Arnold v. Coburn

9 S.E. 21, 32 W. Va. 272, 1889 W. Va. LEXIS 71
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 25, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 9 S.E. 21 (Arnold v. Coburn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arnold v. Coburn, 9 S.E. 21, 32 W. Va. 272, 1889 W. Va. LEXIS 71 (W. Va. 1889).

Opinion

Snyder, President :

' In November, 1885, Jesse W. Arnold filed his bill in the circuit court of Barbour county against M. W. Coburn, in which he avers, that in consideration of love and affection for his daughter, the wife of said Coburn, and $3,000.00 to be paid in three equal annual payments with interest from date, he did on November 2, 1874,. sell and convey to said Coburn a valuable tract of land lying in said county, containing 233 acres, and that he retained a vendor’s lien in the deed for said $3,000.00; that the plaintiff is still the owner of two of said bonds of $1,000.00 each, no part of which has been paid, and prays that his vendor’s lien may be enforced by a'sale of said land.

In March, 1886, the defendant filed his answer, admitting the allegations of the bill in all respects except as to the nonpayment of said purchase-money. In regard' to this he avers, that he and the plaintiff had by written agreement submitted all matters in difference between them, including two of the three bonds given for the said land, to three arbitrators, and that said arbitrators made their award, by.which they determined, that the said two land-bonds had been reduced by payments and sets-off to $1,111.43 with interest from August 1, 1885, and that this was all that remained due on said two land-bonds.

In October, 1886, James Pickens on his own petition was made a defendant in the cause. It is shown by the petition of' said Pickens, that in January, 1885, he had become the owner by assignment of the third of said land-bonds, upon which he had in March, 1886, obtained a judgment in said court for $1,649.80 against the defendant Coburn, and he [274]*274prays, that he may he decreed to have the first lien on said 288 acres of land etc.'

In March, 1887, the defendant Coburn asked leave to withdraw his answer, whereupon Franklin Maxwell, a creditor of Coburn but not a party to the suit, objected to such withdrawal of said answer; and the court permitted Coburn to withdraw his answer upon 'his leaving in the cause attested copies of the same and the exhibits filed therewith. Subsequently the plaintiff filed an amended bill, in which he admits, that James Pickens had become the owner of one of said land-bonds, and avers, that said Pickens had since died, and 'that John D. and Dever Pickens had qualified as his executors. He further avers, that, after said 233 acres of land had been conveyed to the defendant Coburn, he, the said Coburn, by deed dated September 7, 1878, in which deed the plaintiff' united as a grantor, conveyed the said 233 acres and a number of other tracts of land to James E. Hall, trustee, to secure a'debt of $0,600.00 to John D. Pickens, but that a large part of said debt had been paid by the sale of other lands of the said Coburn ;"that by another deed dated'December-21, 1885, the said Coburn conveyed said 233 acres with other-lands to James Pickens and A. G.. Dayton, trustees, to secure the payment of $3,000.00 to Dever' Pickens; and that by another deed dated December 25, the said Coburn conveyed all of,said lands to• Thomas A'. Bradford, trustee, to secure a large number of debts due from him to other creditors, among which' is- a debt of $5,000.00 to Franklin Maxwell. ■ -

To this bill the said James E. Hall, trustee, James D.' and Dever Pickens in their- own rights and as executors of James Pickens, deceased, A. G. Dayton, trustee, Thomas A, Bradford, trustee, and Franklin Maxwell are made defendants, and its-prayer- is for the same relief as that asked in the original bill.

The defendant, Maxwell, filed-'his answer to -this bill and made part ther'eof - the answer of Coburn and the ' exhibits therewith to the original bill, -which after having been filed had been withdrawn -as aforesaid; and he averred, that the withdrawal of said answer was' by’ collusion between the plaintiff and said Coburn, the latter being the son-in-law of [275]*275the former, and for the purpose of defrauding this defendant, and other creditors of the said Coburn; that the aforesaid award and settlement between the plaintiff and said Coburn was valid and binding; and.that the $1,111.43 found by said award is the true balance due from Coburn to the plaintiff on the two land-bonds held by him.

After this answer of Maxwell had been filed the plaintiff amended his bill alleging, that said pretended award between him and Coburn was illegal, fraudulent and void and stating in detail the grounds, which rendered it invalid.

Depositions were taken by both the plaintiff and defendant, Maxwell, in respect to said arbitration and award, and said, depositions fully and distinctly prove, that said award was invalid, .both upon the ground that it was obtained by the fraud of said Coburn and upon mistake of the arbitrators in the application of the law to the facts, when they intended to decide according to' the law. Mathews v. Miller, 25 W. Va. 817. On November 2, 1887, the court .entered a decree against Coburn in favor of the executors of James Pickens for $1,755.03, being the amount of the judgment recovered on one of the purehase-money-bonds for the aforesaid 233 acres of land, and in favor of the plaintiff for $3,560.00 being the amount of the other two bonds for said land, andforboth of which sums a ven dor’s lien existed on said 233 acres of land, and in default of the payment of said sums within thirty days the decree directed the sale of said land to pay the same, etc.

From this decree the defendant Maxwell has appealed.

It is contended for the appellant, that the plaintiff’s bill is' demurrable, because the creditors secured in the three trust-deeds referred to in the bill are not all made parties. This Court has repeatedly decided, that in a suit to enforce a vendor’s lien it is not error to decree a sale of the land, on which such, lien exists, before ascertaining the amounts of other liens on the land and their priorities, because in such suit the doctrine, which requires all the lienors in an -ordinary creditors’ suit to be made parties, does not apply. Cunningham v. Hedrick, 23 W. Va. 579; Neeley v. Ruleys, 26 W. Va. 686. This is conceded to be the law of this State by counsel for the appellant, but it is insisted, that this is' not a suit for the sole purpose of enforcing a vendor’s lien, and [276]*276therefore the rule applicable to such suits does not apply to this suit.

It seems to me,-this Is purely a suit to enforce a vendor’s lien, and that it was so treated and considered by the Circuit Court. The trust-deeds on the 238 acres are all subsequent in date and subject to the vendor’s lien ; the rights of the creditors secured therein were all inferior to the said lien' at the time they became creditors. It was necessary,- or at least proper, to make the trustees in these trust-deeds parties, in order that a sale might devest the title, which they held, and confer upon the purchaser a clear title. This was done in this cause, and it was all that ought to be required in such cases. I do not - think, the facts in this cause differ essentially from the facts in the two cases above decided, in which this Court held, it was not necessary to make the other leinors parties or to ascertain the amounts and priorities of their debts. The relief prayed in the bill and granted in- the decree relates wholly to the vendor’s lien, and-in no manner adjudges or prejudices the rights of the trust-creditors.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
9 S.E. 21, 32 W. Va. 272, 1889 W. Va. LEXIS 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arnold-v-coburn-wva-1889.