82 W. Va. 287 | W. Va. | 1918
This suit in equity is to recover damages for an alleged breach of contract whereby plaintiffs, operators of a sawmill, were employed to saw the timber on defendant’s land at the price of $3.50 per M. feet and were to get the railroad ties at the price of 15e each. Plaintiffs allege that, after they had sawed about 180,000 feet of boards and secured 91 railroad ties, and before they had sawed all the timber on defendant’s land or gotten all the ties, defendant, without warning to them, broke his contract by selling the remaining timber to another person. The amount of damages claimed is $782.50. Plaintiffs also allege that defendant, with intent to hinder, delay and defraud them in the collection of their debt, conveyed his land to his son AY. It. Scott without consideration and charge that the conveyance was wholly voluntary and fraudulent; and further charge that since the institution of this suit, said W. R. Scott conveyed the land to his mother, Alice Scott, wife of the defendant, which conveyance they aver was likewise fraudulent and voluntary. They pray that said deeds be set' aside and the land sold to satisfy their claim. The defendants Frank and W. R. Scott filed separate demurrers and answers to the bill denying the alleged fraud. Frank Scott also denies the alleged breach of his contract with plaintiffs, and avers- he has paid them in full according to his contract for the amount of sawing done. He denies that he contracted with plaintiffs to saw all his timber. He denies that the conveyance to his son was fraudulent, and avers that he and his son AY. R. Scott had an understanding at the time he purchased the land that he should have all the timber and his son the land, his said son having furnished more than half the purchase money therefor, and, pursuant to that agreement, he conveyed the land to his son. W. R. Scott also denies the fraud and avers that he furnished his father more than half the purchase money for the land, with the understanding at the time, that when the timber was sold his father was to have the proceeds thereof and he was to have the land, or “that the land was to be divided in some other way that would be satisfactory to both parties. ’ ’ The
Jurisdiction in equity is challenged by' the demurrers. It. is urged that plaintiffs’ claim is purely one for unliquidated, damages and that equity has no jurisdiction to entertain such a suit. The suit has a two-fold purpose: First, to ascertain the amount of plaintiffs’ damages; and second, to have the-deeds set aside as made with intent to hinder, delay and defraud plaintiffs in the collection of their claim. It is insisted that one having only a right of action for unliquidated damages is not a creditor within the meaning of the statute, Sec. 2, Ch. 133, Code, authorizing a creditor, before obtaining a judgment for his debt, to bring a suit to avoid a fraudulent conveyance by his debtor. This contention cannot be sustained by the authorities. Who are creditors within the meaning of that statute?
Sec. 1, Ch. 74, Barnes’ Code, provides: “Every gift, conveyance, assignment, or transfer of, or charge upon, any estate, real or personal, * * * * * with intent to delay, Under, or defraud creditors, purchasers, or other persons, of or from what they' are or may' be lawfully' entitled to, shall as to such creditors, purchasers, or other persons, their representatives or assigns, be void.” TMs is an old statute, being first enacted by the General Assembly of Virginia in 1785 and copied by this state from the code of that state. It will be noted that the terms defining the class of persons as to whom gifts and fraudulent conveyances etc. are void, are broad and comprehensive. It uses the words, creditors, purchasers and other persons, and defines their claims, as “what they are or may' be lawfully entitled to.” But formally years thereafter, and prior to the enactment of section-2 of chapter 133 of our Code, wUch appears first to have,
Respecting the terms of the agreement the testimony is conflicting. Plaintiffs both swear the contract covered the sawing of all the timber on defendant’s land, a tract of about 67 acres. It was impracticable .to saw .it all at one set, the timber being situated on both sides of a ridge. Defendant was to cut the timber and put the logs on the skidway at the mill. Before all the timber was cut a controversy arose as to who should move the mill to the second set, and the matter was referred to Mr. George Smith, who was the witness to the oral contract. He says nothing was said in his presence by the parties in regard to the matter. That defendant sold a part of the standing timber, not accessible to the mill at the .first set, to another man and thereby put it out of his power to comply with the contract, if it embraced the sawing of all his timber, (and the weight of the testimony is to that.
Plaintiffs’ testimony respecting their damages is very general and indefinite. They both estimate their damage at $782.50, made up of the following items: Loss of ties, about $225; moving the mill, $60; loss occasioned by defendant’s refusal to permit them to saw all his timber, $197.50; and loss of profits they would have made on sawing timber for others at the same set, $300. The circuit court decreed them only $156.00 of that amount. Just Iloav it arrived at that sum does not appear from-the decree, nor are we able to determine from the evidence. It does not appear which items the chancellor allowed or that he rejected all of any one of.them. If we assume he found that it Avas defendant’s duty to move the mill, there is no testimony respecting the cost of moving it. Plaintiffs moved it themselves onto the lands of one Bruffey, near defendant’s line, where they claim the agreement provided the second set was to be, because there was not sufficient water on defendant’s land. But neither of them undertakes to say what it cost or hoAV long it took them to move it. Therefore, this item should be excluded for want of evidence to prove it. Defendant did not guarantee to plaintiffs that other people Avould furnish them timber to be saAved. ' The matter of saAving for others Avas talked OAer at the time the contract Avas made and defendant simply gave permission to plaintiffs to saw timber for his neighbors and stated that all of them, except one Blake, might haul their timber tb the mill across his land. But he is not responsible for any loss to plaintiffs on this account. It was merely a matter of inducement and no part of his undertaking. Neither does the evidence support the claims for $225 for ties lost and $197.50 for not alloAving plaintiffs to saw all of defendant’s timber. Their figures are made up from general statements alleged to haAe been made to plaintiffs by defendant concerning the estimated quantity of lumber and ties on the land, before the contract of sawing Avas entered into, and are denied by defendant. Plaintiffs went over the iand shortly before and examined the timber with a vieAV of buying it, but not agreeing on the price, they later contracted to saw it. They evi
Modified and affirmed.