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Powell v. Holland

Supreme Court of Virginia
Jan 11, 1934
161 Va. 851 (Va. 1934)

Opinion

36669

January 11, 1934

Present, Campbell, C.J., and Holt, Hudgins, Gregory and Chinn, JJ.

1. EJECTMENT — Outstanding Title to Defeat Recovery — What Constitutes Outstanding Title. — An outstanding title sufficient to defeat a recovery in an action of ejectment must be a present, subsisting, and operative legal title, upon which the owner could recover if asserting it by action.

2. EJECTMENT — Outstanding Title to Defeat Recovery — What Constitutes Outstanding Title — Case at Bar. — In the instant case, an action of ejectment, defendant relied on a deed to show an outstanding title in a third party, but the grantee in the deed derived no interest under the deed hostile to plaintiffs and the outstanding title did not belong to defendant.

Held: That a judgment for plaintiffs should be affirmed.

Error to a judgment of the Circuit Court of Accomac county, in an action of ejectment. Judgment for plaintiffs. Defendant assigns error.

Affirmed.

The opinion states the case.

Mapp Mapp and Herbert Barnes, for the plaintiff in error.

George L. Doughty, Gunter Gunter and J. Harry Rew, for the defendants in error.


This controversy, which involves a part of the land which passed to Jesse R. Watson under the will of his father, William T. Watson, is between the same parties named in the case of James T. Powell v. Mary Holland, etc., Ejectment Case No. 1, ante, page 844, 172 S.E. 293, where this will was construed in an opinion announced at this term. The only question raised here, not determined in that case, is the failure of the plaintiffs to trace their chain of title to the Commonwealth or to a common ancestor.

It is conceded, or if not conceded clearly established by uncontradicted evidence, that the land here in question was a part of the land devised to Jesse R. Watson for life, with remainder to his children, plaintiffs in this case. It was also proven that the land was conveyed by Jesse R. Watson to Lemuel Showell, whose interest was conveyed to Rubin Swift; that Rubin Swift conveyed the property to Salathiel E. Matthews, and that Salathiel E. Matthews conveyed the land, or certainly a part of it, to James T. Powell, defendant, who at the time of the trial was in possession, claiming under that deed. In the deed from Matthews to Powell, whether erroneously or not, it is stated that the property conveyed is a certain "parcel of land being the life interest of Jesse R. Watson conveyed to Charles Reines and wife * * *." Defendant introduced a deed from Charles H. Rines and wife to Salathiel E. Matthews, in which the property is described as "a certain lot of land on Chincoteague Island, Virginia, known as the Dr. Rines blacksmith lot, containing 1,458 square feet." Assuming that the land described therein is the same land, or a part of the same, which was conveyed by Salathiel E. Matthews to Powell, the grantee derived no interest under the Matthews deed hostile to plaintiffs, because that deed specifically states that it conveyed the life interest only of Jesse R. Watson, and closed with the following covenants:

"The parties of the first and second part doth covenant together with the said James T. Powell that they are lawfully endowed with the right to sell and convey the same said lease of land and improvements thereon as above described and that they, their heirs and assigns will warrant the same during the life of the said Jesse R. Watson against the lawful claims and demands of all persons."

[1, 2] This deed does not show any title in James T. Powell. Plaintiffs' evidence clearly made out a prima facie case. Defendant relies on the deed from Rines to Matthews to show an outstanding title in Matthews, but "an outstanding title sufficient to defeat a recovery in an action of ejectment, must be a present, subsisting, and operative legal title, upon which the owner could recover if asserting it by action." Reusens v. Lawson, 91 Va. 226, 21 S.E. 347, 348; Holladay v. Moore, 115 Va. 66, 78 S.E. 551; Brunswick Land Corp. v. Perkinson, 146 Va. 695, 707, 132 S.E. 853; Burks' Pl. Pr. (2d Ed.) 157, 158. Defendant's proof does not meet these requirements.

The judgment of the trial court is plainly right and is affirmed.

Affirmed.

GREGORY, J., dissenting.


Summaries of

Powell v. Holland

Supreme Court of Virginia
Jan 11, 1934
161 Va. 851 (Va. 1934)
Case details for

Powell v. Holland

Case Details

Full title:JAMES T. POWELL v. MARY HOLLAND, JOHN H. WATSON, AND OTHERS

Court:Supreme Court of Virginia

Date published: Jan 11, 1934

Citations

161 Va. 851 (Va. 1934)
172 S.E. 295