117 Va. 661 | Va. | 1915
delivered the opinion of the' court.
At the March term of the Circuit Court of Dickenson county, 1914, E. E. Hensley and J. B. Crouch presented their separate petitions claiming the ownership of certain personal property, consisting of five mules, one horse, wagon and harness, on which executions in favor .of Fields-Watkins Company and Barker-Jennings Hardware Company, respectively, against A. E. Sprinkle and J. W. Sprinkle had been levied and the property advertised for sale, said petitioners having in October, 1913, executed to the officer levying said executions suspending bonds for the purpose of having the true ownership and rights of said property tried and determined as provided for by statute, section 3001 of Code, 1904.
The bills of sale under which said petitioners made claim to the property in question, the one to E. E. Hensley and the other to J. B. Crouch, both brothers-in-law of the said A. E. and J. W. Sprinkle, were by the two last named executed in April, 1913, and it is not controverted that the property they purported to convey to the respective vendees was allowed to remain with and in the use of the vendors, for the reason, as stated by J. W. Sprinkle, that at the time of the alleged sales and of the execution of the alleged bills of sale, which were mutatis mutandis the same, the property thereby conveyed was under a deed of trust theretofore executed by said A. E. and J. D. Sprinkle to one N. D. Bachman, trustee. On the 14th day of July, 1913, Bachman, trustee, having fully executed the trust under which the property here in question was held by him, with
The first question'requiring-consideration arises on plaintiffs in error’s, defendants below, bill of exceptions No. 2, taken to the ruling of the trial court in allowing certain evidence to go to the jury. A. E. Sprinkle, testifying for the plaintiffs1 in the issue having stated that- they owned •the property in controversy claimed by them, respectively, •when the'sheriff levied on the same, and that he (witness) did not own'this property, was handed for identification a paper purporting to be a bill of sale claimed to have been executed'by witness and his brother, J. W.-Sprinkle,
This assignment of error is well taken. It is apparent as well as undisputed that this alleged bill of sale was never admitted to record, and the contention made by the learned counsel for defendants in error, that in order to make the bill of sale void under the statuté as to creditors, it must appear by the provisions of the writing itself that the possession of the property was to remain with the vendor, is wholly without merit. The language of the statute, supra, is in the broadest and most comprehensive language, having in view, doubtless, the avoidance of such controversies as arose in this case. It provides that every bill of sale or contract for the sale of goods or chattels, when the possession is allowed to remain with the grantor (and any such bill of sale or contract shall be in writing and signed by the vendor), shall be void as to creditors, until and except from the time that it is duly admitted to record in the county or corporation wherein the property embraced in such bill of sale or contract may be.
In this case it is admitted that the property remained with the vendors after the execution of the alleged bill of sale, and it is not controverted that when the property was released from the deed of trust to Bachman, trustee, on the 14th day of July, 1913, it was not turned over to the vendees -in the alleged bills of sale on an order from A. E. and J. W. Sprinkle, or otherwise, but was turned over to the
As observed, the suspending bonds given by defendants in error for the purpose of having tried and determined their rights with respect to the property in question, were executed in October, 1913, and the petitions filed in this proceeding for the purposes indicated, were not filed till March 10, 1914. The statute in such cases made and provided—sec. 3001, Code, 1914—requires a person claiming to be a bona fide purchaser of property from an insolvent debtor in a controversy with creditors of such debtor seeking to subject the property to the payment of their debts, to show by a preponderence of the evidence, not only that he purchased the property in good faith, but in default' of possession passing to him, he must explain by clear and convincing evidence why the possession of the property was allowed to remain with the seller, and if there is a bill of sale (which must be in writing), it must be recorded; if there is no bill of sale and possession remains with the vendor, it is prima facie fraudulent. Bindley v. Martin, 28 W. Va., where at pp. 793 to 794 the cases in point decided by this court are reviewed and approved.
Section 3001 of our Code, supra, after providing that an officer levying or required to levy an execution, etc., on property, where a doubt arises whether the property is liable to such levy, upon notice to the plaintiff, etc., the plaintiff or some one for him may give an indemnifying
The plain meaning of the statute is that a claimant of property levied on for' a debt due from the party in the possession of the property; must not only execute the suspending . bond required by the statute, but must within thirty days from the execution of such bond institute the proceedings provided for by statute to settle the title to the property so. levied on, and upon his failure to have such proceedings instituted as required by the statute, the property is to be conclusively presumed to be the property of the party in possession.-
- At the trial of this causé, and after the evidence therein ■had been submitted to the jury, the. court; over the objection of the defendants, gave the following instruction asked by the plaintiffs: “The court tells the jury that if they' be
The evidence in the case, as we have seen, is all to the effect that the possession of the property in dispute remained with the debtors, to the time of the levy of the executions in favor of the defendants, and hence there was no foundation for referring that question to the jury at all, but the jury should have been instructed solely on the theory that the possession of the property had remained with the execution debtors and was to be conclusively presumed to be their property. The giving of the suspending bonds by the plaintiffs as the claimants of the property in question and the proceedings within thirty days from the execution of the suspending bonds to have the rights of the property determined, was an indispensable requisite to the jurisdiction of the court in this cause. The time of the giving of the suspending bonds appeared by the bonds themselves and the date of the institution of these proceedings to have the rights of the property determined also appeared on the face of the record, showing without question that these proceedings were not instituted within thirty days from the date of the giying of the suspending bonds.
Upon this state of the record the trial court erred in referring to the jury the questions as to when the suspend
It becomes unnecessary to consider other assignments of error in the petition for this writ of error.
The judgment of the circuit court complained of is re-*versed and annulled, the verdict of the jury set aside, and this court will enter the judgment which the circuit court should have entered, dismissing the cause with costs to plaintiffs in error, defendants below.
Reversed.