1 Gratt. 416 | Va. | 1845
delivered the opinion of the court.
As regards the tenement on the south side of E or main street in the City of Richmond, together with the lumber house on the opposite side of the adjoining alley, in the proceedings mentioned, the court, without deciding under what circumstances, if any, a parol gift of real estate from a father to a child, accompanied by delivery of possession, ought to be enforced or recognized by a court of equity, against the creditors of the donor, or subsequent purchasers from him, or against the donor himself, is of opinion that, in the present case, no equitable right to such relief or protection, in respect to said property, has been shewn by the appellee Mary W. Terrell, formerly Mary W. Ricks, and her daughter, the appellee Debora,h Ann Ricks, or either of them, under the gift in the proceedings mentioned, asserted by the said Mary W. as having been made by her father George Winston to her and her former husband Arnold W. Ricks. And the court is further of opinion, that the rights of the creditors of the said George Winston, in regard to said property, cannot be affected by the decree of the late superior court of chancery for the Richmond district, in the proceedings mentioned, rendered on the 13th of June 1821, in a cause then depending therein, between the said Mary W. Ricks and Deborah Ann Ricks plaintiffs, and the said George Winston and James Winston and Charles James Macmurdo defendants, by which decree the said defendants were directed