232 F. 68 | 4th Cir. | 1916
On April 2, 1913, R. H. Richardson & Sons, were adjudged involuntary bankrupts. In the course of the proceedings an attack was made by creditors on a deed of trust in the nature of a mortgage of a tract of land executed by Richardson & Son to secure notes now held,by the Bank of Williamsburg for SE-SGO and by the Peninsula Bank of Williamsburg for $1,000. The referee reported the deed of trust altogether invalid as an illegal preference, and this finding was confirmed by the District Court.
Richardson & Sons were contractors and bought lumber from Bo-zarth Bros., lumber dealers, for which they were indebted on December
It seems that the precise point has not been decided in Virginia, though the case of Carpenter v. Longan, supra, was cited as authority in Stimpson v. Bishop, 82 Va. 190. The case of Evans v. Roanoke Savings Bank, 95 Va. 294, 28 S. E. 323, has only an indirect if any bearing on the question. There it was held that a satisfaction entered on the record of a deed of trust by the payee of the note secured by it was effectual against the indorsee of the note in favor of a subsequent encumbrancer of the property without notice that the original payee had parted with the note. But this conclusion was reached on the ground that- section 2498 of the Code of Virginia provided that effectual satisfaction could be so entered. In the case now before us there was no release and the statute referred to has no application.
The holding that the deed of trust is valid as a security for the notes held by the Bank of Williamsburg, makes unnecessary in this proceeding consideration, of the question whether there are any other creditors in the same class with the preferred creditors who would be affected by the preference, since the property covered by the deed of trust has been sold and the proceeds $2,000 will not be more than sufficient to pay the notes held by the Bank of Williamsburg. This conclusion will exclude Wm. H. Hayden, the judgment creditor, from participation in the fund, and we shall not anticipate any issue that may arise between other parties.
The result is that the deed of trust to Thos. H. Shelton is adjudged a valid security as to the notes held by the Bank of Williamsburg, and invalid as to the note held by the Peninsula Bank against creditors of the same class; and the decree of the District Court is modified accordingly. .
Modified.