Turner v. Holloway

146 Va. 827 | Va. Ct. App. | 1926

Christian, J\,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from two decrees of the Circuit Court of Caroline county, Virginia, entered, respectively, on the 18th day of April, 1923, and the 27th day of September, 1924, in a chancery suit therein pending wherein Augustine F. and Sallie P. Turner were complainants and J. M. and R. E. Holloway were defend.ants.

This controversy arose out of the following facts:

The appellants were the owners of a large farm known •as “Hazlewood,” in Caroline county, embracing upwards of two thousand acres and prior to August 30, 1921, employed the Louisville Real Estate and Development Company to subdivide their farm into lots of varying, sizes, and sell the same at public auction. At this public sale the appellees became the purchasers of lot 24, as shown on the plat of said farm, thought to contain 59.4 acres at $66.00 per acre, and aggregating $3,920.40. This sale was evidenced by a written contract of sale which was substantially complied with by the appellees paying all cash except the sum of $1,180.00, for which amount, on May 1, 1922, J. M. Holloway executed his negotiable note, payable four months from date, with interest at six per cent until paid.

In the contract of sale the appellants reserved a vendor’s lien to secure the balance of the purchase money. Upon checking the survey made by the Louisville company, it was ascertained that an error of acreage was made in lot 24, which contained 56.3 acres in lieu of *83059.4 acres. The difference in price at $66.00 per acre amounting to $204.00, and this amount the appellants agreed to allow as a credit on the note for the balance of purchase money.

Suit was brought by the appellants upon the contract of sale against the appellees to recover the balance óf purchase money, evidenced by the note of J. M. Holloway subject to credit of $204.00, anda general warranty deed for lot 24 was tendered with the" bill. The appellees answered the bill and alleged that at the public sale it was publicly stated by the agent of the appellants that lot 24 contained 59.4 acres of highland suitable for cultivation, whereas by survey it contained only forty-one and one-half acres and the balance was marsh land subject to overflow by the tide and unsuitable for cultivation. They prayed that for the mistake or misrepresentation at the auction sale the contract be rescinded, their money returned to them or the purchase price abated according to value of the marsh land.

Upon issue thus joined, the court proceeded to hear and determine the case by consent of parties, upon the testimony of witnesses taken ore tenus before it. Seventeen witnesses were examined before the court, but none of their testimony appears in the record nor any exception to contradicting or varying the written contract by parol evidence. '

Upon consideration of the evidence and the pleadings, the court decided that there was a misrepresentation of' the quantity of arable land and the plaintiffs refused to rescind the contract, thereupon'it entered the decree of the April term, 1923 (on April 18th), which fixed the1 quantity of arable" land free from marsh at forty-one and one-half acres, and the quantity of marsh land not suitable for cultivation at fourteen and one-half acres. *831This decree then adjudged that the defendants pay for the forty-one and one-half acres, at $66.00 per acre, and that the defendants were entitled to an abatement in price for the fourteen and one-half acres of marsh land, and referred the case to W. T. Valentine, commissioner in chancery, to fix the value of marsh land and the amount of the abatement to which the defendants were entitled.

The commissioner took evidence as to the value of the marsh land and adopted the price of two dollars and fifty cents per acre, the price at which such land sold at the public auction of all of the land and so reported. This report was excepted to, but the court overruled the plaintiffs’ exceptions, and entered the decree of the 27th day of September, 1924, which fixed the balance due by the defendants to the plaintiffs at $62.50, and ordered the same paid; that the deed tendered be recorded, and upon the payment of the sum of $62.50 the clerk of the court shall mark the vendor’s lien released. This decree provided for the payment of costs and struck the case from the docket.

The appellees submitted two motions to this court to dismiss this appeal. The first one was based upon the fact that the ore terms evidence was not copied in the record. It does not appear that it was ever taken down in writing and, therefore, could not be made a part thereof. The result of this is that this court cannot review the judgment of the learned chancellor upon the facts, and the decree so far as based upon evidence is conclusive. But this failure to bring up the testimony is not ground for dismissal.

The second ground for dismissal is that the decree of April 18, 1923, having been rendered more than six months before the petition for an appeal was presented, the right of appeal is barred by section 6337 of *832Virginia Code. This is a misapprehension of the character of that decree. It merely settled „the principles of the canse, and was appealable by virtue of section 6336 of the Code, at the option of the plaintiffs. Hess v. Hess, 108 Va. 483-6, 62 S. E. 273.

It is well settled in Virginia what a final judgment, or decree is, from the entry of which the limitation begins to run, as follows: “A final order is one that-disposes of the whole subject, gives all the relief contemplated, provides with reasonable completeness for giving effect to the sentence, and leaves nothing to be-done in the cause save to superintend ministerially the execution of the order. If it appears upon the face of the judgment that further action in the cause is necessary to give completely the relief contemplated by the. court, then the judgment is not final.” Salem Loan Co. v. Kelsey, 115 Va. 382, 79 S. E. 329; Martin v. South Salem Land Co., 97 Va. 349, 33 S. E. 600.

For the reasons above set forth there is no merit in the defendant’s motions to dismiss the appeal and the-same are overruled.

In the oral arguments and the briefs there is considerable discussion of the proposition that the statement of the auctioneer that all of the land was highland and arable was an expression of opinion and not a-representation of a fact. There are recitals of testimony to sustain this position but as it is not part of the. record, therefore, this court cannot consider the same,, and upon all questions of fact this decree must be conclusively presumed to be right. The plaintiffs’counsel also call attention to the fact that J. M. Holloway was-thoroughly familiar with the land, passed it every day, knew its character, and had opportunity to inspect the-same, therefore, the doctrine of caveat emptor applied. These were questions to bé determined by testimony *833and the weight thereof, and there being no testimony-before us, we cannot say whether the doctrine of caveat emptor applies to this case or not.

The only question which we can consider, is there such error of law upon the face of the record as calls for relief. Concretely, does the decree grant abatement for quality instead of quantity of land?

“It is probably true, as contended by counsel for appellants, that bills in equity seeking a purely pecuniary recovery on account of mutual mistake (or mistake of one party caused by fraud or culpable negligence of the other) have heretofore in this State been confined to eases involving a shortage or the loss of part of the acreage contracted for by title paramount. Some of the cases, however, have expressly recognized the propriety of considering improvements or other items of special value in fixing the abatement, and we are unable to see any reason why this principle, so sound and just in itself, and so well established as to shortage of acreage, should not be extended in a proper ease to mistakes resulting in loss of any part of the realty which affected the purchase price. The underlying reason for allowing an abatement when there has been a loss of acreage is that the estimated amount influenced the price.” Logwood v. Holland, 131 Va. 186, 194, 108 S. E. 571-574.

In the Logwood Case above quoted from, an abatement was allowed for the shortage of apple trees on a piece of mountain land valuable only for an orchard, because the trees were part of realty and entered into the price. How much stronger is the instant case, where the purchaser thought he was buying a lot containing arable land at $66.00 per acre, and when the boundaries were ascertained, there were found to be fourteen and one-half acres of marsh land in the lot — subject to daily overflow by the tide — and practically of no value.

*834The appellants further contended that the court erred in enforcing the contract with abatement in price for the marsh land. The court gave them the option to rescind the contract, which they refused, and that was a right to which they were not strictly entitled in law, as it is well settled that the vendor, when there is a deficiency in title, quantity or quality of the estate, cannot force the vendee to take the property, the option nevertheless rests with the vendee to require the vendor to convey it, or such part of it as he is able to convey, with an abatement of the purchase money for any deficiency. Millman v. Swan, 141 Va. 312, 127 S. E. 166.

The court properly held that the marsh land was of no value for arable purposes, and allowed an abatement practically as to quantity. This case falls under the equities and reason of the doctrine of abatement as to quantity, and the doctrine of abatement for quality does not apply.

We see no error in the decrees complained of prejudical to the appellants and they must be affirmed.

Affirmed.

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