Baugh & Sons Co. v. Black

90 S.E. 607, 120 Va. 12, 1916 Va. LEXIS 154
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 16, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 90 S.E. 607 (Baugh & Sons Co. v. Black) 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
Baugh & Sons Co. v. Black, 90 S.E. 607, 120 Va. 12, 1916 Va. LEXIS 154 (Va. 1916).

Opinions

Kelly, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This suit was brought by trustees hereinafter named to obtain the decision and direction of the court upon the relative rights of sundry' parties claiming liens upon certain real estate held by them.

On the first day of July, 1908, J. T. Black, J. Lacy Black and Patsy C. Black, his wife, executed a deed of trust to [14]*14secure Andrew Bowling in the sum of $20,000. This sum was evidenced by five bonds made and signed in the common form of joint obligations by J. T. Black and J. Lacy Black. The deed of trust embraced about 300 acres belonging to J. T. Black and about 127 acres belonging to J. Lacy Black and wife, and contained the following provisions material to the present controversy:

“In distributing the purchase money the trustee shall pay: (1) The cost of executing this trust. (2) Any unpaid taxes on the lands. (3) The amount of said debt; and the residue of the purchase money he will pay over to the said parties of the first and second parts as their interest in the said lands and the price derived for the same may entitle them.

“In enforcing said deed, said trustee will sell first the lands conveyed by said J. T. Black, and if a sufficient amount is derived to pay the debt and costs, will not make further sale under this deed.”

In May, 1909, J. T. Black sold 157 acres of his land embraced in the deed of trust, and realized thereon $11,790, out of which he paid, before maturity, one-half of the Bowling debt, applying the residue of the purchase money to his own use. This was done by and with the consent of Andrew Bowling and J. Lacy Black.

On the 20th of August, 1912, J. Lacy Black and wife executed a second deed of trust on their 127 acres above mentioned, to secure Andrew Bowling in the further sum of $7,000; and on December 17, 1914, they executed still another deed of trust on the 127 acres and on certain other real estate and personal property, to secure, first, the debts theretofore secured by prior deeds of trust, “in the order of their legal priority,” and, second, the general creditors of the grantors, among whom were the appellants here.

This suit, for advice and direction, was brought by Pratt and Kerr, trustees under the last-named trust deed. The controversy in the case arises between the general credi[15]*15tors of J. Lacy Black and wife, on the one hand, and J. T. Black, on the other — the former claiming that the balance of J. T. Black’s 300 acres included in the first deed of trust must be subjected to the satisfaction of the unpaid portion of the original Bowling debt before that debt can reach the lands of J. L. Black and wife, and J. T. Black claiming that he was primarily liable, at the most, for only one-half of the original Bowling debt, and, having paid that, his lands cannot be further subjected unless the lands of J. L. Black and wife prove insufficient to pay the other half. His original and further-reaching contention (not inconsistent, however, under the allegations in his answer and under the evidence, with his present position) that he was liable only as surety and not to any extent as principal, is not insisted upon in this court.

The cause was referred to a commissioner for a report on the properties involved and the liens thereon in the order of their priority. Pending this reference, the trustees under the last named deed of trust sold the 127 acres of land owned by J. L. Black and wife at a private sale for $20,000. This was done by consent of all parties interested, and with the approval of the court, and the proceeds were brought into the cause “to stand exactly in the same position as the lands,” and subject to exactly the same liens and equities.

It was, of course, conceded that the second Bowling deed of trust for $7,000 would, in any event, have to be satisfied from the proceeds of the 127 acres before the general creditors of J. L. Black and wife would have any valid claim thereon, and accordingly that deed of trust was paid off and discharged by the trustees pursuant to a consent decree in the cause.

The report filed by the commissioner seems to proceed upon the theory that as between J. T. and J. L. Black the former was only bound for one-half of the original Bowl[16]*16ing debt, and that if J. T. Black’s lands should be subjected for more than one-half thereof, he would be entitled to be subrogated to the rights of Bowling against J. L. Black; but the commissioner was of opinion, and so reported, that this original status of J. T. and J. L. Black would have to yield to the rights of creditors holding debts subsequently acquired against J. L. Black and wife. The report, in this respect, concludes as follows: “But assuming that the Bowling lien will be paid by the J. T. Black land, certainly until creditors of J. L. Black and wife, other than J. T. Black, under the Gordon (second) deed of trust and those secured under the Pratt and Kerr (third) deed, are all paid, J. T. Black will not have the right of subrogation against their land, and cannot come into competition with those creditors, or share in the distribution of assets realized by Pratt and Kerr, trustees.” In arriving at this conclusion, the commissioner was controlled by the clause in the first deed of trust directing that the J. T. Black land should be first sold, and, in case the same brought enough to pay the debt and costs, none of the other lands embraced therein should be sold, and by the fact that two of the general creditors introduced proof that they had examined the records and had been induced to extend credit to J. L. Black and wife by reason of that clause in the deed.

To this report J. T. Black excepted. The court sustained the exception, and its action in doing so is the subject of this appeal.

The essential portion of the very comprehensive decree entered by the court was as follows:

“Upon consideration whereof, the court doth sustain the exceptions of J. T. Black to the report of Master Commissioner Nelson as hereinafter set out; the court is of the opinion that the balance due upon the bonds dated July 1, 1908, executed by J. T. Black and J. Lacy Black to Andrew Bowling and secured by deed of trust dated July 1, 1908, [17]*17to Wm. Patrick ,trustee,, upon the lands of J. T. Black, J. Lacy Black and Patsy Black should be paid at once and Andrew Bowling is entitled to receive payment of said balance at once irrespective of the rights of J. T. Black, J. Lacy Black and Patsy Black, among themselves. And it appearing to the court that the lands of J. Lacy Black and Patsy Black have been sold by agreement of parties to this cause by Wm. Pratt and H. H. Kerr, trustees, in this cause, and that the fund derived from the sale of said lands is in the hands of the said Wm. A. Pratt and H. H. Kerr, trustees, and is ample to pay the balance due on the said Bowling debt, it is therefore adjudged, ordered and decreed that the said Wm. A. Pratt and H. H. Kerr, trustees, do forthwith pay out of the funds in their hands derived from the sale of the lands of J. Lacy Black and Patsy Black the balance due to Andrew Bowling upon the debt secured under the deed of trust dated July 1, 1908, and the court, proceeding to consider and determine the rights of J. T. Black, J. Lacy Black and Patsy Black as between themselves, is of the opinion that J. T. Black and J. Lacy Black are joint obligors in the debt of $20,000.00 evidenced by the bonds dated July 1, 1908, executed by J. T. Black and J.

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Bluebook (online)
90 S.E. 607, 120 Va. 12, 1916 Va. LEXIS 154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baugh-sons-co-v-black-va-1916.