65 W. Va. 616 | W. Va. | 1909
J. W. Tetrick, C. M. Tetrick and C. E. Stewart, partners doing business as Tetrick Bros, and Stewart, claim to have been prejudiced by a decree, pronounced in three consolidated creditor’s suits against McComas Murphy and others in the circuit
The appellants were not interested otherwise than as purchasers of two lots as aforesaid. These were lots Nos. 1 and 2 in Hyer and Stalnaker’s Addition to the town of Burnsville. At the time of the purchase, said lot No. 1, .together with lots Nos. 5 and 6, were subject to a vendor’s lien in favor of Hyer and Stalnaker for over $400.00. On lots Nos. 5 and 6, so linked with No. 1, there was a deed of trust in favor of the Burnsville Exchange Bank and certain sureties for the sum of $300.00. Hyer and Stalnaker held a vendor’s lien on lots Nos. 69 and 70 and other land which Murphy, after his purchase thereof, had divided in lots, which he numbered 17 to 28, inclusive. Murphy was also indebted to W. T. Brosius, trustee, for purchase money of Lot No. 3 in Section A and Lot No. 7 in Section 3 of Of-futt’s Addition, more than $700.00, which debt was a lien on said lots. The vendor’s lien on lots Nos. 1, 5 and 6 was ascertained to be $410.06, the trust lien on Nos. 5 and 6, $312.26, the contract lien on Nos. 69 and 70 and 17 to 28, $212.82, and the contract lien on Nos. 3 in Section A and 7 in Section 3, with the costs, $897.97. On these two, there was another trust deed lien for $600.00. Lots Nos. 5 and 6 were sold separately for $1,450.00, considerably more than enough to pay the vendor’s and trust deed liens on them and No. 1; Nos. 69 and 70 and 18 to 28, for $888.00; and Nos. 3 and 7, for $1,330.00. At the time of the purchase of lots Nos. 1 and 2 by the appellants, and the recordation of their contract of purchase, only one judgment had been docketed, that of Dowell, Helm & Co., for the sum of $278.-44. At that time, the judgments recovered, amounted, in the aggregate, to $1,188.60 and after that date others, amounting to
All the lots, except Nos. 1 and 2, seem to have been sold. One group, 5 and 6, bringing $1,450.00 another, 69, 70 and 17 to 28, $888.00 and another, 3 and 7, $1,330.00. The proceeds of the sale of the' first group will almost pay all the liens on Nos. 1, 5 and 6 to and including the Dowell, Helm & Co. judgment; those of the second group will apparently pay something on this judgment, even if none of those, cpnstituting liens on 5 and S prior to that of Dowell, Helm & Co., should be paid out of the proceeds of 5 and 6, and, if they should be largely satisfied out of the proceeds of 5 and 6, the proceeds of 69, 70 and 17 to 28 will apparently pay the Dowell, Helm & Co. judgment; or, if the judgments, having precedence over that of Dowell, Helm & Co., should be satisfied out of the proceeds of 69, 70 and 17 to 28, the surplus of proceeds of 5 and 6 seems to be amply sufficient to satisfy the Dowell, Helm & Co. judgment to the complete relief of both lot No. 1 and lot No. 2.
Finding this state of things in the consolidated suits, the court entered a decree, confirming the commissioner’s report, adjusting the liens, and ordering a sale of the unsold lots. By this decree, the surplus, arising from the sale of lots Nos. 5 and 6, was held liable for the debts, therein provided for. It was further adjudged, ordered and decreed that lots 1 and 2 should not be sold, if the entire proceeds of lots 5, 6, 69, 70 and 17 to 28.should be sufficient to discharge the liens thereon; but that, if a balance of such liens should remain unsatisfied out of such proceeds, the sale of said two lots, or such parts thereof as may be necessarjr, shall be restricted to such balance, or prevented by payment thereof, but in no event shall they be liable for an amount in excess of the judgment in favor of Dowell, Helm &
The decree is, in our opinion, plainly violative of statutory provisions and also of well settled principles of equity. The appellants are protected in their purchase from undocketed judgments, rendered by justices of the peace, prior to the date of the purchase. Their contract was recorded before any of the judgments, other than that-of Dowell, Helm & Co., were docketed, and there is no proof that the purchasers had any notice of them. Code. ch. 139, sec. 6: As purchasers of lots Nos. 1 and 2, they are entitled to protection from the sale of those lots, if the liens thereon, acquired before they purchased and recorded their contract, can be satisfied out of the proceeds of the other real estate of the vendor, without defeating liens thereon, prior to those constituting burdens on the land purchased. Code, ch. 139, sec. 8. In no event could the lots purchased by them be made liable, directly or indirect^, by marshaling of assets or otherwise, for judgments, not constituting a lien on the lots purchased, as against the purchasers thereof. The principle of marshaling assets cannot be invoked or applied so as to defeat-statutory rights. Section 6 says: “The judgment of a justice of the peace shall not be a lien on real estate” as against a purchaser thereof for valuable consideration without notice, “until the same is docketed as aforesaid.” Section 8 of said chapter provides as follows: “Where the real estate liable to the lien of a judgment is more than sufficient to satisfy the same, and
The report of the commissioner ignored these rights of the appellants and deal with lots Nos. 1 and 2 as they have been dealt with in the decree complained of. The appellants, as well as Dowell, Helm & Co., excepted to this part of the report and the court overruled their exceptions. They should have been sustained and a decree pronounced in accordance with the conclusions above stated, directing a sale of lots Nos. 1 and 2 only in the event that the surplus proceeds of the property already sold should be insufficient to satisfy the judgment in favor of Dowell, Helm & Co. and the others having priority over it on the property sold, namely, the judgments in favor of the Citizens Bank of Weston for $178.30, Burk and Garrett for $86.44, Citizens Bank of Weston for $184.50 and the Collins Company for $52.76.
It is said the legal title to lots Nos. 1 and 2 was outstanding and no decree of sale should have been made for that reason. The commissioner reported that these lots had been conveyed to McComas Murphy and wife and McComas Murphy and Co-berly, respectively, who were all parties, and there was no exception to that finding. The argument of outstanding title is based on the absence of deeds from the record showing the conveyance. We think failure to except on this ground constitutes a waiver of the finding or an acquiescence therein. In fact, the appellants themselves claim under Murphy and wife.
For the reasons stated, the decree complained of, in so far as it makes lots Nos. 1 and 2 liable, bjr subrogation or otherwise, for judgments other than that of Dowell, Helm & Co., or for it, except in so far as it shall remain unsatisfied, after applying thereon, the surplus proceeds of the sale of the unaliened property of the judgment debtor, after satisfaction of liens thereon prior to it, and more than an undivided half of said lot No. 1 liable for said judgment, in any event; and said lot No. 1 liable, as aforesaid, for the amount due under the vendor’s lien in favor of Hyer and Stalnaker, must be reversed, the exceptions of the appellants and Dowell, Helm & Co. to the commissioner’s report sustained, and the cause remanded for further proceedings in
Reversed and Remanded.