62 W. Va. 512 | W. Va. | 1907
Assigning as grounds of error the setting aside of a sale of a lease and a deed of trust, on the ground of fraud, M. J. Atwood and Ed Appel have appealed from a decree of the circuit court of Tyler county, in favor of the Joseph Speidel Grocery Company.
The record discloses no evidence of any indebtedness at the time of the sale of the lease and execution of the deed of trust, nor can it be said that the assignment or transfer was voluntary, since that is negatived by positive testimony to the effect that it was made in consideration of indebtedness due from Mrs. Stark to Mrs. Atwood. All the claims presented against the firm in the bill and petitions seem to have accrued long after the" assignment was made. The plaintiff does not show when its claim was acquired, but Ered Appel’s testimony, not contradicted, shows that it was for goods sold in .June, July and August, 1902, of possibly in d uly and August only, and certainly not for goods sold as early as within a year after the sale of the lease. There is no evidence showing when any of the other debts were contracted. It farther appears, from the uncontradicted evidence of Ered Appel, that M. E. Stark & Co. paid Mrs. Atwood rent at the rate of $45.00 per month, after she had bought the lease, and that the note given to Ed Appel and
As the subject matter of the bill of sale or assignment was a mere chattel real, a term less than five years in duration, created by an instrument not required to be recorded, a writing effecting a sale thereof, does not have to be recorded. Its status is, in that respect, the same as that of a bill of sale or any other personal property, which we have seen need not, and cannot, be so recorded as to have any legal effect. The withholding of such an instrument from record cannot be regarded as evidence of fraud for the reason that it, involves no breach of duty to any one. The vendor of this
To overcome the prima facie case so made, the evidence
The claim of Ed Appel is better sustained. There is direct and positive evidence that he loaned the money to Mrs. Atwood, and he is not burdened with any presumption of fraud. The evidence discloses no indebtedness at the time the loan was made, and no circumstances casting suspicion upon the transaction with him has been shown. His deed of trust may be sustained as against the creditors of Mrs. Stark notwithstanding the failure of Mrs. Atwood, the grantor in the deed of trust, to prove . title as against them. She, having title as against Mrs. Stark, executed the deed of trust in favor of Appel. He caused it to be recorded long before any of the other debts in question were incurred, and all creditors, relying in any way, upon the lease as security, had constructive notice of the lien. These subsequent creditors, entitled to the presumption .of fraud, arising from the mere retention of possession, on the theory that they extended credit under the belief that Mrs. Stark still owned the lease, can have no higher equity than one who loaned money directly as security with the knowledge and consent of Mrs. Stark, and without any knowledge of actual fraud on the part of the then admitted owner. There is no proof that Ed Appel knew or had any reason to believe the sale, evidenced by the bill of sale shown him, was not actual and bona úde. He was not dealing with Mrs. Stark, but with Mrs. Atwood, and was not bound to ascertain
From these conclusions it results that the decree complained of must be reversed, in so far as it set aside said deed of trust and denied the claim of Edward Appel, and the cause remanded, with directions to enter a decree sustaining said deed of trust and giving said Appel priority over all other creditors, in respect to the fund in the hands of the court, arising from the sale of the buildings on the lease, and modify the decree complained of accordingly, and in all other respects said decree will be affirmed.
Affirmed* in Part. Reversed in Part.