delivered the opinion of the court.
The property involved in this litigation is 20.9 acres of forest land situated in Poor valley, in Lee county, Ya., and comprises the northern portion of a tract of seventy-eight acres, patented to Moses McAfee (the common source of title of the plaintiffs and defendants) June 30, 1849.
Considering the original and amended bills of the appellees as a whole, they show a prima facie title to the land in question, and, among others, contain the allegations-“that a few months ago the said Marion T. Ely (one of the defendants) and his father, Robert B. Ely, have gone upon said tract of land * * * and have cut, and are now-cutting, considerable timber and trees, tan bark and other material, and removing the same from said land, claiming the said land as their own, and refusing to acknowledge the title of your orators in said property. Your orators: allege that the said injuries are irreparable, that the said tract of land is mainly valuable for the timber that is-growing thereon, and that the destruction of the said timber is equal to the destruction of the entire property, and they cannot be adequately compensated in damages: for said injuries.”
These allegations are followed by a prayer that the de*33fendants be in joined from trespassing upon the land, and from cutting and removing the timber and other materials therefrom. The bills also contain incidental prayers that the plaintiffs may be quieted in their title and that the clouds may be removed therefrom. But the primary object of the suit is to injoin trespasses involving irreparable injury to the very substance of the land itself. The quieting of the title and removal of clouds are incidental merely to the controlling ground for equitable jurisdiction and relief. If these subsidiary matters had been made the burden of the complaint, as the law was when this suit was brought, it would have been indispensable to allege and prove that the plaintiffs held both the legal title and possession of the land. (But see Acts of Assembly 1912, p. 76.)
Upon familiar principles, where a court of equity acquires jurisdiction of a case on equitable grounds, it will proceed to grant complete relief, even though such redress may include the establishment of purely legal rights and the enforcement of legal remedies otherwise beyond its scope. This doctrine has been uniformly recognized by the decisions of this court.
Upon the main question it was held, in Bledsoe v. Robinette 105 Va. 723, 54 S. E. 861, that a plaintiff in a suit to restrain a trespass need not allege that his title is undisputed or has been adjudicated. He must, however, show a prima facie title. “When he claims, under a paper title, he should generally exhibit his title papers * * * or such of them at least as will make out a prima facie case of title; if he relies on possession, he should state the facts upon which he bases his claim of possession, so that in either case the court can see from the title papers filed, or the facts stated, that he has a prima facie title.”
He must also allege such facts “as will show that the injury is irreparable, or that the remedy at law is inade*34quate. That the timber on the land constitutes its chief value, or that it is esential to the enjoyment of the land, or how its removal would injure the inheritance.” Collins v. Button, 94 Va. 127, 26 S. E. 415 ; Miller v. Wills, 95 Va. 337, 28 S. E. 337; Callaway v. Webster, 98 Va. 790, 37 S. E. 276; Woolfolk v. Graves, 113 Va. 182, 69 S. E. 1039, 73 S. E. 721.
Measured by the principles announced by these authorities, the bills set out a case for equitable jurisdiction and relief, and the demurrers were properly overruled.
Upon the issues of fact submitted by the pleadings, the case may be thus summarized: In the year 1854 negotiations for the sale of the property were commenced by a letter from McAfee to Johnson Gibson, which culminated November 18, 1854, in a deed conveying the same to the three Gibsons, from whom the plaintiffs derive their title. The original deed was found among the papers of Johnson Gibson in September, 1908, after his death, and on September 17,1908, was admitted to record. The deed characterizes the transaction as a “swap or exchange,” but the letter plainly shows that it was in legal effect an ordinary deed of bargain and sale. McAfee owed Johnson Gibson $45, and the discharge of that, indebtedness was the consideration for the deed.
The defendants claim title to the land mediately through the daughters of Moses McAfee, to whom, by deed of gift dated June 17, 1860, he conveys “all of my lands that I own in Lee county, lying on both sides of the main road, adjoining the lands of Thompson, Ely, Eates and Edds, it being the same lands that China McAfee and William Mc-Afee now lives on. No. of acres not known.” On March 24, 1877, the grantees in the foregoing deed and China McAfee, widow of Moses McAfee, undertook, as the defendants assert, to include the 20.9 acres of land in a deed to Robert B. Ely. If it be conceded that the general de*35scriptions contained in the last-named deed are sufficient to embrace the land in dispute, nevertheless, the plaintiffs admittedly have the older title. The controversy, therefore, in its essence, narrows itself down to the single proposition, whether or not Robert B. Ely was an innocent purchaser for value and without notice of the prior title of the plaintiffs?
The defendants, M. M. Ely and Marion T. Ely, the wife and son of the grantor, Robert B. Ely, are not purchasers for value, but are volunteers and, therefore, must rely upon his title to maintain their contention.
We shall not attempt to rehearse the voluminous evidence or to reconcile the discrepancies in the testimony of witnesses. It is sufficient to give our conclusions.
The evidence sustains the allegation that the timber on the land constitutes its principal value, and that the defendants had cut and removed a considerable quantity of timber, tan bark and other materials from the land during the year 1908. The fact that they were not actually engaged in cutting timber at the time suit was instituted loses its significance in view of the attitude of the defendants with respect to the litigátion. There is no avowal on their part of a purpose to desist from further depredation, and their entire defense rests upon a denial of the plaintiffs’ rights, and the claim of absolute ownership of the property on their part, with the consequent right to use it as they please.
The evidence also shows that before Robert B. Ely became a complete purchaser of the land (if he ever became such purchaser), the circumstances were sufficient to put him on inquiry as to the Gibson title, as the law then was (1874), under the doctrine of Chapman v. Chapman, 91 Va. 397, 21 S. E. 813, 50 Am. St. Rep. 846. The rule laid down in that case continued to be the law until it was changed by a proviso added to the Code, sec. 2465, by Acts 1895-’96, p. 842. By Acts 1897-’98, p. 833, the proviso was *36omitted; but it was again restored by Acts 1899-1900, p. 89. See notes to Va. Code, 1904, sec. 2465.
Tbe Gibsons bad long been in actual possession of part of tbe land, and bad cleared and cultivated it and erected a cabin tbereon, wbicb remained in tbe occupancy of tbeir tenants until it was finally pulled down and rebuilt on a different site. They also made a fence from tbe black oak corner, along tbe dividing line between tbe 20.9-acre tract and tbe southern end of tbe 78-acre survey, for part of tbe distance (but not extending all tbe way), in tbe direction of tbe corner marked by two white oaks, a dogwood and a sourwood. This fence was partially destroyed by forest fires, but tbe remains of it, marking tbe old fence line, were visible for several years after tbe close of tbe Civil War. In addition to these indicia of ownership, tbe Gibsons for years exercised tbe right of cutting, using and selling locust posts, board trees, barn logs and other timber from tbe land. They also pointed out to purchasers of timber from them tbe dividing line from tbe black oak to tbe corner at tbe two white oaks, tbe dogwood and tbe sourwood.
But tbe evidence, moreover, shows actual knowledge on tbe part of Robert B. Ely of these transactions, and bis recognition of and acquiescence in tbe dividing line as claimed by tbe Gibsons. He showed this line to purchasers of timber on tbe 20.9-acre tract of land from tbe Gibsons, and also to purchasers of timber on tbe land south of tbe dividing line from himself; and in each instance notified tbe parties that they must confine tbeir cutting to tbeir respective boundaries. It was, furthermore, shown that tbe defendant, Marion T. Ely, bad given similar instructions to purchasers of timber on tbe land south of tbe dividing line from him.
Upon these considerations, we are of opinion to affirm tbe decree of tbe circuit court.
Affirmed.