Barbour v. Duncanson's Adm'r

77 Va. 76, 1883 Va. LEXIS 38
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 25, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 77 Va. 76 (Barbour v. Duncanson's Adm'r) 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
Barbour v. Duncanson's Adm'r, 77 Va. 76, 1883 Va. LEXIS 38 (Va. 1883).

Opinion

Lacy, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This case is before this court upon a rehearing, and is an appeal from a judgment of the circuit court of Fauquier county, rendered on the 19th day of April, 1880, in a suit brought in the name of William Duncanson for the benefit of J. J. Halsey against John S. Barbour, at May rules, 1868, of Culpeper circuit court, to recover of said Barbour the amount of a bond executed by said Barbour on the first .day of January, 1858, for $1,118.60, due the first day of November, 1860, with interest from the first day of November, 185V.

The case as disclosed by the record is as follows:

On the lVth of October, 1858, Duncanson transferred this bond to Jeremiah Morton, to be held by said Morton as collateral security for a debt due by Duncanson to Morton, for the purchase of a tract of land, named in the record “Bushy Park,” at $3,025, and $60 due for guano, evidenced by the two bonds of the said Duncanson, dated November 2, 185V, each for the sum of $1,542.50, and payable respectively December 1st, 1858, and December 1st, 1859.

In December, 1860, Morton notified Barbour that this bond of Barbour to Duncanson for $1,118.60 had been assigned to him, the said Morton. This bond had fallen due November 1st, 1860. Barbour at once replied by letter, which is in the record, filed and relied on by the appellee, in which letter he says: [78]*78“The bond referred to (in your favor) is the last one on my purchase of land from Mr. Duncanson, and cannot be paid until the land has been freed from all incumbrance and deed made pursuant to contract.”

This letter is largely relied on by appellee to show that no part of this bond, the subject of this suit had been paid. Barbour says further, “There have been several judgments against Duncanson binding this land, some of which I have paid,” and after reference to other liens on the land says: “There was also a deed of trust upon which I had to pay. Of course I must take care of myself in these matters before 1 can assume to pay you or any assignee of Duncanson.” This was strange language to be used by Barbour to Morton, who held his bond of $1,118.60, then due and payable upon its face, if, as the circuit court of Fauquier has decided in this case, every dollar of that bond was due and unpaid at that time. That was in December, 1860, Duncanson was not dead then—Morton was living, and both bonds for the purchase of Bushy Park had then fallen due ; all the liens of every sort upon the lands purchased by Barbour of Duncanson, were of record in the cleric’s office of Culpeper county, whether these liens were docketed judgments or trust deeds. If the cirouit court is right in its judgment in this case, this letter must have been startling to Morton, and it is not a violent presumption, that Morton went with this letter without unnecessary delay to Duncanson, his debtor. If the bond in dispute was entirely unpaid, Duncanson must have been indignant. It represented to Duncanson, a large sum of money, which stood between him and destitution, if it was wholly due and unpaid. Under those circumstances there was a strong motive to impel Duncanson to action, and one equally strong to move Morton to action. We would expect to find suit commenced' without delay—the courts were not closed—but what do we find from the record ?

This refusal of Barbour to acknowledge one dollar of indebtedness under this bond did not cause any suit against him. [79]*79Morton pocketed his hond and his disappointment as well. Duncanson, with a trust deed upon his home, said nothing, did nothing, although if Barbour’s statement was untrue, and the whole bond was due, there was nothing easier than to prove it. Yet nothing is said or done until in the month of May, 1866. Many years after Morton addressed a letter to Barbour, in which he says: I have assigned your bond to J. J. Halsey, and filed a copy of my receipt to you when you endorsed my note to Riggs & Oo. for four hundred dollars. My note will fall due on the 9 th and 12th of July, and as I am to make provision for any deficiency which may be—if on a settlement it should turn out that judgments, &c., liens on the land of Duncanson—when you executed said bond, and as I have no money, should have to struggle hard to find any, I hope you will at the earliest day notify Mr. Halsey when you will be prepared to adjust the said matter, with the kindest feelings to you I hope, as I think you are mistaken, and Duncanson is correct. At all events let us ascertain it as soon as possible,” &c. How if Duncanson and Barbour differed as widely as the ax^pellee insists, this was a singular and remarkable indulgence on the part of these creditors toward so stubborn a debtor as Barbour seems to have been. In 1860 he says he will not acknowledge a dollar of responsibility on this bond until the liens are all cleared away from the purchased land; and although nearly six years after he still stands to his assertion, and will not even lend or advance a dollar on this debt until Morton has bound himself in writing to refund if the bond shall turn out to be more than paid. Ho steps are taken by Morton or Duncanson even at this time; and it would seem that the destruction of all the evidences of debt growing out of the four years of war, together with their own consciousness of waning life, would have admonished them that if the wide difference which divided their position from Bar-hour’s was ever to be settled, nothing could be gained by delay. Ho suit is brought on this bond until May, 1868, nearly eight years after Barbour had put them to their proofs by his letter [80]*80of 1860. In the meantime Barbour’s private papers had been rifled and destroyed by the public enemy, and he would be put to inconvenience and perhaps he confronted with insurmountable difficulties in showing his payments. Forthwith, however, in June, 1868, we find Barbour pleading in the case, and pleading substantially as he had written in 1860, that the bond had been paid in various ways and various forms of payment, and as the suit progressed offering evidences of payments on account of Duncanson, which more than paid the bond sued on. And possibly in this fact we may find some explanation of the very singular history of the progress of this' case as disclosed by the record. The suit was brought May, 1868—issue was made in June, 1868. The next step was in 1871, when it was sent to the county court of Oulpeper. Why was nothing done with it from 1868 to 1871? In 1872 Duncanson died. Hi's mouth was closed by death. Barbour’s mouth was then closed also. Upon the main question, how much had he paid on account of this debt to Duncanson? In 1873 the case is sent back to the circuit court. In 1874 it is transferred to the circuit court of Fauquier, and there it slept until 1877. An auditor was appointed in 1877. His first report was made in April, 1878— his second report December, 1878'—and his third report 1879.

Why was this delay ? Duncanson could have explained the true state of the bond to Morton, and doubtless did so in 1860, when Barbour first refused its payment. What was that explanation? We are left to conjecture. But can it he fairly presumed, under these circumstances, that the explanation of Duncanson to Morton was to this effect: “Hot one dollar of that bond has been paid, and not one dollar is necessary to he used to pay judgment liens or trust deeds on my land sold to Barbour.

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Bluebook (online)
77 Va. 76, 1883 Va. LEXIS 38, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barbour-v-duncansons-admr-va-1883.