Blue v. Poling

70 S.E. 279, 68 W. Va. 547, 1911 W. Va. LEXIS 11
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 31, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 70 S.E. 279 (Blue v. Poling) 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
Blue v. Poling, 70 S.E. 279, 68 W. Va. 547, 1911 W. Va. LEXIS 11 (W. Va. 1911).

Opinion

Milled, Judge:

This is an appeal by Curry, Bitner, Curry trustee for himself, Bitner and Felty; and the Curry and Bitner Lumber Company, a corporation.

In liis bill to enforce his lien for purchase money, reserved in a deed from himself and Hart and ivife to Poling- and Bradford, for the timber on a tract of about 2500 acres in Randolph county, the plaintiff made Poling and Bradford, the purchasers, and Hart and the appellants, except the Curry and Bitner Lumber Company, defendants; alleging therein, in substance, that subsequent to the sale and decree of- confirmation and the .conveyance of said timber to them, of October 9, 1905, the purchasers, Bradford and Poling, had sold, and by their deed of October 10, 1905, conveyed the said timber to the appellants, Curry, trustee for himself, Bitner and Felty, and who had therein and thereby assumed payment of the purchase money notes of Bradford and Poling to secure which a lien had been reserved in said conveyance of October 9, 1905. He exhibited copies of both of said deeds with the bill, and acknowledged payment of all of said purchase money, except a balance of something in excess of $5,500.00 on the last note, and prayed that the lien reserved on the timber sold might be enforced, and for general relief.

Defendants, Curry, Curry trustee for himself, Bitner and Felty, and Bitner, demurred to the bill, assigning no grounds, and their demurrer, we think, was properly overruled. They [549]*549also filed their answer and cross-bill, making Blue, special commissioner, Bradford and Poling, Felty, the Curry and Bitner Lumber Company, and William T. George, defendants therein, and for the reasons alleged, praying for certain specific relief against Hart, and especially to be relieved from the payment of the balance of the purchase money, which under the terms of the contract for the sale and purchase of said timber, between Hart and Bradford and Poling, and the decree of the court confirming the same, would be payable to Hart, or to George, his assignee, as a sum in excess of the debts of Hart, for which his land had been decreed to be sold, by Blue, special commissioner.

This cross-bill answer alleges and discloses the fact, not appearing of record or known to Blue, special commissioner, at the time he filed his bill, that the title to the timber, after it had been so acquired by Curry, trustee, for himself and others, had been by them conveyed to the Curry and Bitner Lumber Company, a corporation.

The grounds for the relief prayed for by these respondents, in their cross-bill, is, that Hart and Bradford and Poling, the latter of whom they allege were the agents of Hart, in negotiating the sale and conveyance of said timber to them, and after going with Bitner and the surveyor upon the land, and pointing-out to them the timber which Hart proposed to sell, fraudulently caused to be omitted from the survey thereof a tract of 72 acres, which was to have been included therein, and had substituted therefor three smaller tracts, on which there was practically no timber; and furthermore, that Hart had broken his contract with them, of September 22, 1905, in which, in consideration of $200.00, he had agreed to secure all rights of way for building a railroad to his land on which said timber was situated, and in which he had also agreed that if he should neglect to do so, respondents might secure the same at his expense.

Hart answered the bill of Blue, special commissioner; also the cross bill of Gurry, trustee, admitting the facts alleged in the bill of the former, but denying all of the material facts alleged in said cross bill constituting grounds for affirmative relief against him, and particularly denying the agency of Bradford and Poling; denying also all fraud and collusion, and af[550]*550firming unequivocally that Ms negotiation, with and sale of said timber to Bradford and Poling, had not been with them as his agents to sell to Curry, trustee, and others, as alleged; but that on the contrary he had sold said timber to them directly in accordance with his contract reported to and confirmed by the court; also denying liability to said cross-bill plaintiffs for failing to procure rights of way for their railway, for the reason that they had changed the route of said railway, as originally proposed, thereby excusing him; and also alleging the assignment by him, on December 20, 1906, to defendant George, for a valuable consideration, long since received, of the balance of purchase money, recoverable by Blue, special commissioner; and denying also the right of said cross bill plaintiffs' to any abatement of said purchase money, or to any relief against him.

Bradford and Poling also answered the. bill of Blue, special commissioner; and also the cross bill of Curry, trustee, and others, setting up therein matters for affirmative relief, making the plaintiffs, Curry, trustee, and others, Blue, special commissioner, and all their co-defendants, including the Curry and Bitner Lumber Company, parties defendant thereto, and alleging, in substance, that in their deed of July 10, 1905, to Curry, trustee for himself and others, they had reserved a lien for $3,444.45, with interest, balance of purchase money due them, evidenced by the two promissory notes of the said Curry, trustee for himself and Bitner, each for the sum of $1,722.22-1/2, upon their two thirds undivided interest in said timber, as shown by their deed exhibited with the bill of said Blue, the first of which notes had been paid, but that the second, subject to a credit of $500.00 paid February 19, 1908, remained unpaid; and that after allowing said credit there remained due to them on said second note, as of February 19, 1908, the sum $1480.56, for which they asked a personal decree, and if not paid that the said interests of Curry and Bitner in said timber, subject to the rights of said Blue, special commissioner, on the whole interest, might be sold to satisfy the same.

To this cross answer of Bradford and Poling, Curry and Bit-ner responded, reluctantly charging, they say, that Bradford and Poling had confederated and cooperated with their co-defendant and business partner Felty in perpetrating a fraud upon them, in purchasing the Hart timber, of such a character [551]*551that a court of equity should afford them no relief. They principally rely upon the charge that Bradford and Poling, were the agents of Hart in the sale of the timber to them, and, that the immediate conclusion of the purchase of said timber from Bradford and Poling was negotiated between them and Petty, their co-defendant, with whom it is alleged they combined and colluded to induce respondents to believe that the consideration therefor was $40,000.00, and not the actual consideration agreed upon of $27,500.00; that they had concealed the truth from respondents and had thereby enabled Pelty to obtain his one-third undivided interest therein, free from encumbrance, by the payment to them of only $833.33, except as to the lien of Blue, special commissioner; for which fraud they charge a court of equity should deny them any relief, and should deny to the defendant Hart or his assignee George any right to the $5,709.91, and paid by them in to court, on April 23, 1908, in order to prevent a sale of their timber by said Blue, special commissioner, and for which amount they pray for a decree against Bradford and Poling.

Hart and George also filed answers to the bill of Blue, special commissioner, and to the cross bill of Curry, trustee.

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Bluebook (online)
70 S.E. 279, 68 W. Va. 547, 1911 W. Va. LEXIS 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blue-v-poling-wva-1911.