81 Va. 677 | Va. | 1885
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an appeal from a decree of the corporation court of Danville, rendered on the 11th of July, 1883, in the chancery suit wherein Henry S. Fox, an infant, by his next friend, J. Kaufman, was complainant, and the Cottage Building Fund Association, John T. Watson, and others, trustees, and P. L. Rendleman and Maurice J. Fox, trustee and guardian of the infant complainant, were defendants.
Maurice J. Fox, as guardian for his ward, Henry S. Fox, held for the benefit of the latter the sum of $450, and invested it in a tract of land in Henry county, which was conveyed to the said Maurice J. Fox, as trustee for said Henry S. Fox, by a deed executed April 25, 1871, by George C. Cabell, commissioner, in trust to hold the same for the use of the said infant until his arrival at the age of twenty-one years, and during his non-age, to apply the rents and profits to his maintenance and education, but with power in the said trustee to sell the same and to re-invest the proceeds in other property, to be held on the same trusts. Afterwards, the said trustee sold the land in Henry county, and, on the 28th of August, 1877, secured the proceeds ($450) on a lot of land situated in
A decree was pronounced in the suit on the 11th of July, 1879, according to the prayer of the bill. Thereupon the said Swain and wife conveyed the lot to Maurice J. Fox, as trustee, to hold the same in trust for the use of the ward, upon the terms and with the powers prescribed by the said decree.
Later, in order to raise money to build on and improve said Swain lot, the said Maurice J. Fox bought shares of the stock of the said Cottage Building Fund Association, which was a joint stock company duly chartered under the laws of this State, and redeemed the said shares by borrowing from the association first, $750, then $666, and afterwards, $600, and executed therefor his bonds and deed of trust to the said John T. Watson and his associate trustees, on the Swain lot, to secure the fulfillment of the stipulations of the said bonds, to-wit: to pay to the said association, during its regular continuance, the interest upon the said loans from the time they
Maurice J. Fox failed to comply with said stipulations and to pay the interest on said loans and the monthly dues to said association; and thereupon the trustees, Watson and his associates, advertised and, on the 12th of April, 1883, sold the said Swain lot at public auction for cash enough to pay, not only the sum of $685.35, which was the amount due from the said Maurice J. Fox to the association for monthly dues, fines and interest due and unpaid up to May 1st, 1883, but also to pay the additional sum of $1,951.77, the amount of monthly dues and interest which it was estimated would become due from him to the association from the date last mentioned until the
Soon after the sale to Rendleman, in May, 1883, the said infant, Henry S. Fox, by his next friend, J. Kaufman, brought this suit in said corporation court for the purpose, in effect, of assailing the said decree which was rendered on the 11th day of July, 1879, in the said suit of Maurice J. Fox, as trustee and guardian, and Henry S. Fox, infant, by his next friend, Maurice J. Fox, complainants, against John F. Rison, on the ground of alleged irregularities in the proceedings in that suit, and want of authority in the said court to empower the said Maurice J. Fox to convey in trust the said property of the infant complainant, and for the purpose, also, of assailing the said sale and conveyance of said property to said Rendleman, on the alleged ground that the said deeds of trust under which the sale was made were illegal and void; and on the additional ground that the sale was not made on the terms prescribed in said deeds of trust, having been made (as alleged in the bill and not denied in the answers) for cash not only as to the amount actually due to the association—to-wit: $685.35, but also as to the amount afterwards to become due and payable to the same—to-wit: $1,951.71. The bill also contained allegations to the effect that $600.00 of the money loaned by the association to Maurice J. Fox had never been used to improve said Swain lot, but had been used for the individual benefit of said Maurice J. Fox, and that he and said association had combined to defraud the infant complainant out. of the said property.
The defendants, the said Rendleman and the said association,
We are of opinion that whatever errors and irregularities there
In the case in hand, the corporation court had jurisdiction both of the subject matter’ and of the parties to the suit. That court decreed that the money of the ward, the appellant here, in the hands of the said John F. Bison be applied to the purchase of the Swain lot, and that the guardian, Maurice J. Fox, be empowered to raise money on said lot for the purpose of building on and improving the same.
It is not pretended that the decree was procured through any fraud or surprise practiced on the appellant. The decree has never been reversed, and remained in full force and effect, when in obedience to its provisions, the said Maurice J. Fox obtained the said loans from the said association for the purpose contemplated by the decree, gave his said bonds therefor, and executed the said deeds of trust on said lot to secure compliance with -the stipulations in the said bonds contained. These trust deeds are, therefore, lawful and valid, and any sale of the trust subject made under them and in accordance with their terms, is also lawful and valid, and is of course binding on the appellant.
The only question, then, remaining to be disposed of is,
Assuming,'then, necessarily, that such are the facts, it seems
In White v. Mechanics Building Fund Association, 22 Gratt. 234, a case somewhat similar to this, it was held by this court that a sale of trust property, made under a deed of trust given to the association to secure compliance with the stipulations of the bonds of a borrower, which he had executed upon borrowing money from it, for the payment of monthly dues and the interest on the loan, was premature and erroneous, the sale having been made before an account of the indebtedness had been ordered and taken by a commissioner of the court, and that the sale under said deed of trust should be enjoined until such account was taken.
The decree here complained of—that dismissing the bill of the complainants in the court below—must therefore be reversed and the sale of the said Swain lot and the conveyance thereof to said P. L. Rendleman must be set aside and annulled, and the
Decree reversed.