15 W. Va. 829 | W. Va. | 1879
delivered the opinion of the Court:
It appears in this ease that on the second Monday of April, being a rule day, 1878, the plaintiff filed his bill in equity in the municipal court of Wheeling against John F. Rempe, Mary A. his wife, F. Nolte, in his own right and as trustee of said Mary A. Rempe, John Nolte? trustee, and Jacob Steinfield, trustee, defendants. The substantial parts of the bill are as follows : “The plaintiff complains and says that on tlie 4th day of January ^ 1873, Lawrence Waltherand wife, by deed of that date) sold and conveyed to the defendant, John F. Rempe, the north half of lot numbered sixty-three, situate on the west side of the street then known as Jacob street, but
Said plaintiff further says that the interest on said note was paid in full to the 3d day of August, 1876; that said note is long since due and is wholly unpaid except as to said interest; and that he has by virtue of said last named deed of trusty the second lien on the said property to secure the payment of the amount still due him on said note, viz: $1,000.00, with interest thereon from August 3, 1876.
He further says that the'consideration of the two notes made by said John F. Rempe to him as aforesaid, was money loaned and in part for him, said Rempe, to pay oft the balance of purchase-money due on said land to said Walther, and he says that at the time of the making and record of said deeds of trust, exhibits three and five as aforesaid, there were no other liens upon said property upon the land records of - Ohio county, and that he, said
He further says, from a copy of the deed from the land record of said Ohio county, Said John F. Eempe and his wife, by deed dated February 21, 1873, conveyed the saíne property to the defendant, John Nolte, to secure the payment of a promissory note of $1,000.00, of even date, with interest in two years after date, to the defendant, F. Nolte; that said deed of trust was duly presented for record in the office of the clerk of the county court of Ohio county, on the 7th day of February, 1876, and was on that day duly admitted to record, all of which will fully appear from a duly certified copy of said deed of trust herewith filed as plaintiff’s exhibit seven, and prayed to be taken as part of this bill as if fully set forth therein.
He further says that this lien is the third lien (if it remain a lien at all) on said property, and is subject and subordinate to the prior liens of the two deeds of trust to secure the plaintiff as hereinbefore set out; that the •same is void as to him, a subsequent purchaser for a valuable consideration, and withóut notice. He does not know of his own knowledge whether this claim has been paid off or not, or whether it was ever a bona fide claim at all, but, at all events, it appears upon the land records as an unreleased claim upon said property.
Exhibit one referred to in said bill is filed, and is- a deed of conveyance dated the 4th day of January, 1873, by Lawrence Walther and ’Mary, his wife, of the city of Wheeling, West Virginia, of the first part, to John F-Rempe for the realty in said bill mentioned as being conveyed to said Rempe. This deed appears to have-been duly acknowledged, for record by said Walther and his wife each on the 9th day of January, 1873, before a notary public of Ohio county, and was duly admitted to-record in the clerk’s office of the county court of Ohio-county on the 27th day of February, 1873. The consideration mentioned in this deed is $3,000.00.
Exhibit two, referred to in plaintiff’s bill is a deed dated the 7th day of August, 1873, from John F. Rempe and Mary Rempe, his wife, of Wheeling, Ohio county,
“Witness the following signatures and seals:
“JOHN F. Eempe, [Seal.]
“Mary Eempe, [Seal.]”
This deed appears to have been duly acknowledged for record by said John F. Eempe and Mary Eempe, each •on the 7th day of August, 1873, before a notary public of Ohio county, and duly admitted to record in the
Exhibit three mentioned and referred to in said bill purports to be a deed of trust-, dated the 13th. day of January, 1874, from John F. Rempe and May A., his wife, of the city of Wheeling, West Virginia, of the first part, conveying to Jacob Stifel of the same place, of the second part, the real property mentioned and described in said bill as being thereby conveyed, with general warranty, in trust to secure to Selig Weinberg the prompt payment of the sum of $1,000.00 in twelve months after the date thereof, and the interest on the same as it accrues, payable quarterly, for value received; and the said deed of trust recites as follows, viz: “and as evidence of said sum the said John F. Rempe has given his-promissory note in the words and figures following, to-wit:
‘$1,000.00. WHEELING, W. Va., January 13, 1874.
‘ Twelve months after date, I promise to pay to the order of Selig Weinberg the sum of $1,000.00, with interest from date payable quarterly, for value re- _ ceived, negotiable and payable at the First National Bank of Wheeling.
“[Signed] JOHN F. Rempe.’
“And further to secure any note or notes that may be given in the renewal or extension of said promissory note, or any part of the same,” &c. This deed of trust is signed and sealed by said John F. Rempe and Mary A. Rempe each, and was duly acknowledged by said John F. Rempe for record on the 14th day of January, iu the year 1874, before the clerk of the county court of the county of Ohio, in his office ; and as appears by the certificate of the same clerk was duly acknowledged and in due and proper form before the same clerk in his office, on the day and year last aforesaid, by said Mary A. Rempe ; and was on the same day and year duly admitted to record in the clerk’s office of the county court Ohio county.
“$1,000.00. Wheeling, W. Va., January 13, 1874.
“ Twelve months after date, I promise to pay to the order of Selig Weinberg, the sum of one thousand dollars ($1,000.00), with interest from date payable quarterly, for value received, negotiable and payable at the. First National Bank of Wheeling.
“John E. Rempe.”
This note is endorsed as follows — “ Deed of trust to secure this note, admitted to record January 14, 1874.
“R. B. Woods.
“ Clerk County Court O. C.”
Exhibit number five, referred to in plaintiff’s bills, purports to be a deed of trust dated the 3d day of November, 1874, between John E. Rempe and Mary A., his wife, of the city of Wheeling, in Ohio county, West "Virginia, of the first part, and Jacob Stifel of the same place, of the second part, and conveys to the said Stifel with general warranty the real property mentioned in said bill as thereby conveyed, in trust to secure Selig Wienberg the prompt payment of the sum of $1,000.00 in twelve months after its daté, and the interest on the same as it accrues, payable quarterly, for value received. Said deed of trust recites as follows : “And as evidence of the same the said John F. Rempe, has given his promissory note in the words and figures following to-wit:
1 $1,000.00. ‘Wheeling, W. Va.,November 3, 1874.
‘ Twelve months after date, I promise to pay to the order of Selig Weinberg the sum of one thousand dollars ($1,000.00), with interest from date payable quarterly, for value received, negotiable and payable at the First National Bank of Wheeling.
[Signed] ‘ John E. Rempe.’
“And further to secure any note or notes that may be given in renewal or extension of said promissory note,*840 or any part thereof,” &c. This deed of trust also is signed and sealed by said John F. Rempe and Mary A. Rempe each, and appears to have been duly acknowledged by the said John F. Rempe for record before the clerk of the county court of Ohio county, in his office, on the 5th day-of November, 1874; and also appears to have been duly acknowledged for record in due form by the said Mary A. Rempe. on the day and year last aforesaid before the same clerk in his office. And was duly admitted to record on the day and year last aforesaid in the clerk’s office of the county court of Ohio county, by the clerk thereof.
Exhibit C, referred to in plaintiff’s bill is as follows, viz:
“$1,000.00. Wheeling, W. Ya., November 3,1874.
“Twelve months after date I promise to pay to the order of Selig Weinberg the sum of $1,000.00, with interest from date payable quarterly, for value received, negotiable and payable at the First National Bank of Wheeling.
“JOHN F. Rempe.”
This note is endorsed as follows, viz: “Secured by deed of trust admitted to record November 5, 1874.
“R. B. Woods, Olerk».
Exhibit seven mentioned and referred to in plaintiff’s bill purports to be a deed of trust dated the 27th day of February, 1873, between John F. Rempe and Mary A. Rempe, his wife, of Wheeling, West Virginia, of the first part, and John Nolte of the same place, of the second part, whereby the said parties of the first part convey to the said party of the second part with general warranty, the real property in said bill mentioned as being thereby conveyed, in trust, to secure F. Nolte the payment of $1,000.00, as evidenced by a promissory note bearing even date therewith, and payable in two years after date, with interest, negotiable and payable at the German Bank of Wheeling by John F. Rempe, and signed by him. The right is reserved by the said John F. Rempe to pay off and lift said note at any time within said two years and
The parties defendant to the bill appear to have been duly summoned, and a decree nisi taken against each of them.
It appears that on the 20th day of June, 1878, the said John F. Rempe, Mary A. Rempe, and Frederick Nolte, in his own right, and as trustee for Mary A. Rempe, appeared and filed their several demurrers to the plaintiff’s bill, and the plaintiff joined therein ; and the court overruled the said demurrers, and ordered that the said demurrants be ruled to answer said bill on the 21st day of June, 1878, at 10 o’clock A. M. It appears that on the said 21st day of June, 1878, on motion of defendant, Mary A. Rempe, the court allowed her to make her defense to this suit separately from her husband, and thereupon the defendants, Frederick Nolte, trustee for Mary A. Rempe, and in his own right, John F..Rempe, and Mary A. Rempe in her own right, each filed a separate answer to the plaintiff’s bill, and to each of said answers the plaintiff filed a general replication.
Frederick Nolte in his answer, in his own right and as trustee &c., admits that defendant, John F. Rempe, became the owner in fee simple of the real estate in the bill mentioned and described in exhibit one to plaintiff’s bill. He also admits that on the 7th day of August, 1873, said John F. Rempe and Mary A., his wife, conveyed the realty mentioned in exhibit one aforesaid to him, in trust for the sole use and benefit of Mary
He also says that the consideration of the last mentioned note of $1,000.00, payable to him by said John F. Rempe, was money loaned by him to said John F. Rempe, to make the first payment of the purchase-money to Walther for said realty mentioned in said exhibit one; that he believes said John F. Rempe was to pay $3,000.00 for said property, and at the time he purchased it he paid $2,000.00, $1,000.00 of which was the money so borrowed from him, respondent, and secured by the said deed of trust marked exhibit seven to plaintiff’s ^ilh He denies the allegation in said bill, which says that the plaintiff did not know of the existence of any deed of trust or mortgage or other lien for the security of any debt, at the time he took the notes of John F. Rempe secured by exhibits three, four, five and six to
He also says that at the time of the making of said deed, exhibit two to plaintiff’s bill, by said Rempe and wife, they were not, nor were either of them, indebted to plaintiff in any sum, and did not become-indebted to plaintiff in any sum until about five months after the making and recording of said deed of the 7th of August, 1873, from said Rempe and wife to him, respondent, as trustee. . He further says that he had no knowledge that said Rempe and wife had conveyed or attemped to convey the realty mentioned in said exhibit two, until about the 7th day of February, 1876, when on account of a report to that effect he visited the said clerk’s office and ascertained that such an attempt had been made, and that the deeds, exhibits three and five, were on record. He also says that at, the time he loaned John F. Rempe the $1,000.00 aforesaid, which is secured by said deed of trust, exhibit seven, and at the time of executing said deed of trust the said John F. Rempe was the owner in fee simple of the said realty conveyed to said John Nolte
He further says, that John F. Rempe’s note for $1,000.00 held by him, nor any part thereof has ever been paid, but that there is still due him thereon $1,000.00 with interest from the 27th day of February, 1873. He further prays the court in conclusion by its decree to adjudge and order that his said claim oí $1,000.00, together with its interest as aforesaid, be and is an existing lien upon said property from and after August 8, 1873,
The defendant, John F. Eempe, in his answer admits that he became the owner in fee simple on the 4th of January, 1873, of the realty described in exhibit one to plaintiff’s bill. He also admits that he and his wife, Mary A., conveyed, on the 7th of August, 1873, the said realty mentioned in said exhibit one, to Frederick Nolte in trust for the sole use and benefit of his said wife and her heirs, as appears by exhibit two to plaintiff’s bill, which was duly recorded in the clerk’s office of the county court of Ohio county, on the 8th of August, 1873. He also admits that he and his said wife, on the 13th of January, 1874, attempted to convey to Jacob Stifel, as trustee, the realtv mentioned and described in said exhibit one, to " . . 7 / secure a note for $1,000.00 of that date to plaintiff, as set forth in his bill.. He further admits, that on the 3d day of November, 1874, he and his said wife, Mary A., by deed of that date attempted to convey to said Stifel, as trustee, the said realty to secure a note for $1,000.00 of that date to plaintiff, as set forth in his bill. He also admits that on the 27th day of February, 1873, after the purchase by him of said realty and after the deed from Walther and wife to him for the same was duly admitted to record, he and his said wife conveyed the same to John Nolte, as trustee, to secure the defendant, Frederick Nolte, the payment by him of $1,000.00, evidenced by the promissory note of him, respondent, .bearing even date with the last mentioned deed, and which said deed was duly admitted to record in the clerk’s office of the county court of Ohio county on the 7th day of February, 1876.
He also says, that the consideration of this last mentioned note for $1,000.00, payable to said Frederick Nolte by him, was money loaned by said Nolte to him to make the first payment of the purchase-money to said Walther for the said realty, and that there still remains due to the said Frederick Nolte the sum of $1,000.00,
He further says that on or about the 13th of January, 1874, when the last payment of $1,000.00 became due and payable for said realty to said Walther, he applied for and received a loan of $ 1,000.00 from the plaintiff, to make said last payment, and gave plaintiff the deed of trust, exhibit three, to secure said loan ; that he was not asked as to whether any other deeds of trust were on record or had been given by him upon said realty by the plaintiff, and as he considered the property was of greater, value than all the loans thereon, he did not consider it necessary to inform plaintiff of the lien of said note to Frederick Noite. He also says that he did not inform said Frederick Noite of the loans to him, respondent, by the plaintiff at the time said deeds of trust were made, nor afterwards, until enquired of as to them by said Noite, about the 7th day of February, 1876, when he was about to put his said deed of trust on record. He also says that the plaintiff afterwards, about the 3d day of November, 1875, applied to him to take another $1,000.00
The defendant, Mary A. Rempe, in her answer says that on or about the 13th day of January, 1874, when the last payment of $1,000.00 became due and payable for said property to said Lawrence Walther, her said husband, the said John F. Rempe, applied to and received a loan from the complainant, Selig Weinberg, to make said last payment, and gave said complainant the deed of trust, marked exhibit three, to secure said loan, this defendant joining in said deed, and while the defendant signed said deed, and the money, as she is informed, was applied to the payment of this last installment of purchase-money on the property mentioned and described in exhibit one of complainant’s bill, yet said loan was made to John F. Rempe, her husband, and not to this defendant ; that the credit was given by the said complainant, Weinberg, to said John F. Rempe, and not to this defendant, and was so understood by the said complainant; that this defendant in signing said deed had no intention of charging her separate estate or to become security for the payment of said debt, or bind her separate estate for the payment thereof in any manner whatever, and had any such explanation or intention been made known to her, she would not have signed said deed ; that afterwards, on or about the 3d day of November, 1874, John F. Rempe, the husband of this defendant, requested this defendant to join him in another deed of trust to secure the said Selig Weinberg in another further sum of $1,000.00, and directed this defendant to accompany him to the office of .the clerk of the county court of Ohio county and sign said deed, which she acccordingly did, on the 5th day of November, 1874. The defendant avers that no part of
Her answer in other respects is about the same in substance as that of her husband, and I therefore deem it unnecessary to state it further’, except to say that she concludes by praying the court to protect her interest in her separate estate, &c.
The bill and answers are respectively verified by affidavit.
A number of depositions were taken in the cause by plaintiff and defendants, which I deem it unnecessary to set out at this place, but will hereinafter refer to so much of the same as I deem material.
On the 26th day of June, 1878, the court made and entered the following decree in the cause, viz: “ This cause came on again to be heard upon the summons duly ’served upon all the defendants, the bill and exhibits, the separate answers of Frederick Nolte in his own right and as trusteee of Mary A. Rempe, of John F. Rempe and Mary A. Rempe, and general replication filed to each of said answers, and upon the depositions of Selig Weinberg, Andreas Wolf and Robert B. Woods, taken lor the plaintiff, and the depositions of defendants, Frederick ISTolte, John F. Rempe and Mary A. Rempe, taken for
From and to this decree the defendant, Frederick Holte, in his own right and as trustee for Mary A. Rempe, obtained from this court an appeal and super-sedeas.
The appellant in his petition for an appeal and super-sedeas has assigned the following as errors in said decree, for which the said decree should be reversed, viz:
“ 1st. In this, that the court erred in overruling your petitioner’s demurrer to the bill of complaint in the said .suit.
“ 2d. The court erred in decreeing the debt of John F. Rempe to be a lien upon the property described in the bill, John F. Rempe not being the owner thereof at the time of the execution of the deed of trust to secure the debt of Weinberg.
“3d. The court erred in entering said decree without*851 passing on the validity of the deeds of trust filed as ex-hits numbers three and five with the bill of complaint.
“4th. The court erred in this, that after overruling the petitionei’’s demurrer, time enough was not .allowed by the rule to answer within which to prepare his answer.
“5th. The court erred in decreeing that Weinberg had the first lien upon the property described in the bill.
“6th. The court erred in entering said decree without first having referred said cause to a commissioner to take an account and state the liens, if any, upon said property together with their priorities.
“7th. The court erred in entering said decree, because it appears that at the time John F. Rempe contracted the debt with Selig Weinbergthe deed from John F. Rempe and wife to your petitioner, as trustee for Mary A. Rempe, was on record and had been for about five months before, and by the terms of said deed, as well as in law, this petitioner had the legal title to said real estate, and John F. Rempe and wife could not make such a conveyance as was attempted to be made, and of this fact Weinberg had notice. It also appears by the depositions that this petitioner had no knowledge of said debt of Weinberg’s, or the attempted conveyance to secure the same, until long after they were made, and never gave any assent thereto.
“8th. Your petitioner’s claim should have been held to have been the first lien against said real estate described in the bill.
“9th. Because it does not appear that at the time Weinberg loaned said money to John F. Rempe, he knew Mrs. Rempe had any separate estate, or that he gave the credit to her, or that she had any intent to charge her separate estate with the payment of said loan, but by an inspection of the answers filed in said cause, as well as the depositions of Weinberg, Rempe and Mrs. Rempe, the contrary appears.
“10th. Because even if the first loan made by Weinberg to J. F. Rempe was a charge on the separate estate*852 of Mrs. Rerape (on the ground that the money was used ■for the benefit of her estate), yet ic was error to decree the second loan to John F. Rempe by Weinberg to be a charge and the first lien upon her separate estate, it appearing not to have been used for the benefit of her separate estate, but by Rempe himself, to whom the credit was given.
“11th. Because even if the decree in other respects be not erroneous, yet the time mentioned in said decree within which the said defendant should pay said sum of money directed by said decree, and upon default a sale of the property was ordered, was too short and was not a reasonable time. And for other errors manifest upon an inspection of the record in said cause.”
I will now proceed to the consideration and determination of this cause upon the facts and the law and the rules and principles governing courts of equity. In the first place I deem it proper to remark, that the acknowl-edgement and privy examination of Mary A. Rempe to each and all the deeds of trust hereinbefore mentioned are lull and complete. No defect therein has been suggested by counsel. The certificates of acknowledgment- and privy examination are in accordance with the requirements of our statute in such case touching married women.
As to appellant’s first assignment of error: I see no error in the court in overruling the demurrers to the bill. The plaintiff’s bill manifestly upon its face contains sufficient equitable matter to give the court jurisdiction of the subject-matter thereof. And indeed no reason has been assigned by the appellant’s counsel showing why the court erred in overruling the said demurrers. See Radford et al. v. Carwile et al., 13 W. Va. 572. But I will remark further upon this subject in considering some of the other assignments of error touching to some extent the matters covered by the demurrers.
As to the appellant’s third assignment of error: This assignment of error, it seems to me, is not well taken. The
As to the appellant’s fourth assignment of error: As we have seen, the court overruled the demurrers to the bill on the 20th day of June, 1878, and thereupon entered a rule that each of the demurrants answer on the 21st day of June, 1878, thus giving to the demurrants one day in which to file their answers. The 30th section of chapter 125 of the Code of this State of 1868, provides that “ A plaintiff in equity may have any plea or demurrer set down to be argued. If the same be overruled, no other plea or demurrer shall afterwards be received, but there shall be a rule upou the defendant to answer the bill; and if he fail to appear and answer the bill on the day specified in the order, the plaintiff shall be entitled to a decree against him for the relief prayed for therein.” It will be observed that this section of the Code does not fix any maximum or minimum time in which the demurrant may be ruled to answer when his demurrer is overruled. The time is properly left by the statute to the sound discretion of the court according to the circumstances of each case ) and under some circumstances where the Appellate Court sees that the discretion has been abused and the demurrant injured thereby, it will interfere and review and reverse the action of the court below therefor; but ordinarily the time to be fixed must to a great extent be left to the court below. Whether one day was too short a time for the demurrant to be ruled to answer in this case, this Court cannot decide, as the record now stands. One day in some cases would be amply sufficient, and in other cases, under circumstances made to appear, would be insufficient. All that could be required or expected of the court below is that it should allow a reasonable
In this case the appellants nor any other party to the cause, did not raise the question in the court below- in any form as to the insufficiency of the time given the de-murrants to file their respective answers. Neither of them complained to the court below that the time given was too short; nor did they, or any of them, ask the court to extend the time, or pretend to show any cause therefor. But on the contrary each of the demurrants appeared on the day fixed and promptly filed their answers at great length. The answer of the demurrant,. Frederick Nolte, appears to have been prepared and verified by affidavit on the 15th day of May, 1878, over a month prior to the time the demurrer was overruled and the rifle to answer made. The answer of the demur-rant, John F. Rempe, appears to have been prepared and verified by affidavit some two or three days prior to the date of the other answer, and the answer of the said Mary A. Rempe was sworn to on the 21st day of June, 1878, the day fixed by the court for the filing of the answer. Under these circumstances surely it cannot be successfully maintained, that this court should hold that the time fixed for the demurrant to answer the bill in this case was unreasonably short, and that demurrants-were prejudiced thereby. If the time fixed by the court
As to the appellant’s fifth and eighth assignments of error : The pleadings and evidence show that on the 13th day of January, 1874, the appellee, Selig Weinberg, loaned to defendant, John F. Rempe, $1,000.00, for which he gave his note of that date, and he and his wife Mary A. secured the payment of tne same by a deed of trust on the realty in the bill mentioned, being the same property which the court by its said decree of June 26, 1878, decreed to be sold. This deed of trust was duly acknowledged by said Rempe and his wife, Mary A., with proper privy examination of the wife on the 14th day of January, 1874, and was on the same day duly admitted to' record in the clerk’s office of the county court of the county of Ohio in which county the property was situated. On the 3d day oflSTovember, 1874, said Weinberg loaned said John F. Rempe another $1,000.00, for which he gave his note of that date, and secured the payment thereof by another deed of trust made by him and his said wife on the same property ; this deed of trust was duly acknowledged by said Rempe and wife, with full privy examination of the wife, on the 5th day of November, 1874, and was on the same day duly admitted to record' in the clerk’s office of the county court of the said county of Ohio. On the 7th day of August, 1873, said Rempe and wife conveyed to the appellant Frederick Nolte, trustee, the same property “for the sole use and benefit of Mary A. Rempe and her heirs. Said trustee may sell and convey said property on the written order of herself, and the money or other consideration to be pffid only for the use and benefit of the said Mary Rempe, and her heirs.” This deed was duly acknowledged by the said Rempe and wife, with full privy examination of the
At the time of Weinberg’s said, loans to John F. Rempe, and the execution and delivery of said deeds of trust to secure the same, and the acknowledgemnt and recordation thereof, and for a considerable time thereafter he, Weinberg, had no notice or knowledge of the •existence of the said deed of trust so executed to secure the said debt of $1,000.00 to said Frederick Nolte. The first $1,000.00 loan made to John F. Rempe from said Weinberg, and secured as aforesaid, was borrowed to pay -on the back purchase-money due from said Rempe to one Walther, from whom said Rempe had purchased. said property, upon which there was alien for said back purchase-money, and it was so applied to the entire extinguishment thereof. The second $1,000.00 loan made by said Weinberg to said Rempe, and secured by •deed of trust on said property as aforesaid, was borrowed by said Rempe to go into his business he was then following, being that of merchant tailor. The $1,000.00 loaned by said Frederick Nolte to said Rempe, secured by deed of trust as aforesaid, was borrowed by said Rempe to aid in completing the down payment of the purchase-money on said property by said Rempe to said Walther, and was so applied. The said Walther and wife conveyed said property to. the said John F. Rempe by deed
The court below held that by virtue of the said deeds of trust, exhibits three and five, made by Eempe and wife, duly acknowledged and recorded as aforesaid, and at the dates aforesaid, the said Weinberg had the first liens on said property, though the trustee, Frederick Nolte, had not assented to or signed said two deeds of trust, and that these liens were 'prior to that of the said deed of trust to secure to said Frederick Nolte his said debt of $1,000.00J recorded February 8, 1876; that said Eempe and wife had full power under the deed of trust to Frederick Nolte, trustee for said Mary A. Eempe, to charge the corpus of her said separate real estate by said deeds of trust with the debts due Weinberg, and did thereby charge the corpus of said separate estate. It appears that until about the 7th day of February, 1876, when it was admitted to record, the said Weinberg had no notice or knowledge of the existence of said Frederick Nolte’s said deed of trust, exhibit seven, bearing date February 27> 1873; and when he took his, Weinberg’s, said two deeds of trust, exhibits three and five, there was nothing upon record in the clerk’s office of the county court of Ohio county, or in existence elsewhere of which he had notice or knowledge, to furnish him with notice or knowledge of the said deed of trust lien, exhibit number seven, of said Frederick Nolte.
The 4th and 5th sections of ch. 74 of the Code of 1868 of this State provides as follows, viz: “ 4. Any contract in writing, made in respect to real estate or goods and chattels, in consideration of marriage, or made for the conveyance or sale of real estate, or a term therein of more than five years, shall, from the time it is duly admitted to record, be, as against creditors and purchasers, ■ as valid as if the contract was a deed conveying the estate or interest embraced in the contract. 5. Every such contract, every deed conveying any such estate or term, and every deed of gift, or deed of trust or mortgage, con
The appellant’s fifth and eighth assignments of error are not well taken, if Weinberger’s said two deeds of trust are valid as to said Mary A. Rempe, which point is hereinafter considered.
As to the appellant’s sixth assignment: The bill in this case alleges, that there are but two lienors against the said property, and the amounts and just credits to which each are subject. The answers do not controvert these allegations. The credits are but few and are small, and they apply only to Weinberg’s debt. It is also proven by Weinberg that the interest was paid in full on his first note to July 13, 1876, and on his second note to August 3, 1876, and that in addition thereto John F. Rempe paid him $1.72; $17.00 paid September 18, 1877; $30.00 October 31, 1877; and $35.00 December 18, 1877. The payments and credits are in no way controverted, nor is it claimed by any party that there are or should,
As to the appellant’s eleventh assignment of error: The decree of sale directs that unless the said defendants, or
As to the appellant's second, seventh, ninth and tenth
The jus disponendi is an incident to the ownership of a separate estate; and it can only be taken away, or limited, by express words. The liability of the separate estate of a married woman to the payment of all her debts, in
In the case of Lee et al. v. The Bank of the United States, 9 Leigh 200, “by post nuptial deed of settlement, reciting that the husband had sold his wife’s estate, and she had joined in the conveyance thereof, under apromise from him to settle an equivalent on her, therefore, the husband conveys real estate to a trustee. 1." To the separate use of the wife for life, unless she should, in writing under her hand, direct trustee to sell and convey the whole or any part of trust-subject, in which case he should hold the proceeds of sale subject to the separate use and order of wife. 2. After wife’s death to the use of husband for life. And 3. After husband’s death, to and for the use of the devisees or heirs of wife, to be divided and
Such being the law applicable to this case, is there anything express or to be implied in the deed to Frederick Nolte, trustee, exhibit number two, to restrain defendant, Mary A. Rempe’s general power of disposition of the corpus of her said separate estate thereby created? The clauses showing the trust and pointing out one particular way of disposing of the real estate are, as we have seen, as follows : “The property hereby conveyed to said trustee is intended for the sole use and benefit of Mary A. Rempe and her heirs. Said trustee may sell and convey said property on the written order of herself, and the money or other consideration to be paid only for the use and benefit of the,said Mary A. Rempe and her heirs.”
This leads me to the enquiry: Has she encumbered her said-separate real estate in the present case so as to bind thecorpts thereof? She executed the two deeds of trust to secure said Weinberg’s said two debts (exhibits three and five) in connection with her husband. She was privily examined as to both of them, and upon their being fully explained to her she acknowledged their execution and declared that she did not wish to retract it, fully in the form prescribed by law; and they were thereupon duly admitted to record as to both husband and wife. The 6th section of chapter 73 of the Code of this State of 1868 provides, that “when the privy examination, acknowledgement and declaration of a married woman shall have been so taken and recorded in the recorder’s office, or when the same shall have been so taken and certified as aforesaid, and the writing to which such certificate is annexed, or on which it is, shall have been delivered to the proper recorder and admitted to record as to the husband as well as to the wifé, such writing shall operate to convey from the wife her right of dower in the real estate embraced therein, and pass from her and her representatives all right, title and interest of every nature, which at the date of such writing she may have in real estate conveyed thereby, as effectually as if she were, at said date, an unmarried woman,” &c. I do
Can these statements in the answer be fairly construed by proper implication into a charge by way of defense, that her signature to said deeds of trust were procured from her by the fraud of Weinberg? I humbly think not. But if I should be mistaken in this, if the said statements in said answer can be construed in any way to amount to a charge of fraud against said Weinberg, then it must be held that the charge of fraud is affirmative'matter alleged in the answer by way of defense, and it is incumbent on the defendant, Mary A., to prove the charge clearly. But there is no evidence even tending to prove any fraud as against said Weinberg, or any of said statements of said Mary A. Rempe in her said answer. But the said statements of said Mary A. in her answer are utterly inconsistent with her acts. At the time she signed said two deeds of trust to secure Wein
In Harkins v. Forsyth et al. 11 Leigh 294, the syllabus in first part thereof is as follows : “ After husband and wife have signed, sealed and delivered a deed of mortgage, two justices of the.peace certify in the form prescribed by the statute, that she personally appeared before them, and being examined privily and apart from her husband, and having the deed fully explained to her, she acknowledged the same to be her act and deed, and declared that she had willingly signed, sealed and delivered the same, and wished not to retract it. In a suit in equity afterwards brought to foreclose the mortgage, it is contended that the deed is void as to the wife, for want of such explanation of its nature as the statute requires ; and the depositions of the justices are taken to prove the fact that the deed was not fully explained to the wife, Held : As the privy examination, acknowledgement and declaration of the wife are certified to by the justices pursuant to the direction of the statute, the deed is effectual to pass all her right.” See upon this subject the opinion of Tucker, Judge, who delivered the opinion of the Court in the case.
But if such evidence were legal in any case, the evidence in this case does not prove that said deeds of trust were not fully explained to said Mary A. at the time she acknowledged the same. Upon the whole it seems to me quite clear that the said Mary A. has charged the corpus of her said separate estate by each of the said two deeds of trust, given to secure the said two debts of the said Weinberg. For the foregoing reasons the appellant’s
It seems to me, after a careful examination and consideration of this whole cause, that there is no error in the said decree of the municipal court of the said city of Wheeling, rendered in this cause on the- 26th day of June, 1878. The said decree must therefore be affirmed and the appellant, Frederick Nolte, must pay to the ap-pellee, Selig Weinberg, his costs about his defense of the appeal and supersedeas in this cause in this court expended, and $30.00 damages.
Decree Affirmed.