Borst v. Nalle

28 Gratt. 423
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 15, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 28 Gratt. 423 (Borst v. Nalle) 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
Borst v. Nalle, 28 Gratt. 423 (Va. 1877).

Opinion

Burks, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

In November i860, the appellee, ThomasNalle, recovered a judgment in the county court of Culpeper against William B. Ross and James A. Beckham, his surety, and caused the same to be docketed in said county court on the 3rd day of November, 1865. At the date of the judgment, Beck-ham was seized of several tracts of land in the county of Culpeper, which he conveyed to John Minor Botts and Franklin '^Stearns by deed dated the 10th day of _ December, 1862, and admitted to record in the clerk’s office of said county court on the llth day of December, 1862.

Between the date of the judgment and the date of docketing thereof, John C. Tliom and William A. Thom, as the executors of Lucy Lewis Taylor, by deed conveyed to the said William B. Ross, a tract of land in said county called “Berry Hill,” which by the will of their testatrix they were empowered to sell; and Ross and wife thereupon conveyed the same to the appellant Peter B. Borst; both of which deeds were afterwards admitted to record in the county court aforesaid.

Nalle filed his original bill in the circuit court of Culpeper against Ross, Sternes, and the heirs of John Minor Botts (the latter being dead), to subject to the lien of his judgment the lands conveyed as aforesaid by Beckham to Botts and Stearns, alleging in the bill, among other things’, that Ross was insolvent. Some of the heirs of Botts answered the bill; and denying that the judgment of the complainant constituted any lien on the lands purchased of Beckham, and .averring that the “Berry Hill” estate conveyed by Ross to Borst, if there was any lien at all, was first liable to the satisfaction of the judgment, prayed that the complainant might be required to proceed against that estate, “as the lands of the principal debtor, and as the lands last aliened.”

Thereupon, Nalle filed his amended and supplemental bill against the parties defendant to the original bill (except Ross who had died), and against the personal representative and heirs of Ross, the heirs of Beckham and against Borst, seeking to subject to the satisfaction of his judgment the “Berry Hill” tract of land owned by Borst, and charging that it was primarily liable for the payment of said judgment. *Borst answered the bill, denying that the judgment was any lien on the “Berry Hill” tract; first, because, as he averred, the judgment was not docketed within the time prescribed by law; and second, because, as he further averred, Ross was never so seized of said land as to make it subject to the lien of the judgment. As to this second ground of objection, he. stated in substance, that the executors of Mrs. Taylor were empowered by the will of their testatrix to make sale of her real estate, of which “Berry Hill” was a part; that they employed the said William B. Ross as their agent to make sale of “Berry Hill” at a price of not less than $135,000 in Confederate currency; that Ross, as such agent, did make the. sale to him (Borst); that he (Borst) paid the purchase money to one of the executors, and after [141]*141the payment was completed, that a deed of conveyance of the land from the executors to Ross, which had been theretofore prepared, signed and acknowledged, was then delivered to Ross, and at the same time a deed of conveyance of the same land from Ross was delivered to him (Borst) — the delivery of the two deeds being contemporaneous acts — and both deeds were admitted to record at the same time; and that in the whole transaction, Ross asserted no claim to the land, acted merely as the agent of the executors, and never in fact at any time had any beneficial interest whatever in the land.

These statements of the answer were fully proved by the deposition of John C. Thom (one of the executors of Mrs. Taylor, and a grantor in the deed to Ross), and Borst gave his own deposition to the same effect. No other depositions were taken in the case. Exceptions were filed to the depositions on the ground of the alleged incompetency of the witnesses, and the illegality *of parol evidence to establish the facts sought to be proved thereby.

.At the hearing of the cause, the court sustained the exceptions taken to the incompetency of the witnesses, held the land of Borst to be. primarily, and the land of Botts and Stearns to be secondarily liable to the Hen of the complainant’s judgment, and ordered an account to be taken of the fee simple and annual value of Borst’s land and of the liens thereon, including the lien of the complainant’s judgment. Erom this decree, an appeal was applied for by Borst, and allowed by one of the judges of this court.

It is objected, in the first place, by the appellant Borst. that even if Ross were the beneficial owner of the “Berry Hill” tract of land at the time he conveyed it to the appellant, still it was not bound by the judgment, because it was not docketed before the conveyance to him and within the time prescribed by law. The same objection is urged by the appellees owning the land purchased of Beckham.

This objection, we had supposed, was fully answered by the decision in Hill v. Rixey & als., 26 Gratt. 72, made by this court since an appeal was allowed in this case.

Notwithstanding that decision, however, learned counsel still insist, that the docketing of a judgment under § 8, ch. 186, Code of 1860. is not within the operation of the act passed March 3 4, 1862, entitled “an act to extend the time for the exercise of certain civil rights and remedies:” (acts of 3861-62, ch. 81, p. 99) or of the act with the like title passed March 2, 1866, (acts of 3863-66, p. 191, Code of 1873. ch. 3 46, §§ 6, 7, pp. 998-99): that the docketing of a judgment as required by the Code is not “an act to be. done to preserve or prevent the loss of a civil right *or remedy” within the meaning of those terms as employed in the aforesaid acts of 3 862 and 1866; and therefore that Nalle, having failed to docket his judgment within the time prescribed by the statute, and conveyances having beei made to the purchasers of the lands and admitted to record long before the docketing, the judgment constituted no lien on the lands conveyed.

Let us inquire for a moment into the origin, nature, and extent of the judgment Hen. At common law, lands of the debtor could not be taken to satisfy his debts, except judgments due to the king, and judgments therefore did not operate as liens on land. But by the statute of Westm. 2, 13 ' Edw. 3, ch. 18, substantially adopted in this I state, (1 R. Code, ch. 134, § 1, pp. 524, 525, 526, 527), a new execution was provided, the writ of elegit, by which a moiety of the lands of the debtor could be subjected to the satisfaction of the judgment.

The statute, however, did not in express terms give a lien on the land. It provided for j the writ, and prescribed the form of it. j By its terms, the officer was required to j deliver to the creditor all the goads and j chattels of the debtor, saving the oxen and beasts of his plough, and also a moiety of all his lauds and tenements whereof the debtor at the day of obtaining his judgment was seized, or at any time afterwards, by reasonable price and extent, to have and to hold the said goods and chattels to the creditor as his own proper goods and chattels, and the said moiety as his freehold, to him and his assigns, until thereof the judgment be satisfied, (“until he shall have levied thereof the debt and damages aforesaid).”

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Bluebook (online)
28 Gratt. 423, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/borst-v-nalle-va-1877.