, 1859. Subsequently, on March 1, 1859, an agreement in writing, under seal, was. entered into and duly executed by John Porter and a certain David Gr. Shepherd, styled “trustee,” the agent and manager of the owners under the Rustin grant, by which the respective rights to the said parcel of land were compromised and adjusted, and the suit dismissed. By that agreement JohnPorter acknowledged the title of the claimants under the Rustin grant to the land, and became their tenant. By its provisions he was authorized to fence, cultivate, or use any of the land until the timber should be taken off, and they reserved the right to cut and use the timber in any.way they might see proper. Porter agreed that, when they had gotten all the timber from the land that they might wish, he would buy the land from them, and give as much for it as any other person ; and they agreed to give to him the refusal of the land so soon as they should get the timber off, or so much of it as they might wish to use. The effect of this agreement was to make an adjustment and settlement by compromise of the respective rights of the parties to the land, and to invest the Rustin claimants with an indisputable title to it, so far’ as John Porter was concerned. He was thereby estopped from contesting or disputing thereafter their title to it. He also, by becoming their tenant, was, for this further reason, that a tenant cannot dispute his landlord’s title, estopped
The Ruskin claimants having, then, so far as John Porter and all who claim through and under him were concerned, an incontestable title to the land, were they entitled to the inj unction ? It was alleged in the bill that the chief value of the land consists in the timber upon it; that, if stripped of this, it is of little value ; and that the appellants, who were defendants in the court below, were engaged in committing irreparable trespass, waste, and injury to the land by cutting the timber and hauling it off and selling it. The averments of the bill in these respects are sustained by the testimony taken in the cause. It was shown that the value of the land consists in its minerals and timber ; and that the timber is indispensable to the development of the minerals, and that the loss of it would be an irreparable injury. It was further shown that the defendants were cutting and taking away timber from the land, and claimed the right to do so under their purchase from John Porter. The jurisdiction of a court of equity to restrain by injunction the commission of waste or trespass, where the applicant for the injunction has the title to the land, and the injury would be irreparable, is well settled. High, Inj. §§ 460, 464 ; Pom. Eq. Jur. §§ 1347, 1356, 1357; Manchester Cotton Mills v. Town of Manchester, 25 Grat. 825 ; Sanderlin v. Baxter, 76 Va. 299 ; Switzer v. McCulloch, Id. 777; and Jerome v. Ross, 7 Johns. Ch. 315. In the case of Manchester Cotton Mills v. Town of Manchester, supra, it was said by Judge Staples, in delivering the opinion of the court, that it was not essential that the applicant for the injunction should establish a clear title, but only that he should show a fair prima facie case in support of his title. 25 Grat. 831. Here the complainant showed, not' merely a fair prima facie case in support of its title as against John Porter, through whom the defendants claimed, but that against him, andall who claim under him, ithad a clear
There is no error in the decree complained of, and the same-must be affirmed.