85 W. Va. 640 | W. Va. | 1920
This appeal is prosecuted to review a decree of the circuit eourt of Marion county in the consolidated chancery causes of
The bill in the ease of Mary J. Donnally, et als, alleges that the defendant Mary J. Donnally, her husband uniting therein, on the 9th day of September, 1911, executed a deed of trust to W. Scott Meredith, Trustee, granting and conveying certain real estate, referred to and described in the bill, in trust to secure the payment of a certain promissory note, bearing even date with the said deed of trust, executed to the said John Y. Hite by the said Alfred H. Donnally and Mary J. Donnally for the sum of $7,000.00, and due at five years from its date, with interest thereon,'payable,semi-annually; that prior to the execution of this deed of trust the said Mary J. Donnally had executed a deed of trust conveying said parcel of land to Michael Powell. Trustee, to secure to Josephine A. Skinner a debt of $1500.00, which debt is still a subsisting lien upon said real estate; that subsequent to the execution of the deed of trust to secure the plaintiff, to-wit, on the 11th day of November, 1912, said Mary J. Donnally conveyed said real estate to John G. Pritchard, Trustee, to secure to Charles R. Donnally a debt of $650.00. The bill then alleges that it is necessary to have the intervention of a court of equity in order to fairly administer the trust because of the prior lien upon the property in favor of Josephine A. Skinner, and the subsequent lien thereon in favor of Charles R. Donnally, and avers that the land will not bring an adequate price unless the amounts of these liens are ascertained and decreed in advance of a sale, and prays that the cause be referred to a commissioner for the purpose of ascertaining the amounts of said liens, and that when such amounts are ascertained a sale be ordered in satisfaction thereof. The demurrer of the defendant Mary J. Donnally to this bill was overruled.
The bill in the second case, which is against Alfred H. Don-nally, et als, avers that the said Alfred H. Donnally, his wife uniting therein, on the 9th of September, 1911, conveyed a certain parcel of land owned by him, and which lies adjacent to the parcel of land owned by his wife, which was conveyed in the deed of trust referred to above, to the defendant W. S. Meredith, Trustee, to secure unto the plaintiff John Y. Hite the
The ground of the demurrers is that there is no jurisdiction in equity to entertain these bills; that resort to a court of equity was without any reason, and that the plaintiff had a full and' complete remedy by advertising the sale of the property under the deeds of trust. In the case against Mary J. Donnally it appears that there is a lien against her property prior to the lien of the plaintiff, and one subsequent thereto, both secured by deeds of trust, the amounts thereof being certain and definite, and there is no allegation in the bill that there is any controversy over the amount of either of these debts, neither is there
In the suit against Alfred H. Donnally it is averred that there is a deed of trust subsequent to the deed of trust given to secure the plaintiff, and a number of judgments creating subsequent liens against this real estate, and it is likewise shown that there is one judgment upon the real estate superior in dignity to the plaintiff’s deed of trust, and a deed of trust prior to the plaintiff’s deed of trust which it is alleged has been entirely paid off and discharged, and it is not shown that any contention is made by the beneficiaries therein that this is not the case, nor is there any contention as to the amounts or validity of the judgments, or as to the order of their priority. Eesort to a court of equity in this case is attempted to be justified upon the ground that the prior deed of trust, at least as to one of the parties whom it secures, constitutes a cloud upon the title of Alfred H. Donnally, and that resort to a court of equity may be had to remove this cloud in advance of a sale.
It is quite well settled in this jurisdiction that a court of equity will not entertain a bill for the purpose of enforcing the lien of a deed of trust simply because there may be prior or subsequent liens upon the property. George, Trustee, v. Zinn, 57 W. Va. 15; Ware, Trustee, v. Hewett, 63 W. Va. 47, and| cases there cited. So far as the subsequent liens are concerned they in no wise affect the interest conveyed to the trustee. A purchaser under the deed of trust would take the property entirely free of any subsequent encumbrance thereon, so that it cannot be said that the price which the property would bring at a sale under the deed of trust would be in any wise affected by the subsequent encumbrances, whether the amounts thereof are certain or uncertain, but where there are liens prior to the
It is insisted, however, that the legal title to the property of Mrs. Donnally is outstanding in the trustee in the prior deed of trust, and decisions are cited which it is contended justify the resort to equity when this is the case. A review of thosej decisions show that they contemplate an outstanding adverse title, and not title in the trustee in a deed of trust creating a lien for a definite and fixed sum. In the case of George, Trustee, v. Zinn, supra, this question of the right of a trustee, or a creditor secured by a deed of trust, to resort to a court of equity for the execution of such lien is fully discussed, and after the full, complete and exhaustive presentation of the law upon the question contained in that opinion it is hardly necessary to do
There is no basis in either of the bills for resort to a court of equity for the enforcement of the ■ liens. The demurrers thereto should therefore have been sustained, and we will reverse the decree of the circuit court entered in the consolidated causes, sustain the respective demurrers to the bills, and remand the causes to the circuit court, with leave to the plaintiff to amend his bills, or to dismiss the same without prejudice.
Reversed and remanded.