delivered the opinion of the court.
The object of this suit is to subject one-half of that portion of a strip of ground fifty feet wide, formerly designated as Walnut street, in the city of Roanoke, lying continguous to the Southern boundary of lot Ho. 1, conveyed by the Home Building *754and Conveyance Company to the Boanoke Building Company, to the alleged lien of appellant’s judgment.
The devolution of title to lot Ho. 1 is accurately and succinctly set out in the brief of counsel for the appellees as follows : “In October, 1888, the Boanoke Land and Improvement Company conveyed a tract of land in Boanoke city to the Home Building and Conveyance Company, the southern boundary being described as running with Walnut street H. 67° 15' W. 168.8 feet to Marion street. On the thirteenth day of May, 1890, the Home Building and Conveyance Company conveyed the land by the same description to the Boanoke Building Company. The Boanoke Building Company sub-divided the land into lots, and on the third day of February, 1891, conveyed that <one of the lots lying furtherest south and abutting on Walnut street, to Joseph Ellis, the southern boundary of the lot being given as H. 67° 16' W. 156.65 feet, or practically that given in the deeds from the Boanoke Land and Improvement Company to the Home Building and Conveyance Company, and from that, company to the Boanoke Building Company (the discrepancy in the length of the line is attributed to cutting off an alley from the side of the lot) ; but the deed does not state that the line runs with Walnut street. The lot conveyed by this deed is further described as lot Ho. 1 on a map in the clerk’s office of the corporation court of the city of Boanoke.”
It. is admitted that the first two deeds invested the respective grantees, successively, with one-half of Walnut street, subject to the easement of the right of way; but the appellant denies that such was the operation of the deed from the Boanoke Building Company to Ellis, that deed not specifically calling for Walnut street as the southern boundary of lot Ho. 1.
Durbin’s judgment was recovered against the Boanoke Building Company at the June term, 1893, more than two years after the conveyance of the lot to Ellis; and it is fair to assume that the debt, upon which the judgment, is founded, was not in *755■existence at that time, since it hears interest from a subsequent •date. This suit to enforce the judgment was brought July 16, 1904, nearly fourteen years after the title to the lot had passed ■out of the judgment debtor. It is also admitted that the appellee, Mrs. Baehrach, the alienee of Ellis, has erected a residence, located in part on the strip of land in dispute, at a cost of $4,000.
It appears (but at what time the record does not affirmatively disclose) that the location of Walnut street, as originally designated, was changed so as to run in a more southerly direction; the effect of the change being to interpose a small triangular lot between lot Ho. 1 and the line of the new street. The lot thus ■created was purchased by Ellis from the Roanoke Land and Improvement Company, February 14, 1891. The location of Walnut street having been once established, in the absence of ■evidence to the contrary, we must presume that it remained unchanged at the date of Ellis’ purchase. The appellant, however, does not attach importance to that circumstance, but rests his right to recover “'upon the fact that the street is not called for or mentioned in the deed.”
AYe think it is clear that the conveyance from the Roanoke Building Company to Ellis is coextensive with the calls of the second clause” of the deed from the Home Building and Conveyance Company to the Roanoke Building Company, and the southern line of lot Ho. 1 coincident with Walnut street; and that the legal effect of the deed to Ellis was, to invest him with title, subject to the right of way, to the center of the street, as ■effectually as if that boundary had been expressly called for.
The general rule is stated in Malone on Real Property Trials, 254, as follows: “The authorities, both in England and America, uniformly agree to the legal proposition, that ‘a person holding lands bounded upon a highway is held prima facie to own to the center of the road.’ This presumption is based on grounds •of public convenience, and to prevent disputes as to the precise boundaries of property; and it is supposed that when the road *756was originally formed, the proprietor on either side contributed a portion of his land for the purpose.”
This doctrine has uniformly received the sanction of this, court, the latest expression on the subject being found in. Schwalm v. Beardsley, 106 Va. 407, 56 S. E. 135.
In Tyler’s Law of Boundaries, 127, after laying down the general doctrine where the conveyance calls for a highway as a. boundary, the learned author observes: “Indeed, it has been held by high authority that when land is sold bordering on a highway, the mere fact that it is not so described in the deed will not vary the construction. The grantee takes the fee to the middle of the highway, on the line of which the land is situated.” Citing Gear v. Barnum, 37 Conn. 229 ; Stark v. Coffin, 105 Mass. R. 328; Howsville v. Lander, 8 Bush (Ky.) 679.
In the first-named case, the rule is stated thus: “It being established that the land is in fact bounded upon the highway, the mere fact that it is not so described in the deed will not vary the construction. In either case, the presumption that it was not the intention of the grantor to withhold his interest in the road to the middle of it, after parting with all bis right to the adjoining land, will be the same. Dnless such intention clearly appears, the presumption applies.”
It may be remarked in this case, as was said in that: “We see nothing in the language of the deed, or in the situation and circumstances of the property conveyed, to warrant the inference that anv such intention existed.”
If it were permissible to invoke the interpretation placed upon the deed by the parties, it would only tend to strengthen our conclusion. Ellis and his alienee have been suffered to occupy the strip of land all these years, and to erect valuable improvements thereon, without a suggestion of ownership on the part of the Roanoke Building Company, so far as the record discloses.
For these reasons, we are of opinion that the decree appealed from is plainly right, and it must be affirmed.
Affirmed.