44 W. Va. 492 | W. Va. | 1898
R. J. Taylor was the owner of a house and lot situated in Upper Hinton, which was unincumbered; and on the 18th day of January, 1895, he borrowed from the Baltimore Building & Loan Association, of Baltimore (a corporation), the sum of five hundred and fifty dollars, and executed to George D. Haynes, trustee, a deed of trust to secure the payment of said loan, which was evidenced by the bond of said R. J. Taylor and Anna J. Taylor, his wife, bearing even date with said deed, which sum was to be paid in monthly installments, in accordance with the conditions of said bond and the covenants and stipulations of said deed, in eighty-four monthly payments, including the interest thereon. On March 14, 1895, L. Wise’s Sons recovered judgment against R. J. Taylor for one hundred and seventeen dollars, before a j ustice, and had it docketed, andón June 5, 1895,'brought a chancery suit against said R. J. Taylor and others to subject the real estate of said Taylor to the payment of their judgment lien; making said Building and Loan Association and said George D.Haynes, trustee, parties thereto. The cause was referred to a commissioner, who ascertained and reported the liens upon said real estate, and their priorities. Said Building and Loan Association demurred to the plaintiff’s bill, and answered, admitting the allegations of the bill as to the execution of the deed of trust by R. J. Taylor and Anna J. Taylor, his wife, to George D. Haynes, trustee, to secure said sum of five hundred and fifty dollars, as evidenced by bond dated Jan
It is claimed that the court erred, first, in sustaining the exception of plaintiffs, L. Wise’s Sons, to the commissioner’s report allowing an attorney’s fee of twenty-five dollars to it, which was reported by the commissioner in pursuance of petitioner’s contract with R. J. Taylor, and that, if the latter did not complain, L. Wise’s Sons could not. The second assignment of error claims that the
Returning to the question as to the right acquired by the plaintiffs as judgment lienors, this Court has held, in the case of Pack v. Hansbarger, 17 W. Va., 314 (third point of syllab us ), ‘ that; ‘ ‘Where statute enactments do not interfere, a judgment creditor can acquire no better right to the estate of the debtor than the debtor himself has when the judgment is recovered. He takes it subject to every liability under which the debtor held it, and subject to all the equities which exist in favor of third parties; and a court of equity will limit the lien of' the judgment to the actual interest which the debtor has in the estate.” See, also,
Reversed.