70 W. Va. 312 | W. Va. | 1912
The relation of the appellants, W. C. Bond and N. H. Bond, to the land and debt involved in this suit will appear from the facts stated in Bond v. Taylor, 68 W. Va. 317. The Pocahontas Tanning Company assigned the unpaid purchase money notes, mentioned in the statement of that case, to Harry.E. Clark and John W. McCullough, partners, under the firm name of Clark & McCullough, and they brought this suit, while that
A motion made here to dismiss the appeal of the Harpers Ferry Timber Company will be sustained. As to it, the decree is one upon the bill taken for confessed. Hence, if it is erroneous in any way, an application should have been first made to the circuit court to correct the error. That is a condition precedent to the right to appeal from such a decree.
The equitable claim of the Bonds, already stated, should have been sustained and provided for in the decree. They bought certain portions of the timber from the Harpers Ferry Timber Company, the vendee of the Pocahontas Tanning Company. At the time of their purchase, both land and timber were subject to the vendor’s lien for the enforcement of which this suit was
If any equitable right in the plaintiffs to sell the timber along with the land, treating both as one, or in the Harpers Ferry Company to have the timber sold first, could have been founded upon the expectation of the latter to pay the original purchase money out of the proceeds of the timber, such right was destroyed by the'conduct of the Harpers Ferry company in preventing the cutting of the timber by its collusions with Taylor in the effort to preclude the Bonds from any share in the timber. The decree in the cause- of Bond v. Taylor, reciting the facts in that cause, was exhibited in this with the Bond answer, from which the failure of Taylor and the Bonds to comply with their contract with the Harpers Ferry Company, which would have enabled the latter to pay the Pocahontas Tanning Company, clearly appeared to have been caused in part by the Harpers Ferry Company.
In disposing of these questions, we have said enough to demonstrate the right of the Bonds to be heard in this cause. Though their purchase was subsequent to the vendor’s lien, they were nevertheless interested in the subject matter of the suit.
A cross-assignment of error is based upon the terms of sale, prescribed by the decree, which requires only $30,000.00 of the purchase money, less than the interest on the debt, to be paid in cash, and the balance, over $300,000.00, in three equal installments, payable respectively, in one, two-and three years from the date of the sale. These terms are somewhat liberal to the purchaser, but the cash required to be paid is a considerable stun and the deferred installments are not unreasonably postponed. The creditors will receive all .their money with interest in a reasonable time, if the property sells for enough to cover the debt. Unable to see any abuse of the court’s acknowledged discretion in the prescription of these terms, we overrule this assignment.
■Shortly before the institution of the suit, B. M. Hoover purchased all the land as delinquent for non-payment of taxes.
For the reason stated, the decree will be reversed and the cause remanded to the circuit court of Pocahontas county, with direction to enter- a decree, requiring a sale first of the land, excluding the timber thereon sold to Taylor and the Bonds, and, if the proceeds thereof shall be insufficient to pay the purchase money due the plaintiffs, and their costs, then so much of the timber sold as aforesaid as shall be necessary to satisfy the balance of the purchase money lien and'costs, and for further proceedings. Costs in this Court will be decreed to W. C. Bond and N. U. Bond, the parties substantially prevailing here.
Reversed and Remanded.