This case was before this Court at a former term and was fully decided, as will appear by reference to the report thereof in 33 W. Va. 758 (11 S. E. Rep. 220). In order to understand the issues that were then tried, and the decision reached by this Court, it will be necessary to consider the bill and the answer, and for that purpose I here set them out in extenso.
“The plaintiff complains and says that heretofore,- to wit, on the 8th day of April, 1887, the defendants 'William M. McAllister, Samuel C. Tardy, and Samuel C. Tardy, Jr., were seized and possessed in fee of a large tract of land situate in the county of Pocahontas, containing four thousand, seven hundred and eleven acres, made up of several contiguous parcels of land, which was conveyed to said defendants by A. ■ L. Boulware, receiver, and A. R. Blakey, trustee, by deed dated 20th day of April, 1885. (A certified copy thereof is here exhibited, marked ‘A,’ and made part of this bill.)
“The plaintiff further avers that heretofore, to wit, on the 8th day of April, 1887, he entered into negotiations with said defendants W. M. McAllister, S.C. Tardy, and S.C. Tardy, Jr., through the said McAllister, who acted for himself and as agent for his co-owners aforesaid, and was thereunto duly authorized, for the purchase of two thous- and, five hundred acres, part of said tract of land; and the said defendants W. M. McAllister, S. C. Tardy, and S. C. Tardy, Jr., on the day last aforesaid, made a verbal agreement to sell to plaintiff two thousand five hundred acres, part of said tract of land, through the said W. M. McAllister, for the sum of one dollar and twenty five cents per acre, one half to be paid in cash, the balance in twelve
“The plaintiff further alleges that he required of the said defendants, through the said McAllister, that said contract of the sale should be reduced to writing, and agreed to pay all purchase-money in, if the purchase was consummated. And on the 25th day of May, 1887, the said defendants W. M. McAllister, S. C. Tardy, and S. C. Tardy, Jr., by the said McAllister, who was thereunto duly authorized by his co-owners, made a proposition in writing, subscribed by the said Vm. M. McAllister, to sell to plaintiff two thousand and five hundred acres of timbered land in Pocahontas county, W. "Va. — meaning and intending the two thousand and five hundred acres of land above described, and about which said verbal negotiations had previously taken place between the plaintiff and the said defendants through the said McAllister — for the sum of one dollar .and twenty five cents per acre cash, if paid within-days from and after the said 25th day of May 1887, to wit, on or before the 9th day of June, 1887. (Said proposition in writing bears date on the 25th day of May, 1887, and is here exhibited, marked ‘D/ and made part of this bill.)
“And the plaintiff further avers that after the 25th day of May, 1887, and before the 9th day of June, he accepted the said proposition for the sale of the said two thousand and five hundred acres of land, and notified the said defendants W. M. McAllister, S. C. Tardy, and S. C. Tai’dy, Jr., of his said acceptance; and the said proposition thereupon became a complete contract of sale, by which the said defendants agreed to sell the said plaintiff’ the said two thousand and five hundred acres of land for-- of one dollar and twenty five cents per acre, to be paid in cash on or before the said 9th day of June, 1887.
“The plaintiff further alleges that afterwards, to wit, on the 7th day of June, 1887, he was ready to pay and offered to pay to said defendants W. M. McAllister, S. C. Tardy, S. C. Tardy, Jr., the purchase-money for the said two thousand and five hundred acres of land pursuant to the terms of said contract of sale, and demanded of said defendants a deed therefor ; but the said defendants wholly failed
“The plaintiff' further avers that by the said contract between the said McAllister, S. 0. Tardy, and S. 0. Tardy, Jr., of the one part, and the said D. W. Hile, acting for himself and for the said Anthony Hile and Eli Bloom, of the other part, the said vendors were to receive two dollars and twenty five cents per acre for the said land; one thousand dollars of which was paid on the date of said contract, and the residue was to be paid upon the execution and delivery of a deed by the vendors to the said vendees.
“The plaintiff further avers that the said defendants I). W. Hile, Anthony Hile, and Eli Bloom entered into negotiations with the said ~W. M. McAllister, S. C'. Tardy, and S. C. Tardy, Jr., for the purchase of the said land, on or about the 8th day of June, 1887, and the said McAllister and Tardys really agreed to sell the said land to said Hiles and Bloom on or about the said 8th day of June, 1887; and because they were getting one dollar per acre more by their contract with the said Hiles and Bloom than by their previous contract with the plaintiff was the reason why the said defendants McAllister and Tardys refused to deliver deed to said land to said plaintiff, and specifically perforin their said contract of sale to him. ‘A certified copy of the said contract between the said Tardys and McAllister of the one part, and the said Hiles and Bloom of the other part, is here exhibited, marked E,’ and made a part of this bill.’
“The plaintiff now further alleges that at the time that the said Hiles and Bloom entered into negotiations with the said McAllister and Tardys for the purchase of the said two thousand and five hundred acres of land, and at the
The answer is as follows :
“The separate answer of ¥m. M. McAllister to the bill of complaint of Frank Barrett, exhibited against him and others in the Circuit Court of Bocahontas county : This respondent, saving and reserving to himself the benefit of all proper exceptions to said bill, for answer thereto says that it is true that he and his co-defendants Samuel C. Tardy and Samuel C. Tardy,-Jr., on the 8th day of April, 1887, were seised and possessed in fee of a tract of land containing four thousand seven hundred and eleven acres, lying in the county of Pocahontas, and that the same was conveyed to them by the deed from A. L. Boulware, receiver etc., a copy of which is filed with said bill, marked ‘Exhibit A.’ Respondent denies the allegation of said bill that on the said 8th day of April, 1887, he, on his own account, or for himself and his said co-owners, entered into negotiations with the plaintiff’ for the sale to him of two thousand and five hundred acres of said land, or that on that day, on his own account, or for himself and for his co-owners, he entered into any agreement with the said plaintiff’ for the sale of any part of said tract of four thousand seven hundred and eleven acres of land at any price per acre or in gross.
“Respondent, further answering, denies that he and his said co-owners were ever required by the said plaintiff'to put said alleged verbal contract into ‘writing. On the contrary thereof, respondent says that all-that was ever said by the said plaintiff' on the subject was a request by him contained in a letter of date May 11, 1887, in this language : ‘I do not want an option, but simply write me that you will sell to me at one dollar and twenty five cents per acre, if I come before sold, and that you will hold it open‘fifteen days for me.’ (Said letter is herewith filed as a part of the exhibit, marked ‘A.’) Respondent admits that he wrote and signed the letter exhibited with the plaintiff’s bill marked ‘Exhibit D,’ in which he proposed for himself and his co-owners to sell two thousand and five hundred acres of timbered land off of said tract of four thousand seven hundred and eleven acres, at one dollar and twenty five cents per acre, if paid within fifteen days, but no body of said land had then been or was thereafter designated as said two thousand and five hundred acres. When respondent went on said land with plaintiff and others on the 6th day of June, 1887, he said to the the plaintiff that any sale he would make would have to embrace lots 8, 9, 10, and 11, but no part of lots 6 and 7 was specially designated, and no line through them agreed upon. Respondent, further answering, denies that the said plaintiff on the 7th day of June, 1887, accepted the said proposition contained in Exhibit D, and was then or on the 8th or 9th day of June, 1887, ready to pay and offered to pay to respondent and his said co-owners, or either of them, the purchase-money for the said two thousand and five hundred acres of land pursuant to the terms of said alleged contract of sale. On the contrary thereof, said plaintiff made no tender of any money on account of said alleged contract, but respond-
“Respondent alleges that the said plaintiff' was a mere adventurer, and unable at any time during the pending negotiations to complete said purchase by the payment of the money therein conditionally provided for. Respondent denies that he has been guilty of any fraud or unfair dealings in the matter, but is satisfied that the said plaintiff, throughout the transaction, did not act in good faith, but was guilty of deceit, and by trickery attempted to get title to said land. And, having fully answered, respondent prays that said bill may be dismissed, and that the costs be awarded him. Vm. M. McAllister.”
A large mass of testimony was taken, and the case was decided on the 19th day of June, 1889. The court below was of opinion that the plaintiff was entitled to relief, and
When the case went back, Me Allister and the two Tardys, (the suit having been .dismissed as to the other two nonresident defendants) tendered a plea, as follows :
“And the said defendants, W. M. McAllister, Samuel C. Tardy and Samuel C. Tardy, Jr., for plea in this behalf, come and say that they are in no wise hound by the alleged contract filed with the plaintiff’s hill bearing date on the 25th day of May, 1887, because they say that said alleged contract is in contravention of the statute of frauds and perjuries, and that under and by virtue of the said alleged contract no parol proof can lawfully he heard in support of the demand of the said plaintiff; and this they are ready to verify.”
As appears by the final decree, which is now before us for review, the plaintiff objected to the filing of this plea,
It is objected upon the part of the appellee that the plea tendered having been rejected is no part of the record, and can not be considered by this Court, because, as it is alleged, it was not made part of the record by an order of the count or by any exception of the defendants or by any indorsement of the clerk. This view, I think, is erroneous; and I think the error originates in confounding the practice in a court of chancery with that at common-law. I have always understood the practice to be as decided in Craig v. Sebrell, 9 Gratt. 131, that where any pleading or deposition is referred to in the decree, it is thereby made a part of the record. If this were not so, there would be no .method known to the chancery practice whereby a plea, which has been rejected by the court, could become the subject of review in the court of appeals, since correct chancery practice does not permit a bill of exception to be taken except on trial of an issue out of chancery. Even in that case a hill of exceptions is not permitted by the English practice. Daniel Ch’y Pr. 1119.
In the case of Ex parte Story, 12 Pet. 339, it was decided that “a bill of exceptions is altogether unknown in chancery practice,” and a mandamus to compel the Circuit Court to sign such a bill was refused.
In our own Code, it is provided in s. 9, c. 131: “ In the trial of a case at law, in which a writ of error or supersedeas lies to the Court of Appeals, a party may except to any opinion of the court, and tender a hill of exceptions, which (if the truth of the case be fairly stated therein) the judge shall sign, and it shall be a part of the record of the case.”
.We are told by Mr. Daniels : “ In stating deeds or other written instruments in a bill, it is usual to refer to the instrument itself in some such words as the following, viz., ‘as by the said indenture, when produced will appear.’ The effect of such a reference is to make the whole document referred to part of the record.”
The true rule which excludes pleadings or depositions from the record is laid down by this Court in Hilleary v. Thompson, 11 W. Va. 113: “Affidavits and depositions not referred to in any decree or order in a chancery suit are no part of the record.” So, also, Judge Haymond says in Kable v. Mitchell, 9 W. Va. 492 : “ There are a number of affidavits and depositions accompanying the record, which are no part of the record, as.they are not referred to in any decree or order entered in the cause.”
Without multiplying authorities, I take this to be the true rule in chancery: that where a plea or answer is referred to in a decree or order as having come under the cognizance of the court, either for the purpose of filing or rejecting it, it does thereby become part of the record, and no further action, by way of exception or otherwise, is necessary upon the part of the defendant to enable him to prosecute an appeal upon the rejection of his plea or answer. It is true, as cited by counsel, that there is to be found in the case of Ruffner v. Hewitt, 14 W. Va. 744, a dictum to the contrary. But it will be observed that nothing is said of the point in the syllabus, and we must regard it therefore as an inadvertence, arising from a failure on the part of the judge who delivered the opinion to discriminate between the practice at law and in chancery.
Fortunately we have a case in our own Court exactly in point. In Stephens v. Brown, 24 W. Va. 234, the question arose upon the refusal of the lower court to permit an an
The next question to be considered is: Is the plea sufficient in substance, or is it in that regard fatally defective ? It will be observed that, as there can be neither demurrer nor special replication to a plea in chancery, the rules are more strict in regard to the necessary averments which should be embodied in the plea. Thus in a plea of purchase for valuable consideration without notice it is not sufficient merely to state that the defendant is such a purchaser. lie must state in the plea that the person from whom he pirrchased had, or pretended to have, a right to convey; that there was a proper conveyance; that a valuable consideration was paid; and that the defendant had no notice of the claim of the plaintiff. Daniel Ch’y Pr. 611, 612. Moreover, if the defendant in his answer should have admitted facts amounting to notice, his subsequent plea would have tobe overruled. Id. 611.
Tried by these tests, it will be seen that the plea we are now considering is not a good defence to the plaintiff’s bill. Looking at the allegations of the bill, the claim for relief does not rest exclusively on the contract of the 25th of May, 1887, but it charges that this contract was supplemented by subsequent transactions, whereby the effect of the statute of frauds was avoided. The plea should by averment have negatived any such subsequent transactions. Otherwise, if this were’, a good plea, the plaintiff would
But, in point of fact, the whole issue attempted to be raised by the plea was res judicata under the former decision of this Court. By examining the opinion in connection with the syllabus of the former appeal, it will be found that it is there decided that the defendants had waived the defence of the statute of frauds. “The whole body of agreement,” says Judge BraNNON in delivering that opinion, “except in that respect, is admitted.” Moreover, in, the syllabus the Court says : “When an answer 'admits an agreement for the sale of land as alleged in the bill, though it be oral, the defendant must plead the statute of frauds and perjuries, or the answer must claim its benefit; otherwise he is held to have admitted the agreement, and renounced the statute’s benefit. If'the answer denies generally the making of such agreement as that alleged in the bill, the plaintiff must prove an agreement valid under the statute; but if the answer admits an agreement, substantially the same as that alleged in the bill, and differing from the agreement alleged in the bill in points not essential, the answer is treated as admitting the agreement, and, unless the defence under the statute is made by plea or answer, the statute will not avail the defendant.” And the facts were found and decided to be as thus stated in the syllabus, viz., that the defendants had substantially admitted the agreement by their answer, and had thus waived the defence of the statute of frauds.
This being true, the question arises : When the case goes back to the Circuit Court for no other purpose than to carry out the mandate of this Court, can the defendants so amend their pleadings as to take advantage of a defence which they had formerly waived? I think not. Having waived the defence once, it is too late to avail themselves of it after the case has come back from the court of appeals.
In the case of Lanier v. Cocke, 6 Munf. 580, it was held that, after the court of appeals had passed upon a case, and remanded the cause for a new trial upon the general issue,
In their brief counsel for appellants have assigned as error that the plaintiff' was permitted to dismiss his bill as to the non-resident defendants ; hut I am of opinion that as the resident defendants had in no manner indicated any desire for any relief as against their co-defendants, and as the plaintiff' had elected to take no decree against them, there was no error in permitting him to dismiss them from the suit.
For these reasons the decree of the Circuit Court of Pocahontas county is affirmed.
AeíTRMBD.