48 W. Va. 412 | W. Va. | 1900
This is a suit brought by John A. Kimble in the circuit court of Tucker County against B. E. Wotring, Margaret E. Wotring, L. W. Hickman, C. E. Kennewig, Isaac I. Thompson and Mollie E. Lipscomb, for the setting aside of a deed from C. E. Kennewig to Margaret E. Wotring, dated July 22, 1891, and also a deed from Margaret E. Wotring to Mollie E. Lipscomb, dated August 20, 1897, as fraudulent and void as to plaintiff’s claim against B. E. Wotring and to subject the real estate conveyed by said deeds to the payment of said claim. Plaintiff was surety on a note of B. E. Wotring to Erank Layton for three hundred dollars, dated April 1C, 1895. Layton brought his action before a justice of Tucker County on the 12th of Jnue, 1897, who rendered judgment in his favor against said Wotring and Kemble for three hundred and thirty-nine dollars and ten cents, being the amount of said note with its interest to the date of the judgment and the costs of the suit. Kimble paid off the judgment without execution issued, and caused the judgment to be recorded in the judgment lien docket of said county in the office of the clerk of the county court, and claims to be entitled to sub-rogation to the rights of Erank Layton against said B. E. Wot-ring, in the enforcement of said judgment. At October rules, 1897, said Kimble filed his bill in the clerk’s office of the circuit court of Tucker County against B. E. Wotring, Margaret E. Wotring, L. W. Hickman, C. E. Kennewig and Isaac I. Thompson setting up said judgment, that at the time said judgment was obtained said B. E. Wotring had no personal property by which said judgment could be made, nor had he had any since that time, as various executions had- been issued against him on other judgments on which said Wotring rendered a schedule, and said executions were returned showing no property found, subject to a levy of an execution, and that after frequent demands by said Layton of said plaintiff he paid off and fully dis
It is also assigned as error under the proofs and pleadings to set aside as fraudulent the deeds from Kennewig to Margaret E. Wotring, and from Wotring to Lipscomb, and in not dismissing the plaintiff’s bill on the proofs and pleadings. This raises the question again so long and so well settled in this State as to the presumption in ease of purchase by a wife during coverture. In Rose v. Brown, 11 W. Va. 122, syl. pt. 5, it is held, “In the case of a purchase by a wife during coverture the burden is Upon her to prove distinctly that she paid for the thing purchased with funds not furnished by her husband. Evidence that she purchased amounts to nothing, unless it is accompanied by clear and full proof that she paid for it with her own separate funds. In the absence of such proof the presumption is that her husband furnished the means of payment.” The same is held in Stockdale v. Harris, 23 W. Va. 499; and in McMasters v. Edgar, 22 W. Va. 673; Herzog v. Weiler, 24 W. Va. 199; Core v. Cunningham, 27 W. Va. 206; Burt v. Timmons, 29 W. Va. 441. In case at bar it is alleged in defense that the property was purchased entirely with the separate estate of Margaret E. Wot-ring; averred in the answers of both Wotring and his wife that she received from her people about two thousand dollars to two thousand five hundred dollars, and is so stated in their own depositions, but there is no other evidence in the cause that she ever received a dollar from that source. If it be true that she inherited or otherwise received such a sum of money, it would not be a difficult matter to prove the fact by the representative of the estate from which she derived- it or by others having knowledge of the fact. In her answer Margaret E. Wotring says, “that at the time of her father’s death she fell heir to about two thousand dollars in cash, which she has ever since used and controlled as her own money, except on one occasion she let her husband have a small sum of money to buy a small farm in Preston county about the time they were married.”
It is assigned as error that in decreeing the sale it did not provide for the payment to Mrs. Lipscomb the amount of the vendor’s lien, with its interest paid by her to Kennewig. It is not disputed that Mrs. Lipscomb paid the ninety-four dollars to the attorney of C. F. Kennewig, the holder of the vendor’s lien, and it is proved also, this sum of money was the first lien on the property. In Schmertz v. Hammond, 47 W. Va. 527, (35 S. E. 945), where the fraudulent purchaser had taken an assignment of an equitable lien on the purchase property which represented a part of the purchase money due from the vendor, although the deed was set aside as fraudulent, the purchaser was given his priority as holder by assignment of the vendor’s lien. 2 Snyd. Ven. (8 Am. Ed.) 398; Griffin v. Carmack, 36 Ala. 695; Griggsby v. Hain, 25 Ala. 327; McAlpin v. Burnett, 19 Tex. 497; Rakestraw v. Hamilton, 14 Iowa 147; Cummings v. Ogleby, 50 Miss. 153; Boies v. Benham; 127 N. Y. 620, (28 N. E. 657); 14 L. R. A. 55; Henderson v. Goode, (C. C.) 49 Fed. Rep. 887; Board v. Wilson, 34 W. Va. 609 (12 S. E. 778); Poe v. Paxtons Hs., 26 W. Va. 607; James v. Burbridge, 33 W. Va. 272, (10 S. E. 396). This assignment of error-is well taken, and the court should have decreed the ninety-four dollars and its interest to be first paid to the defendant Mollie E. Lipscomb who holds the lien held by C. F. Kennewig. It is also claimed error in not sending this cause to a commissioner to ascertain the liens and their priorities on said real estate, and what, if anything, had ever been paid upon the judgment as
As to the plea of payment set up in the answer by the assignment of the judgment to plaintiff against A. D. W. Shaffer, defendant Wotring filed no answer until the cause was ready for hearing. Suit was brought in September, 1897, bill filed at October rules, defendant Wotring filed no answer until March, 1899, and although his deposition was taken twice in the cause, he never mentioned the assignment in his depositions. He undertook to prove the assignment of the judgment by Soloman Clark, a former justice of the peace, but his evidence is too indefinite and uncertain to prove anjdhing, even if the deposition had been supported by proper pleadings. I have no doubt the answer was filed for the purpose only of further delay. If defendant had been armed with a tona fide defense of that character he would have made it in time to avail him.
The decree will be reversed in so far as it fails to decree the lien paid by Mollie E. Lipscomb to C. E. Kennewig to said Lipscomb as the first lien on the property, and in all other respects the decree is affirmed. The cause is remanded with instructions to amend the decree by decreeing in favor of the defendant, Mollie E. Lipscomb, the said ninety-four dollars and interest as the first lien on the property. The appellant Mollie E. Lipscomb being the party substantially prevailing, will recover her costs in this Court against the appellee.
■Reversed in part.