Cox v. Heuseman
Cox v. Heuseman
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is a statutory proceeding instituted by W. H. Cox to establish a disputed boundary line between his land and that of an adjoining landowner, Henry Heuseman.
There was a jury trial, which resulted in a verdict finding the line substantially as claimed by the defendant. Heuseman, and the court, in accordance therewith, rendered the judgment under review.
Heuseman concedes that the paper set out above- was drawn up and signed at the time to represent the decision arrived at, but claims that the arbitrators also “agreed to fix the line.” His testimony in this connection was as follows: “After Cox put his wire fence up, I told him he was over on me, and he agreed to have it arbitrated. He picked Mr. Thomas, and I picked Mr. Dunleavy, and we called in Mr. Cox, the surveyor from Hanover county. We all went over the line and Cox said he was willing to put his fence back to the old fence row. The arbitrators met at my house for dinner, and .after dinner they all agreed to fix the line where we had run it, and Cox was to give me $15.00 for the timber cut off the land by Jones, and Mr. Thomas drew up the award, which has been introduced as evidence, Cox was not there at the time the award was made. He had gone home. Mr. Thomas signed all our names to the paper. Mr. Cox left before the paper was written, but told Mr. Thomas what to write. All this was agreeable to Cox. After the award was made, Cox moved his fence back to the line of the fence, where it stayed until a short while before this suit, when he moved it out where it now is.”
Dunleavy, after stating that he was requested to act as one of the arbitrators, testified further as follows: “We all went down to the old fence, Cox, Heuseman, and Mr. Cox, the surveyor. Down on the line Cox agreed to put his
The foregoing is the material evidence bearing upon the arbitration and award. The instruction which the court gave in regard thereto was as follows: “The court instructs the jury that if they believe from the evidence that the plaintiff and defendant submitted the matter in dispute between them as to the boundary between their lands to arbitration, and that the arbitrators decided the dispute in favor of the line now claimed by the defendant, they must find for the defendant.” The plaintiff duly objected to all of the defendant’s evidence upon which this instruction was based, and to the instruction itself.
These instructions (which were not attempting to deal with adverse possession as a source of title) amounted to saying to the jury that acquiescence or verbal acknowledgment or agreement as to the location of a disputed boundary could, proprio vigore, pass title from one man and ves.t it in another. Such is not the law. Acquiescence and admissions as to boundaries may become very proper and very important evidence in determining where the true boundaries are, and such acquiescence and admissions may exist or be made under circumstances which will estop a landowner from denying them; but they are not in themselves independent sources of title. “No mere parol agreement to establish a boundary and thus exclude from the operation of a. deed land embraced therein can divest, change or affect the legal rights of the parties growing out of the deed itself.” McMurry v. Dixon, 105 Va. 605, 611, 54 S. E. 481, 483, and cases there cited.
The instructions in question were improper and should have been refused.
There were other assignments of error, but we discover nothing in them to the prejudice of the plaintiff, and nothing therein requiring any discussion.
For the errors above pointed out, the judgment must be reversed, and the case remanded for a new trial to be had not in conflict with the views herein expressed.
Reversed.
Reference
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- 1. Boundaries—Arbitration and Award—Parol Submission and Award—Semble.—It would seem that both the submission to arbitration and the award between the parties as to the location of a disputed boundary line may be by parol j and that any valid award settling the question of the location of the boundary line is, as to that question, a sufficient foundation for -the party prevailing in the arbitration to stand upon in a subsequent action between the same parties involving the title to land. The theory is that the arbitrators do not make new boundaries nor change old ones, but merely determine, as a conclusive fact, the true location of boundaries pre-existent. 2. Arbitration and Award—Pa/rol Evidence to Vary Atoará.—In the absence of fraud or other exceptional circumstances, the terms of an award, when reduced to writing, cannot be varied by parol testimony. In the instant case the award in question as soon as made was written out and signed. It allowed defendant a small amount in damages for timber cut and tres- . passes committed and in no way referred to the boundary line in dispute. It was, therefore, error to admit parol evidence to the effect that the award fixed the line in a statutory proceeding between the parties to establish the line. S. Boundaries—Arbitration and Award—Case at Bar.—In the instant case the question was not whether one of the parties to a dispute as to a boundary line at the time of its submission to arbitration agreed in fact to the location of the line as the same is claimed by the other, nor, Indeed, what the arbitrators themselves believed as to the true location, but whether the establishment of the line was a matter embraced in the submission and award. The two questions are vitally different.- The authorities in relation to the effect of a valid award in a boundary dispute, and those in regard to the effect of a verbal admission or agreement by a landowner as to the location of a line, will show that while such an award is probably sufficient to afford a basis for either the prosecution or defense of an action of ejectment between the same parties, such an admission or agreement has not that effect. 4. Boundaries—Aoqvdeseence—Parol Agreement as t'o Bowndwries.— Acquiescence or verbal acknowledgment or agreement as to the location of a disputed boundary cannot, where there is no question of title by adverse possession, proprio vigore, pass title from one man and vest it in another. Acquiescence and admissions as to boundaries may become very proper and very important evidence in determining where the true boundaries are, and such acquiescence and admissions may exist or be made under circumstances which will estop a landowner from denying them; but they are not in themselves independent sources of title. No mere parol agreement to establish a boundary and thus exclude from the operation of a deed land embraced therein can divest, change or affect the legal rights of the parties growing out of the deed itself.