Lewis's Heirs v. Singleton's Heirs
Lewis's Heirs v. Singleton's Heirs
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
Andrew Lewis, owning a military survey containing, by the patent calls, 2000 acres, but in fact more, died, having previously made his last will and testament, in which he devised to his son John 1000 acres, part of the 2000, its position to be fixed by the choice of John, and the residue (supposed to be 1000 acres) to be equally divided between his sons Thomas, Andrew and William. Of this tract there does not appear any division to have taken place, determining the choice of John, until after the remaining devisees took possession and sold to Singleton, the ancestor of the present appellees, a proportion of the tract, and he took possession and for a long time held the uninterrupted enjoyment, until the appellants, heirs or representatives of John, the devisee, filed their bill, claiming their choice in a division and the whole or a proportionate share of the surplus. A partition was directed, and a proportionate share of the surplus assigned to each devisee by the decree of the court below, which decree has been affirmed by this court. In making this division and extending the devise of John, a considerable portion, not only of the land, but of the improvements made by Singleton, under his purchase from one of the remaining devisees, was allotted to the complainants. The court below appointed commissioners to value the improvements, and the face of the order directed the commissioners to take as their guide in their assessment the act of assembly entitled “An act to amend an act entitled an act concerning occupying claimants of land.”
To this act the commissioners conformed in their report. It was excepted to in the court below; but the court in the decree thereon, pursued the directions of the act aforesaid. By the errors assigned, this question is presented—Is this case within the provisions of the act recited? The answer to this question involves the construction of the act, which can be correctly given, by considering the old law, the mischief and the remedy. In England and in Virginia, from which our jurisprudence is taken, the contests decided in lands, arose about the same title. All claimants in tracing back the chain ended in the same grant from the government, and the controversies existed between the
Apply this construction of the act to the case of Singleton’s heirs, now before the court, and it is clear they cannot come within it. They and their adversaries trace their titles to the same public record, and the defect exists in subsequent alienations, and their confidence in supposing the land to be their own must have arisen from a trust in a supposed or real parol division, or in a misconception of the will of Andrew Lewis, the elder, and probably in both; and although they have lost, the base of the title remains as stable as it ever was. They cannot, therefore, be entitled to the application of the act.
It has been suggested in argument, that it does not appear what law the commissioners applied, in as much as they were allowed to report such matter as either party might require. It does not, however, appear that they imported any matter at the request of either party; of course they must have reported as instructed by the court below. The act of the court directs them to take the statute for their guide—they conform to the act in every substantial particular, and the orders of court subsequent shew that the court intended to, and did apply, the act to the case, while the appellants excepted to the legality of the proceeding.
The decree must therefore be reversed, and the cause remanded for new proceedings.
But the question presents itself to this court, what kind of instructions to commissioners, and decree, ought to have been rendered? The claim for rents often varies greatly by the rules of equity as to its commencement. Sometimes it ought to be allowed from the commencement of occupancy. At others it is curtailed according to the supposed security of the occupant, or the supineness of his adversary in asserting his claim. Varieties of this kind frequently occur, where the dispute arises on the same title, and without varying the rule according to the circumstances of the case injustice might be done. This, by the bye, strongly conduces to shew that the legislature did not intend to apply the statute, with its inflexible rules, to cases requiring the chancellor to vary with its circumstances. Singleton’s possession was long undisturbed. The construction of the will might, and no doubt was, considered a matter of some difficulty. Besides, in a decision it depended on a contingency whether any of his improvements be assigned to the remaining devisees. It seems to the court, that, under such circumstances, his heirs ought
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.