103 Va. 661 | Va. | 1905
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an appeal from a decree of the Circuit Court for Wise county, sustaining a demurrer to a bill, as amended, filed by the appellant against the appellees, and dismissing the same; to a decree dismissing a bill of review filed by the appellant, to review- that decree; and to a decree striking from the docket the cause of Hunsucker, &c. v. Spear, &c., in which the appellant’s bill, as amended, was asked to be treated as a petition to rehear. The object of appellant’s bill was to remove a cloud upon its title to certain coal and mineral rights claimed by it.
It is insisted by the appellees that the demurrer to the bill of the appellant, as amended, was properly sustained upon several grounds. First, because the deed of W. L. Roberts to his children, dated April 26, 1882, passed to his said children all his right, title, and interest in the land in controversy, and, therefore, the deeds made by him to Greenway and Warner, and to Barrett and Trigg, in the year 1887, passed no interest whatever in the lands.
The appellant, in its amended bill, attacks the deed of April 26, 1882, upon two grounds: First, that it was voluntary and fraudulent; and, second, that the grantees in it are estopped from setting it up as against the appellant.
The appellees insist that the charge in the bill (and when we speak of the bill we mean the bill as amended), that the deed was voluntary and fraudulent, is not sufficiently definite and specific, and that the facts relied on to show that the deed was fraudulent as against the appellant or those under whom it claims, should have 'been set forth.
This objection to the bill is well taken; but that defect was not sufficient to justify the court in sustaining the demurrer to the bill, if the allegations of the bill are sufficient to estop the grantees in the deed of April 26, 1882, or those who claim under
The estoppel set up in the hill is of two kinds — estoppel by the record, and estoppel in pais. As the question of estoppel by the record belongs more properly to another ground of demurrer it will not now be considered.
As to the estoppel in pais. The bill alleges, in substance, that Wade IT. Roberts, one of the grantees in the deed'of April 26, actively participated in the negotiations that led up to the sales by W. L. Roberts to Greenway and Warner, and to Barrett and Trigg, and induced them to purchase; that said sales were made by W. L. Roberts with the knowledge, acquiescence, and consent of the grantees in the deed of April 26; and that Greenway and Warner, and Barrett and Trigg, and the parties through whom the appellant claims, each and all of them, at the time of their respective purchases, had no knowledge or notice of the alleged deed of April 26, but that they and each of them purchased in good faith, relying upon the assurances, representations, and conduct of the said Wade H. Roberts and the other grantees in that deed.
If these allegations are true, and upon demurrer they must be so treated, they are sufficient to estop the grantees in the deed of April 26 from claiming any rights under it to the prejudice of the appellant (C. & O. Ry. Co. v. Walker, 100 Va. 69, 40 S. E. 633, and authorities cited), unless, as is urged, the bill was defective in not specifically alleging that the grantees therein had reached their majority when their father and grantor made his sales to Greenway and Warner, and Barrett and Trigg.
The deed of April 26 provides that the grantees therein and neither of them have the right to sell or dispose of the real and personal property embraced in the deed, nor any part thereof, until they arrive at the age of twenty-one years. The
The next ground relied on here by the appellees to show that the demurrer to the bill was properly sustained is that the appellant and those under whom it claims purchased during the pendency of the suit of Hunsucker and others v. Spears and others, and are conclusively bound by the proceedings in that cause, by which certain of the children of W. L. Roberts, grantees in the deed of April 26, 1882, who were also pendente lite purchasers, acquired absolute title to the land in controversy.
In the year 1879 John Hunsueker, James Hunsueker and W. L. Roberts instituted a suit in the Circuit Court for Wise county against the heirs of: Thomas Rogers and others, for the purpose of having a contract for the sale of a tract of land (which includes the land in controversy), entered into by the
The proceedings in the case of Hunsucker and others v. Spears and others, which resulted in the conveyance last mentioned, it is insisted by the appellees, was an adjudication that the grantees in the deed of April 26, 1882, were entitled to the land in controversy, and conclusively binds the appellant, and those under whom it claims, all of them being pendente lite purchasers.
The general rule is that a person who acquires an interest in land involved in a pending suit, and from a party litigant, takes
Applying these well settled principles to the facts of the case of Hunsucker and others v. Spears and others, do the proceedings in that cause which resulted in a conveyance of the land in controversy to the grantees in the deed of April 26, 1882, conclude the appellant from setting up claim to the coal and mining rights in the land as against the grantees in that deed ? Heither the grantees in the deed of April 26, 1882, as such, nor the appellant, nor those under whom it claims, were ever parties to that suit. W. L. Boberts, the vendor of both sets of claimants, was a party until his death. Then the suit was revived upon the motion of his heirs, and afterward prosecuted
A purchaser having actual or constructive notice of a pending suit can only be held chargeable with knowledge of the facts of which the record in the suit, as it existed at the time of his purchase, would have informed him. He cannot be charged with knowledge of facts afterwards brought into the case. Davis v. Christian, &c., 15 Gratt. 11; Stout v. Phillippi Mfg. Co., 23 S. E. (W. Va.) 571, 56 Am. St. 843.
But even if it did appear in the record of that court, as appellees insist, that the grantees in the deed of April 26, 1882, had some interest in or claim to the land which W. L. Roberts was seeking to have assigned him, it only appeared incidentally, and did not in any manner affect the litigation between the complainants and defendants in that suit; and a decision as to the validity of such claim was not essential to giving complete relief under the pleadings in the case. In such a case, even where the person w'hose interest only incidentally appears is a party to the suit, an adjudication of such a claim does not bind a pendente lite purchaser who has no notice of such claim; and for a much stronger reason it would not bind where such person was not a party to the suit.
In Ereeman on Judgments (1 Ed.), sec. 200, it is said, in discussing the doctrine of Us pendens, that “if in an action by one plaintiff against two or more defendants, it appears from the pleadings that one of the defendants has certain equities against other’s, but those equities do not in any way affect the present litigation between the plaintiff and defendants, and the rights of the defendants between each other are not sought to be determined, no lis pendens can be created beyond the purposes of the suit, and an alienee of one of the defendants is not charged with implied notice of the equities between the co-defendants. It would seem to be perfectly clear, in the absence-of authority on the subject, that there could be no Us pendens between co-plaintiffs and co-defendants in any action not designed to settle the rights of such plaintiffs or defendants between each other, no matter how many facts not material to the present controversy happened to find their way into the record. If, however, upon proper pleadings, one of the' defendants is shown to have certain rights, as against the others, affecting specific property, and entitling him to relief with respect to such property in the present action, a purchaser, after such pleading’s, have been filed and notice of the defendant’s claim for relief registered (where registry is required) is bound as a purchaser pendente lite.”
The appellee? further insist that “the decrees entered by R. T. Irvine, special judge, in September, 1901, directing sale of the land in controversy for costs, the sale made pursuant thereto, and the decree confirming the sale, and the deed made by Commissioner Vicars and decree confirming this deed dated April 8, 1902, are all valid and binding and cannot be set aside,” and that the bill, as an original bill, was demurrable.
The purposes of the suit of Hunsucker, &c. v. Spears, &c. had been accomplished by the proceedings had therein prior to the decree of April 12, 1899. Nothing further remained to be done in the cause except to settle the question of costs. By that decree the amount of costs were ascertained and apportioned among those liable to pay. Of that sum, as costs for partitioning the land, W. L. Roberts, though dead, was directed to pay $40, and it was decreed to be a lien on the land assigned him, and theretofore conveyed to his heirs by a commissioner of the court. By the same decree a receiver was appointed to collect and disburse the costs, and if the parties against whom costs were decreed did not pay within thirty days’ executions were directed to be issued in favor of the receiver against them.
If the decree of April 12, 1899, was a final decree, as insisted by appellees, and as under our decision we think it was (Cocke’s admr. v. Gilpin, 1 Rob. 20; Ryan v. Ryan, 32 Gratt. 367; Rawlings v. Rawlings, 75 Va. 76; Sims v. Sims, 94 Va. 580, 27 S. E. 436, 64 Am. St. 722), the subsequent proceedings by which the land assigned W. L. Roberts was sold would seem to be without authority of law, at least as to the appellant, who had no notice thereof.
In Johnson v. Anderson, 76 Va. 766, 771, where the court had given all the relief contemplated in the cause, Judge Burks, speaking- for the court, said: “The cause was ended, and the court could proceed no further. It had no further jurisdiction in that proceeding, either of the subject matter or of the parties. . . . The original cause being ended, the proceeding was a new one against the defendant, and being without notice the personal decree against him is a nullity, and would be so treated, we presume, everywhere.” See Battalie, &c. v. Maryland Hospital, &c., 76 Va. 63; Smith v. Powell, 98 Va. 431, 36 S. E. 522.
If it had been necessary in the suit of Hunsucker, &c. v. Spears, &c. to have sold the land, the subject matter of the suit, for the purpose of partition, of course the costs adjudged
But if it be held that the proceedings in question which resulted in the sale of the land are binding upon the heirs of W. L. Roberts, since they, being parties to the suit, are presumed to have had notice thereof and made no objection, still they are not binding upon the appellant, who had no notice of them. As before stated in this opinion, a purchaser having actual or constructive notice of a pending suit can only be held chargeable with knowledge of the facts of which the record in the suit, as it existed at the time of his purchase, would have informed him, and he cannot be charged with knowledge of facts afterward brought into the case, (Davis v. Christian, supra), or be bound by proceedings had therein affecting the land after a final decree, and beyond the jurisdiction of the court.
Having reached the conclusion that under the allegations of the bill the grantees in the deed of April 26, 1882, are estopped by their conduct from asserting a claim under it to the prejudice of the appellant; that the proceedings in the cause, by which the land assigned to W. L. Roberts was directed to be
Having reached this conclusion, it will be unnecessary to consider the other grounds of objection to the validity of the proceedings in the cause of Hunsucker, &c. v. Spears, &c., set up in the bill, as a decision of the questions raised by them, however decided, could not render the bill demurrable, or affect the conclusion we have reached.
The decree of the Circuit Court of April 11, 1903, dismissing the appellant’s bill, and its decree of April 7, 1904, dismissing the appellant’s bill of review, must be reversed and annulled; and this court will enter such decree as the Circrnt Court ought to have entered, overruling the demurrer to the bill, and remand the cause to. the Circuit Court for further proceedings to be had not in conflict with the views expressed in this opinion. And the appeal from the decree of April 10, 1903, in the case of Hunsucker, &c. v. Spear, &c. must be dismissed as improvidently awarded, as there was a final decree rendered in that cause more than one year before the bill in the case of Virginia Iron, Coal & Coke Co. v. Roberts, was asked to be treated as a petition to rehear in that cause.
Reversed in one case, and appeal dismissed in the other.