42 W. Va. 420 | W. Va. | 1896
Upon appeal from a decree pronounced by the Circuit Court of Taylor county on the 26th day of September, 1895, directing restitution of money to the credit of this cause, wrongly paid to appellant, Pickenpaugh, and to Eeed.
On the 29th day of February, 1884, Protzman, Eeed, appellant Pickenpaugh, and others brought their suit in chancery in the circuit court of Monongalia against Elisha C. Allender and others to enforce mechanic’s liens against a certain steam grist mill built by Allender. On the 23d day of June, 1884, an order of reference was entered in the cause to ascertain and report the liens against this property. Master Commissioner Dent executed the order, and filed his report on the 2d day of May, 1887, in which he reported inter alia, a mechanic’s lien in favor of Pickenpaugh of four hundred and thirty nine dollars and twenty nine cents. Allender excepted to this debt, as one hundred dollars too much; and to the report, as not made as required by the order of reference. Here this cause stopped. Shortly thereafter Phillip H. Keek, being trustee in a deed of trust on the mill to secure the debts of sundry creditors filed his bill in equity alleging that, for reasons given, he was not able to execute the trust safely without the aid and direction of the court; making Pickenpaugh and others defendants, who accepted service of process. At the Febru
On the 2d day of March, 1888, Pickenpaugh and defendant Reed filed their petition to rehear and correct these decrees fixing priorities, setting up that the Protzman suit was still pending; that the true place of their lien, in order of priority, was No. 2, ahead of Long and Vandervort, instead of No. 4, to which latter place they were mistakenly assigned by the commissioner. To this petition defendants Long, Vandervort, and Keck, trustees, appeared and answered; and such proceedings were had that by decree entered on the 17th day of October, 1889, the court held that the report of the master commissioner, which had beeu confirmed without exception, was erroneous on its face, in marshaling the liens, and corrected the decree by placing Pickenpaugh’s mechanic’s lien as No. 2, remitting the lien of Long and Vandervort to the fourth place; and from this decree Long and Vandervort appealed, and their case was decided in this Court in December, 1892. See Keck v. Allender, 37 W. Va. 201 (16 S. E. 520).
1. No motion to continue was made or overruled, and on that point there is nothing for this Court to consider, except as far as it was involved in ordering the receiver to settle, which would, of necessity, have operated as a continuadme of the cause.
2. Bid the court err in refusing to refer the cause for settlement of the receiver’s accounts and in staying the order of restitution until such settlement had been made ? By reason of the erroneous decree of the circuit court in 1889, chauging the order of priority of the lien of Vandervort and Long, turning them down from above to a place below this appellant, they were aggrieved, and upon the reversal of such decree, restored to their former place in the order of fight of payment, had a right to be restored to what they had lost by reason of such erroneous decision, and have restitution of that which was of right theirs, but had been wrongfully paid over to another, and were entitled to such remedies as the court of equity gives in such cases to one
That the money was paid to him and received by him in good faith has nothing to do with the question. It having been decided that Yandervort and Long have the better right, and that it was paid to appellant in derogation of such right, what justification can a decree of the lower court reversed and annulled by the court of last resort afford appellant for refusing to pay it over to those to whom it belongs? This decision of the appellate court the court below properly declined to review, or again call the matter into question; for whether right or wrong, there must of necessity be somewhere, at some time, an end of litigation; and the matter here sought by appellant to be again put in issue had already been finally adjudged, and the record of the suit of Protzman against Allender, whatever effect it might have had, if it had been heard together with this cause, now comes too late.
The appellant, Pickenpaugh, can still go against any fund there may be in the hands of the receiver to the credit of the cause, so far as he can show himself entitled. But what interest have Yandervort and Long in this question, when they have a.right to have this particular fund re
The appellant claims the benefit of some statute of limitations. How could any statute run so as to bar an order of restitution in a cause which has been a pending cause from the inception of this transaction continuously down to the entering of the decree complained of?
Complaint is also made against Yandeivort and Long, as guilty of negligence and laches in taking their appeal. But how can they be charged with inexcusable delay in asserting a right, when it was asserted within the period prescribed by law for taking appeals.
I see no error in this record, and therefore the decree complained of must be affirmed.