84 Va. 318 | Va. | 1888
delivered the opinion of the court.
. The facts and proceedings are voluminous—hence a succinct statement of them is essential to a proper understanding of the questions at issue. By a trust deed, dated July 21st, 1848, W. P. Thompson conveyed his tract of land containing 270 acres, situated in said county, to Cyrus Price, trustee, to secure certain debts to Warfield Price, on which there was owing to him when the land was sold, May 5th, 1883, the sum of $5,103 50.
On the 3d of March, 1862, in the county court of said county, there was rendered a judgment in the name of L. H. Turn-bull for the benefit of Randolph Dickenson, against W. P. Thompson and others. In August, 1877, Dickenson brought a creditor’s bill in said circuit court to enforce the lien of said judgment upon said land, which had never been sold under
The process to begin the suit was returned executed to September rules as to all the defendants, except Warfield Price and Sparrel F. Simmons; but at said rules, the clerk entered decrees nisi against all the defendants, and at the succeeding October rules took the bill for confessed as to all of them, and set the cause for hearing. On the 10th of October, 1877, a vacation decree was made directing a commissioner to take an account of the real estate of W. P. Thompson, and of its rental value, and of liens.
At November term, 1877, W. P. Thompson, the only defendant who ever appeared in the cause, filed his answer, setting up the defence of usury to the judgment and denying the charge of fraud or satisfaction as to the trust deed, and asking for an issue as to the question of usury. At the same term Commissioner Carper returned his report. Though the vacation decree ordered the commissioner to give notice of the time and place of taking said account by service of such notice on all the parties to the suit, he does not report that, he did so, hut only says he issued such notices and placed them in the hands of the sheriff, without adding that there had been service thereof, or filing the sheriff’s official return to that effect. None of the
At the November term, 1878, the two causes were heard together, and the court, without passing on any other question, directed an issue as to the question of usury. At May term, 1879, a decree was entered, setting aside the issue and dismissing the cross-bill, and recommitting the commissioner’s report for further accounts of real estate and liens and credits on said judgment.
At October term, 1879, the cause was heard on the papers formerly read, the recommitted report and exceptions thereto. The first report was confirmed, and the land directed to be sold by special commissioners Griffin and ÍTelson. From this decree an appeal was taken, and this court, on the 14th October, 1881, reversed the decree and rendered the judgment, on account of usury, to $2,665 40, the amount of the principal loaned, and-in other respects affirmed the decree and remanded the tíause for further proceedings.
In January, 1883, ~W. P. Thompson obtained an injunction to the sale of the land that had been advertised under the decree of October 31st, 1879; and at the May term, 1883, the causes came on to be heard together, the first on the papers formerly read; the second on the injunction bill and Dickenson’s answer and motion to dissolve. The court, without deciding the motion, continued both causes, directed the taking of further accounts of liens, and added that “Peter L. Fisher, the alleged purchaser of the land in litigation in this cause, be made defendant and allowed to assert his rights by answer or
At October term, 1883, the original cause of Dickenson v. Thompson and the injunction of Thompson v. Dickenson came on to be heard on the papers formerly read, and on Dickenson’s motion to dissolve the injunction; and the injunction was dissolved and the bill dismissed. Again, in January, 1884, W. P. Thompson obtained an injunction; and, at May term, 1884, the two causes were heard and the injunction again dissolved. No commissioner’s report of liens as directed by the decrees of November term, 1882, and May term, 1883, were ever returned. Not until after the close of the May term, 1884, did Peter L. Fisher, the appellant here, learn that he had been made a party, on his own motion by counsel, to the suit of Dickenson v. Thompson, and that he had waived, as it seemed by the record, a formal amendment of the bill. He then caused the papers to be examined, and procured an injunction to the sale advertised under the decree of October 31st, 1879. His cause was matured at rules—the defendant, Dickenson, filing his answer at July rules, 1884. In his bill, Fisher averred that without notice of Dickenson’s claim, he was a purchaser for value of the 270 acres of land in litigation; that he had bought the same at a public sale thereof made May 5th, 1883, by Thomas C. Calloway, who had been duly substituted by an order of the county court of Franklin county, made April 5th, 1883, on the motion of the grantor,'after due notice to all concerned, as trustee in the place of the original trustee, Cyrus Price, deceased, in the trust deed under which the sale of said land was made by said Calloway, substituted trustee as aforesaid, to him, Fisher, which trust deed was executed June 21st, 1848, by "W. P. Thompson, whereby said land was conveyed to said original trustee in trust to secure certain debts to "Warfield Price; that said trust deed had been duly recorded in said county on 23d June, 1848, and the lien
With his bill, Fisher filed copies of said trust deed, of certain bonds, &c., tending to show the origin and bona jides of Wai’field Price’s debt which was secured by said deed of trust, of the order of the county court substituting Calloway in place of the original trustee, who had died in 1874, and of the trustee’s receipt to him for the $2,500, the purchase price of the land; and he took the depositions of himself, of W. P. Thompson, oT Warfield Price, of T. C. Calloway, of Judge Whittle, and two others, tending strongly to establish satisfactorily how the debt secured to Warfield Price had originated; that it had never been paid; why the trust deed had never been enforced until May 5tli, 1883; that' Warfield Price and Sparrel F. Simmons, his alleged assignee in bankruptcy, had never been served with process to answer Dickenson’s bill, Warfield Price testifying that lie had never been served with such process and had never appeared in the suit, and that Simmons had for many years before the institution of the suit, resided, and still resided, in the county of Poanoke, and that Fisher was a purchaser for value of said land without notice of Dickenson’s claim thereto; that he had paid the purchase money, $2,500, received a conveyance, and been put in possession of the land; that he never employed, or authorized any one to employ, counsel to appear for him and make him a party to the suit of Dickenson v. Thompson, and had no knowledge of such appearance for him until the land was advertised for sale by Griffin and iSTelson under the decree of May, 1884.
On his part, Dickenson presented no evidence, either documentary or parol, nevertheless, on the 30th October, 1884, the said causes of Fisher v. Dickenson and of Dickenson v. Thompson, came on together to be heard, the second on the papers therein formerly read; the first on the bill of the complainant, the answer of the defendant, Dickenson, and the
The first assignment of error to the action of the court below is its ruling that sustains the appellee’s exceptions to the reading of the depositions of Warfield Price and Peter L. Pisher, taken on behalf of the appellant during the term at which the final decree was rendered. The term began on the 25th day of October, 1884. The depositions excepted to were taken respectively on the 24th and 25th. The final decree was rendered on the 30th day of that month. Code 1873, ch. 172, ;§ 36, says: “In a suit in equity, a deposition may be read if returned before the hearing of the cause, or though after an interlocutory decree, if it be as to matter not thereby adjudged, and be returned before a final decree.” It is true, the statute gives no absolute right, and only provides that the depositions in such ease may be read. See Summers v. Darne, 31 Gratt., 761; Richardson v. Duble, 33 Gratt., 730. It is, therefore, a question of sound judicial discretion to be exercised by the court in view of all the attendant circumstances. But in the case at bar there had been no interlocutory decree, nor had there been any unreasonable delay. The taking of the depositions was begun in the presence of the appellee’s counsel, who cross-examined the witness that first deposed, and the completion of the second was adjourned over until the next
As to the depositions themselves, they certainly contain evidence .which is very material, if not actually decisive of the issues before the circuit court. For these reasons we are of opinion that the circuit court erred in sustaining the exceptions to the reading of the two depositions.
The second assignment of error is, that the circuit court, by the decree complained of, dissolved the complainant’s injunction and dismissed his bill with costs, &c., when, on the other hand, it should have perpetuated that injunction.
After a very careful examination of the voluminous record, we are of opinion that this assignment of error is well taken. All the evidence adduced in the cause is in behalf of the appellant, the appellee having examined no witnesses, and presented little, if any, documentary proof of the allegations whereon he founded his claims to recover. In the first place, he set up a judgment which is confessedly junior to the trust deed executed in 1848 by W. P. Thompson to secure a debt to War-field Price, that at the date of the sale of the 270 acres of land under the trust deed, by the substituted trustee to the appellant, amounted to more than double the price which the land brought; which price, the witnesses all say was its full value. Yet the appellee claims that his junior judgment was a lien on said land paramount to the rights of Warfield Price under said trust deed, and consequently superior to the claims of the appellant, who purchased and holds thereunder. And to
Of these allegations, he not only presents no proof, hut they are actually disproved. Whilst the burden of proving the alleged fraud or payment rests on him, he not only failed to produce an item of evidence tending to establish their truth, either before the circuit court or its commissioner, but failed even to produce before either the assailed deed. The record leaves some doubt on our minds, even in the face of the well known rules of presumption as to the correctness of the proceedings of courts of general jurisdiction, whether or not those especially interested in setting up the deed of trust, ever were served with process to appear either before the court or the commissioner, and defend their rights under it. But there can he no doubt that the question of its validity was never considered either by the commissioner in making, or by the circuit court in confirming, the then report of liens, or by this court, when on appeal here from the decree of October 31st, 1879, it reversed that decree in so far as it refused relief to the appellant, Thompson, against the manifest usury in the judgment sought to be enforced against him by Dickenson, and affirmed the decree as respected the report of liens as it then stood, and remanded the cause for further proceedings. After the cause went back, the circuit court directed additional accounts of liens, but finally dissolved all injunctions and allowed the sale of the land, without having compelled a return of a report of the accounts it had ordered. It would be monstrous to construe any of the decrees found in the record as adjudging by mere implication that a trust deed was fraudulent, or had been satisfied, when no decree expressly so adjudges,’ and when, if it did so, it would be in direct opposition to pointed and express evidence to the contrary.
This court is of opinion that the substitution of Calloway as trustee in said trust deed in the place of the original trustee,
Section 8 provides that in any case where a trustee in any deed of trust shall have died, any person interested in the execution of the deed may apply by motion to the county court of any county in which said deed is recorded, who may appoint a trustee in the place of the trustee named therein; and the trustee so appointed and accepting the same, shall be substituted to all the rights, powers, duties, and responsibilities of the trustee named in said deed: provided that the grantor and grantee in said deed, their heirs or personal representatives, the creditor, surety, or other persons intended to be secured thereby, or their personal representatives, shall have ten days’ notice of the motion.
On behalf of the appellee, it is insisted that this proceeding was illegal. It is contended that Cyrus Price, the original trustee, being dead, the trust devolved on his administrator, G-. W. Price, and that if another trustee ought to have been appointed, it could and properly should have been done in this suit, citing the same sections (8 and 9) of chapter 174, Code 1873.
It is true that, according to section 9, -the personal representative of a sole trustee shall execute the trust, unless some other trustee be appointed by a court having jurisdiction of the case. And G. W. Price, as such administrator, might have executed this trust; but he did not undertake to do so, and the county court in the exercise of jurisdiction expressly conferred upon it by statute, (sec. 8) did appoint Calloivay as such trustee.
And it is also true that, according to section 8, in any suit in equity in which it appears that a trustee has died, although the heirs of such trustee be not parties to the suit, yet if his personal representative and others interested, be parties, the
It appearing from the evidence in the record that the 270 acres of land in controversy was subject, first, to be sold under the trust deed in order to satisfy the debt of over $5,000 owing to Warfield Price and secured therein; and that the sale of said land thereunder, on the 5th of May, 1883, by the substituted trustee, at the instance of the trust creditor, to the appellant, was fair, for an adequate price, and agreeable to the terms prescribed, and that the appellant paid the purchase money to the substituted trustee and received from him a conveyance and delivery of possession of said land, it follows irresistibly that he has acquired a valid title thereto, and is not in any way affected by the decrees of the said circuit court in the cause of Dickenson v. Thompson, to which, in no regular or lawful sense, had he ever been made a party, the evidence clearly proving that he neither appeared in said cause, nor was summoned to appear, nor employed any attorney to appear for him, nor authorized any one else to employ one for that purpose,
We are, therefore, of opinion to reverse and annul the decree complained of, with costs to the appellant in the court below and in this court, and to enter a decree here perpetuating the injunction awarded the appellant, which injunction was dissolved by the decree appealed from.
Decree reversed.