Birch v. Linton

Hinton, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action of ejectment brought by the defendants in error, Phillip H. Linton and Martha A. Linton, his wife, against the plaintiff in error, John T. Birch, in the circuit court of the county of Alexandria, to recover sixteen acres of land lying in said county, and for the mesne profits accruing during the five years next preceding the action.

During the progress of the trial the defendant requested the court to give four instructions; but it refused to do so, and in lieu thereof gave one of its own; and this action of the court constitutes the first ground of exception.

The refusal of the court to set aside the verdict which the jury found for the plaintiffs, constitutes the second ground of exception.

The evidence was not conflicting, and the court has certified it as being the facts proved. It shows that on the 9th June, 1855, Bobert Birch and Mary, his wife, conveyed to his niece, Martha A. Birch, the lot of land in question, and that on the 8 th day of September, 1857, the said Martha *588A. Birch, who was then an infant, conveyed the same land, to a trustee for the sole and separate use of her stepmother, Jane C. Birch, with power to dispose of it in any manner she might think proper. This last mentioned deed was Recorded on the 9th September, 1857, and on the next day this infant, Martha A. Birch, married her present husband and co-plaintiff, Phillip H. Linton, and went with him to the State of Maryland, where they have resided ever since.

On the 11th day of April, 1865, Jane C. Birch, her trustee and her husband uniting, conveyed the said property to the defendant. On the 22d of April, 1858, the infant, Martha A. Linton, became of age, and on the 6th of September, 1876, the present action was commenced by herself and husband.

That the conveyance of land by an infant is voidable, and that he may, after attaining his majority, affirm or dis-affirm it, is now well settled. But what amounts to an affirmance or a disaffirmance, by an infant of his deed, seems still to be a subject of dispute, as to which there is a considerable conflict of authority. The prevailing opinion, however, seems to be not only that acts which would be insufficient to avoid a deed may amount to an affirmance of it, but that mere silence, for any length of time less than the statutory period, which would bar an action of ejectment, when unaccompanied by some act of a confirmatory nature, will not suffice for that purpose. Upon this point the supreme court of the United States, in a late case, says: “ The preponderance of authority is, that in deeds executed by infants mere silence or inertness, continued for a period, less than that prescribed by the statute of limitations, unless accompanied by affirmative acts, manifesting an intention to assent to the conveyance, will not bar the infant’s right to avoid the deed.” Sims v. Everhardt, 102 U. S. R. 310. And to the same effect is the statement of Mr. Tyler, an author of acknowledged merit, who says: “ That *589by the authorities in this country, it would seem ordinarily that a conveyance of real estate by an infant may be dis-affirmed at any time, so long as an action of ejectment is not barred by the statute of limitations.” Tyler on Inf. and Cov. p. 70; Irvin v. Irvin, 9 Wall. 627; Drake’s Lessees v. Ramsey, 5 Ohio R. 254; Jackson v. Carpenter, 11 Johns. R. 541; Wallace v. Latham, 52 Miss R. 293; Wilson v. Branch, 77 Va. 65. Accepting this as the true exposition of the law on this subject, we come now to consider both the instruction which was given and those which were refused by the court.

As to the single instruction which the court gave, it is ■only necessary to say that, in view of the facts of this case, it correctly expounds the law, and that the general objection taken to it at the trial seems to have been abandoned in this court. As to the first instruction asked for by the defendant, it was properly refused. For, after the most careful scrutiny of the record, we have failed to find one particle of evidence tending to make out the resulting trust to James H. Birch contemplated in said instruction; and to have given it, therefore, would have been to mislead the jury, by withdrawing attention from the facts of this case to a hypothetical case, utterly unsupported by any evidence in this case.

The second instruction was based upon that provision of the statute of limitations which allows infants to make entry or bring action within ten years after the removal of the disability of infancy, notwithstanding the fifteen years’ limitation may have expired. The suggestion of the defendant in this instruction was, that the statute curtailed the time of the infant for the assertion of his rights in this case from fifteen years, the time allowed for the bringing of an action of ejectment, to ten years. But this is exactly the reverse of the operation of the statute, in cases like the one under review. In such cases the statute enlarges the *590time for the assertion of the rights of those under the disability of infancy by giving them fifteen- years in any event, or ten years after disability removed, in which to bring the action, and it is immaterial which period shall first expire. It was therefore properly refused.

By the third instructipn the court was asked to charge the jury that if the plaintiff, after Martha A. Linton became of age, permitted the defendant to expend large sums of 'money in the improvement of the land, without notifying him of their claim, they cannot recover; and

By the fourth instruction the court was asked to instruct the jury that if they believed that Martha A. Linton had not disavowed the deed, but allowed the grantees therein and the defendants to hold possession of the land and to-expend money and labor thereon, in permanent improvements, that they should find for the defendant. The first of these two instructions, in effect, affirms the proposition that mere silence on the part of the infant, for a period short of the statutory limit, within which an action of ejectment may be brought, will bar the right of the infant to recover. Such, however, as we have before seen, is not the law; and this instruction, therefore, was properly refused. As to the fourth instruction, we have only to say, that it is not necessary, in this State, for the infant to do more than bring his suit within the proper time; that is all the disavowal of his deed that is required by the law here. See Bedinger v. Wharton, 27 Gratt. 870; Mustard v. Wohlford’s Heirs, 15 Gratt. 329.

The only remaining question is whether this action was instituted within the proper period for the bringing of an action of ejectment; and upon this point we are all agreed that it was. The right of action accrued on the eighth day of September, 1857, and the suit was brought on the sixth day of September, 1876, the actual period, therefore, which intervened between the date of the conveyance of *591the infant and the date of the bringing of the suit for its avoidance, was eighteen'years, eleven months and twenty-eight days. Now, without undertaking to say whether the whole period between April 17, 1861, and January 1, 1869, should be excepted, that being unnecessary for the decision of this case, we are all clearly of opinion that the period excepted by the act of assembly, passed March 2, 1866 (see Acts 1865-66, p. 191), and known as “An act to preserve and extend the time for the exercise of certain civil rights and remedies,”—to-wit: four years, ten months and fifteen days—must be excepted, and this brings it within the fifteen years allowed by the statute, within which an action of ejectment may be brought.

Upon the merits, we think that there is no reason for the complaint of the defendant that the infant stood by and saw improvements being put upon this property without giving any evidence of disavowal. On the contrary, the facts clearly establish that the infant, within two days after her conveyance was made, left the neighborhood and went to another State to reside, and has never been in that vicinity but once since, and then only for a brief period. And as to the alleged improvements, it is equally clear that they were only such as were incident to the cultivation of the land, the profits of which the defendant has enjoyed. Upon the whole, we are of opinion that the judgment appealed from is right, and must be affirmed.

Judgment appirmed.