Armentrout's Ex'ors v. Gibbons

30 Gratt. 632
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 15, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 30 Gratt. 632 (Armentrout's Ex'ors v. Gibbons) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Armentrout's Ex'ors v. Gibbons, 30 Gratt. 632 (Va. 1878).

Opinion

MONCURE, P.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

In January, 1871, Abel Gibbons exhibited his bill in chancery in the county court’of Rockingham county, charging, among other things, “that on the 4th day of April, 1860, James M. Loffland and H. M. Loffland sold and conveyed by deed of general warranty, and John C. Woodson, trustee, conveyed by deed of special warranty, to David Armentrout, 488 acres, 2 roods and 4 poles of land lying in the .county of Rockingham, in consideration of $23,500, of which $7,833.33^ was paid in hand, and the balance to be paid as follows, to-wit: $2,000 annually on the 1st day of April, 1861, 1862, 1863, 1864, 1865, 1866, 1867, and $1,666.66^ on the 1st day of April, 1868, for which deferred payments the said David Armentrout executed his bonds to Henry M. Loffland, and to secure the deferred payments a lien was expressly reserved in the deed conveying the said land;” that on the-day of -, in the year'186-, (in August, 1867,) the said David Armentrout died, leaving a will whereby he appointed B. F. Armentrout [215]*215and H. B. Armentrout his executors, who proved the will, a copy oí which was filed with the bill; that two of said bonds of $2,000 each, to-wit: one falling due April 1st, 1866, and one falling due April 1st, 1867, have been transferred to complainant; that there yet remain unpaid and due upon said *bonds the following amounts, to-wit: on the bond which became due on the 1st day of April, 1866, the sum of $828.51, with interest thereon from the 17th day of March, 1870, and on the bond which became due on the 1st day of April, 1867, the sum of $2,000, with interest thereon from the 1st day of July, 1870; that the personal estate of said David Armentrou! has been exhausted, and is insufficient to pay said debt due to complainant, who by reason of the lien retained in said deed, has a right to have it paid out of the proceeds of the sale of said land, lie therefore prays that, the widow, executors and devisees of said David Armentrout, be made defendants to said bill; that so much of said land as might be necessary should be sold for the payment of said debt, and for general relief.

Besides a copy of said will there were filed with said bill as Exhibit C, the said two bonds which were transferred to complainant, on each of which is endorsed an assignment in these words: “I assign the within to C. E. Kirtley, December 11th, I860. H. M. Foffland.” On the bond due in 1866 is also endorsed an assignment in these words: “For value received I assign the within to Abel Gibbons, April 18, 1861. C. F. Kirtley, pr. Alfred Welsh, agt.” And credits in these words: “Credits received April 16, 1866, by order on Joseph Andrew for sixty dollars. $100: Paid on within one hundred dollars, October 6, 1866. $100: Paid on within one hundred dollars, February 18, 1867. Credit, July 15, 1867, by $900. Credit by cash one hundred anti one dollars and thirty-six cents, April 1st, 1869. Credit as of July 1st, 1869, by $14.81 interest. Credit March 17, 1870, by $200, paid by B. F. Armentrout.” And on the bond due in 1867 is also endorsed an assignment in these words. “November 26, 1865. I assign the within note to Abel Gibbons, for value received. C. E. Kirtley, per Alfred Welsh.” And credits in these words: “Cr. by *cash one hundred and twenty dollars, April, 1869. By one year’s interest April 1st, 1868. Cr. by one hundred dollars July 30, 1870. Cr., Sept. 19, ’70, by $20.”

In July, 1872, on motion of the defendants. B. F. Armentrout, II. B. Armentrout and A. D. Armentrout, leave was given them to file their answers to said bill, which was accordingly clone, to which answers the replied generally.

In the joint answer of B. F. Armentrout and H. B. Armentrout, in their own right and as executors of David Armentrout, they say in substance, among other things, that they admit the truth of the allegations of the bill in regard to the conveyance of the said land to the said David Armentrout for the price payable as aforesaid, for which a lien was reserved in the deed, and in regard to his death and will and appointment of executors and their qualification. They say they believe his personal estate is sufficient to pay all his debts; “that said bonds of $2,000 each, falling due the 1st of April, 1866 and 1867, were assigned by H. M. Foffland to C. E. Kirtley, December 11, 1860, as was also the bond for $1,666.6644, falling due April 1st, 1868, as will appear from the endorsements on said bonds; and the endorsements show that the said two bonds were assigned to the complainant — the first on the 18th of April, 1861, the other on the 26th November, 1865 — ■ but whether these endorsements are correct or not, respondents do not know or admit, and call for proof thereof. The bond for $1,666.6644 was paid by respondent, B. F. Armentrout, as executor of David Armentrout, to C. F. Kirtley, the holder thereof, in different payments, the last of which was made on the 12th of May, 1869, as will appear from the bond and endorsements thereon, marked X, and filed with said answer. The bonds of $2,000 each, falling due in April, 1861, 1862, 1863, and 1864, were all paid by David Armentrout in his lifetime, and he made *some payments on the bonds falling due in 1865 and 1866. The bond falling due in 1865 was assigned to Z. Shirley and lost during the war, and since the war, as respondents believe, the said David Armentrout, at the instance of said Shirley, executed a new bond, being a duplicate of the original, in order that he might have evidence of the debt, but without any purpose of changing the debt or in any way affecting the rights or responsibilities of the parties, which bond is now held by said Shirley. It is true that a lien was reserved in the deed to said David Armentrout to secure the payment of all the bonds mentioned, and there could have been no difficulty in the payment of any of said bonds but for the fact that within the last few months one T. D. Collins has instituted a suit in this court, on the chancery side thereof, claiming that he held a prior lien on the said land for the sum of $1,204.93)4; with interest thereon from the 26th day of August, 1861, due by the bond of said H. M. and J. M. Foffland, executed to Mary K. Foffland, for the same land, and assigned to said Collins, which bond purports to be executed on the 26th day of August, 1856, and to be secured by a lien in the deed from Mary K. to H. M. and J. M. Foffland of the same date, all of which will fully appear from the record of said suit;” of which a copy is made a part of said answer. “Respondents do not admit that said debt of $1,204.93)4 and interest is a lien upon said land sold to David Armentrout but if it is (as seems most likely at present), they claim that the amount thereof must be deducted from the bonds of $2,000 now held by complainant and Z. Shirley, as the said David Armentrout in his lifetime, and respondents since his death, have paid all the residue . of the purchase money for said tract of land, without any knowledge or intimation of the lien of said Collins or any other lien thereon, the evidence of which was lost by the burning of the records *in 1864, and only accidentally discovered by complainant about the 1st of [216]*216January, 1871.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 Gratt. 632, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/armentrouts-exors-v-gibbons-va-1878.