Court Opinion

ID: 6811303
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-23 18:54:23.331019+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:03:39.818045
License: Public Domain

Whittle, J.,
delivered the opinion of the court.
In October, 1904, the plaintiff in error brought ejectment against the defendant in error to recover a certain lot situated in the town of Hampton. The defendant relied upon adverse possession under claim of right, to defeat the plaintiff’s recovery; and at the trial, a jury having been waived and all matters of law and fact submitted to the court, the judgment under review was rendered in behalf of the defendant.
Both plaintiff and defendant claim the land in controversy from a common source (Abraham Holmes), beyond which it is, therefore, unnecessary for either to trace title. Bolling v. Teel, 76 Va. 487; Chesterman v. Bolling, 102 Va. 471, 46 S. E. 470.
The plaintiff made out a prima facie case, connecting his title by successive conveyances with that of Abraham Holmes; while, as observed, the defendant, who had no deed or other paper title, relied solely upon adverse possession under claim ■of right. To rebut that contention, the plaintiff offered in evidence the record of a suit in equity, instituted in August, 1902, by C. W. Holmes, through whom the defendant claims, for specific performance of an alleged contract between his father, Abraham Holmes, and himself, for the sale of the lot in controversy. At the hearing the prayer for specific performance was denied and the bill dismissed.
It thus appears that less than three years before the institution of the present action, C. W. Holmes, by the allegations of his bill, admitted that his entry upon and possession of the land *180was under the alleged contract of purchase from Abraham Holmes, and that the relation of vendor and vendee existed between them.
In such case, the doctrine is well settled in this State that the possession of an incomplete purchaser only becomes adverse when there has been a severance of the relation of vendor and vendee by a distinct avowal on his part that he is holding adversely and not in subordination to the title of the vendor, and notice of such disclaimer is brought home to the vendor.
In the leading case of Clarke v. McClure, 10 Gratt. 305, the rule is thus stated: “A vendee who enters under an executory contract, which leaves the legal title where it was, and contemplates a future conveyance, enters in subordination to it, holds under and relies upon it to protect his possession in the meantime. And in such case, as also in the case of lessee, mortgagor, cestui que trust, and the like, where one is under the owner of the legal title, a privity exists which precludes the idea of a hostile, tortious possession which could silently ripen into a title by adverse possession under the statute of limitations.”
An entry on land under a parol gift from the owner, and a claim to hold any estate by virtue of the gift, is in its nature a recognition of the continued existence of a subsisting title in the legal owner; and a claim to hold any estate by gift from the legal owner is a claim to hold in subordination to his title. Idem.
The principal case has been cited and approved in a number of subsequent decisions by this court. Creigh v. Henson, 10 Gratt. 231; Nowlin v. Reynolds, 25 Gratt. 137, 141; Lewis v. Overby, 31 Gratt. 601, 616; Creekmur v. Creekmur, 75 Va. 430, 436; Chapman v. Chapman, 91 Va. 397, 21 S. E. 813, 50 Am. St. Rep. 846; Hulvey v. Hulvey, 92 Va. 182, 23 S. E. 233 ; County of Alleghany v. Parrish, 93 Va. 615, 622, 25 S. *181E. 882; Va. Mid. R. Co. v. Barbour, 97 Va. 118, 33 S. E. 554; Neff v. Ryman, 100 Va. 521, 42 S. E. 314.
In Chapman v. Chapman, supra, at page 406, it is said: “Before adverse possession can arise between a vendor and his vendee, or between the grantee of the vendor and such vendee, where the vendor has retained the title, and the statute of limitations commences to run, the vendee must have dissevered the privity of title between them by the assertion of an adverse right, and openly and continuously disclaimed the title of his vendor, and such disclaimer be clearly brought home to the knowledge of the vendor or his grantee.”
The record in the suit for specific performance was therefore clearly admissible to show the character of C. W. Holmes’ possession; and, for the error in excluding it the judgment of the trial court must be reversed, and the case remanded for a new trial.

Reversed.