Bank of Radford v. Kirby

42 S.E. 303, 100 Va. 498, 1902 Va. LEXIS 51
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 11, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 42 S.E. 303 (Bank of Radford v. Kirby) 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
Bank of Radford v. Kirby, 42 S.E. 303, 100 Va. 498, 1902 Va. LEXIS 51 (Va. 1902).

Opinion

Cardwell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The facts out of which this appeal arises are as follows: On the 1st day of January, 1895, H. S. Kirby made an assignment [499]*499by deed to J. D. Chumbley and J. A. Pratt, trustees, of all his property, both real and personal, to secure his various creditors. Among the assets conveyed was a debt against one L. T. Jennings for the sum of $6,500, evidenced by eight notes, dated August 14, 1894; the first seven of the notes being for the sum of $800 each, and the last for $900, and all bearing interest from the 1st day of September, 1894, and being for a part of the purchase money for a tract of land conveyed by the said H. S. Kirby and wife to Jennings. This tract consisted of 605 acres, but to secure the payment of the aforesaid notes a vendor’s lien was retained by Kirby on only 100 acres of the tract, Kirby covenanting in the deed to look only to the vendor’s lien retained upon the 100 acres for the payment of the sum of $6,500, evidenced by the said notes.

Among the debts for which H. S'. Kirby made provision in his assignment to Chumbley and Pratt, trustees, was a debt due to the Bank of Radford for the sum of $1,700, evidenced by a note, and the sum of $1,500, evidenced by another note, which had 'been renewed but was not yet due. Elizabeth Kirby, the mother of U. S. Kirby, was one of the endorsers on these two notes, and some other notes also secured by the deed of assignment.

In March, 1895, after the bank had brought suit on the $1,700 note against H. S. Kirby as maker, and Elizabeth Kirby and others as endorsers, Elizabeth Kirby concluded that she would take an assignment of the property which H. S. Kirby had conveyed to Chumbley and Pratt, trustees, for the benefit of his creditors, and make herself responsible for the debts thereby secured. The object she had in view was to get time within which to meet the debts for which she was bound as endorser, and protect her own property against liability therefor in ease the trust property should prove insufficient to pay them.

To effect this arrangement, ultimately agreed to by the ■creditors thereby secured, including the Bank of Radford, H. S. [500]*500Kirby and wife, Obumbley and Pratt, trustees, and all of the creditors provided for -in the trust deed, joined in a deed to her (which is spoken of in this record as a “composition deed”) conveying all of the trust property, and she, by the same deed, created a charge upon 600 acres of her own. land as security for the payment of the debts of the creditors of PI. S. Kirby, provided for in his deed to Ohumbley and Pratt, trustees, with interest on these debts from March 1, 1895.

In this deed, the debt of the Bank of Badford, evidenced by the two notes, the one for $1,700, and the other for $1,500, is • provided for, and stated to be $3,250, with interest .from March 1, 1895, the difference being on account of accrued interest on the $1,700 note and costs in the suit brought thereon previously. By this deed Elizabeth Kirby covenanted and bound herself to take the property conveyed to her in trust for the payment of the debts mentioned therein, and to sell, collect and apply the proceeds therefrom to that purpose alone.

About the time, or shortly before, the “composition deed” of March 5, 1895, was executed, Elizabeth Kirby applied to the-Bank of Badford, through a friend, as her agent, to find out whether, in the event she perfected the arrangement then contemplated, it would buy from her the Jennings debt, and the bank at that time stated that it did not desire such paper; but, after some delay and insistanee on the part of Mrs. Kirby’s agent, it finally agreed to purchase the debt, and made her a tentative offer therefor which was thereafter to be more accurately stated. Some days afterwards the sale and transfer of the Jennings debt by Mrs. Kirby to the Bank of Badford was effected. Up to this time Jennings had not executed the bonds, but they were then executed by Jennings to H. SL Kirby, and Mrs. Kirby endorsed her name in blank upon each of them, and delivered them to the bank, the bank agreeing to pay her the sum of $5,090.13, and she to execute, acknowledge and have admitted to record a deed of trust to one B. L. Gardner, trustee.. [501]*501reciting the fact that she had sold, transferred and assigned the Jennings bonds to the bank for value received; and, as the vendor’s lien retained on only 100 acres of the Jennings land was deemed insufficient security for their payment, she conveyed a tract of 200 acres of land in trust as further security for the payment of the said bonds, and to secure their prompt payment to the bank at maturity, and for no other purpose, providing, that if Jennings should make default in the payment of either of the bonds, she was to have 120 days’ notice of such default before the trustee (Gardner) was authorized to proceed to sell the land thereby conveyed. This deed to Gardner, trustee, was duly executed by Mrs. Kirby, and admitted to record.

In making this sale of the Jennings debt to the bank, it was agreed between Mrs. Kirby and the bank that the debt payable to the bank above mentioned, which Mrs. Kirby had assumed, and for the payment of which she had provided in the “composition deed,” should be allowed as part of the purchase price of the Jennings debt, and the balance of the purchase price placed to the credit of Mrs. Kirby at the bank, which was done; and that balance was shortly thereafter drawn out by her.

When the first of the series of the Jennings bonds became due and payable, Jennings failing to pay the same, the bank brought an action at law thereon against him and recovered the amount thereof; and when the second of the series became due and payable, and Jennings failed to pay, the bank brought suit in equity to enforce the vendor’s lien retained on the 100 acres of the Jennings land. To this suit Mrs. Kirby was made a party, and she filed her answer to the bill, practically admitting the bank’s ownership of the Jennings bonds, and its right to have the 100 acres of land subjected to the payment thereof. Under the decree of sale in that suit Mrs. Kirby became the purchaser of the 100 acres of land, at the price of $2,000, and paid the purchase money to the commissioner of the court, and by the same decree which confirmed the sale and directed a conveyance [502]*502to her, it was decreed that the commissioner pay the costs of the suit ont of the purchase money, and then pay off the Jennings bond for $800, with interest, which fell due September 1, 1896, and the bond for $800 and interest due September 1, 1897.

At the next term of the court, in March, 1898, the commissioner having made his report, a final decree was entered in the cause, stating: “It appearing to the court from said report .that ■after the payment of costs there remained the net sum of $1,880.78 to be applied to the payment of the Jennings bonds; that said net sum was sufficient to pay off the bond, with its accrued interest, which became due September 1, 1896, and leaves a net balance of $927.98, to be credited on the bond due September 1,1897, as of November 5, 1897; and that the commissioner so applied the said sum, showing a balance due on the latter bond of only $21.82, as of November 6, 1897; and there being no exceptions to said report, the same is confirmed, and all the purposes of this suit having been accomplished, the same is stricken from the docket.”

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Bluebook (online)
42 S.E. 303, 100 Va. 498, 1902 Va. LEXIS 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bank-of-radford-v-kirby-va-1902.