Boswell v. Lipscomb

200 S.E. 756, 172 Va. 33, 1939 Va. LEXIS 218
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 9, 1939
DocketRecord No. 1993
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 200 S.E. 756 (Boswell v. Lipscomb) 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
Boswell v. Lipscomb, 200 S.E. 756, 172 Va. 33, 1939 Va. LEXIS 218 (Va. 1939).

Opinion

Browning, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This case grows immediately out of the alleged breach of a contract or lease of rental.

The parties to the contract are W. T. Lipscomb and W. A. Willeroy, attorney for Luretta and Walter Ludlam, and W. A. Willeroy, personally. By its terms, W. T. Lipscomb agreed to plow, plant, cultivate and harvest a crop of corn on forty acres of land owned by Willeroy. The contract provided specifically for the time when the work was to be done and the manner of doing it. A general stipulation was that the work- would be performed in accordance with methods of good farming and good management, and the use of good husbandry throughout. The work was to begin on the 24th of May, 1937, and be completed by the 15th of December, 1937. It was agreed between the parties that the contract was to be regarded as an entirety, that is, if Lipscomb should at any time abandon the work before the completion thereof, he was to receive no compensation or consideration for that part of the work which he had performed.

The consideration upon the part of Willeroy, individually and as attorney, was that when the contract, as an entirety, was fully performed and discharged by Lipscomb, he would cause to be dismissed certain distress proceedings in the circuit court of New Kent -county, Virginia, [36]*36between the said Ludlams and W. T. Lipscomb, and mark satisfied a judgment which had theretofore been rendered against Lipscomb in favor of the Ludlams. It was further provided that during the period of the performance of this contract the distress proceedings should be in abeyance and remain in statu quo.

There was a companion contract between Willeroy, attorney for the Ludlams, and Clay Crenshaw, attorney for W. T. Lipscomb, J. F. Lipscomb and E. V. Lipscomb, which was entered into in pursuance of the promise of performance of the provisions of the first mentioned contract, which stipulated that the distress proceedings, referred to, depending in the circuit court of New Kent county, should be continued from time to time and remain in abeyance in all respects for the purpose of permitting the said W. T. Lipscomb to perform and execute the agreement he had entered into; but if he should fail or refuse to do so, the aforesaid litigation should proceed as though “there had been no break, interruption or continuance of the same.”

The presence of J. F. Lipscomb and E. V. Lipscomb as parties, by representation, to the second contract is accounted for by reason of the fact that they had asserted ownership in themselves of certain of the property which was involved in the distress proceedings and which had been levied upon as the property of W. T. Lipscomb.

It is here noted that J. F. Lipscomb is a son of W. T. Lipscomb, and E. V. Lipscomb is a brother. Luretta Ludlam and Walter Ludlam were persons living in Detroit, Michigan, but who owned lands in New Kent county.

W. T. Lipscomb formerly resided in King William county, Virginia, which is adjacent to New Kent. He purchased a large farm there, which was subject to heavy encumbrances. This farm was sold for debt and Lipscomb moved over into New Kent, leaving behind him lien indebtedness of some fifty,thousand dollars. He leased the farm in New Kent belonging to the Ludlams, for which he was to pay five hundred dollars per annum. He became in arrears in the payment of the rental money to the extent of four hundred [37]*37dollars. A distress warrant was issued at the instance of the Ludlams for the amount of the unpaid rent, and notice under section 6156 of the Code of Virginia was served upon W. T. Lipscomb, he having disclaimed the ownership of certain property, which was in his possession and had been for years, and had been levied upon to satisfy the rent claim.

Let us be mindful of the fact that no liens'of any sort against W. T. Lipscomb were recorded in the county of New Kent; therefore persons dealing with him in that county had no constructive notice of the existence of any such liens and no actual notice of them on the part of Willeroy and the Ludlams is charged. This is particularly mentioned because the alleged ownership of the property by J. F. and E. V. Lipscomb was based upon a chattel mortgage, executed in 1930 by W. T. Lipscomb against certain of the property, and a judgment for the unpaid portion of the debt secured by the mortgage of which J. F. Lipscomb was the assignee, and to show lack of ownership in W. T. Lipscomb there was filed a bill of sale as to certain of the property in favor of E. F. Lipscomb. The mortgage was recorded in the county of King William. It does not appear that the judgment was docketed anywhere, or that the bill of sale was recorded at all. The foundation of these claims of ownership is not, however, in our opinion, of major importance, in the consideration of the case, because the court withdrew the issue of ownership from the consideration of the jury in the subsequent proceeding, holding and deciding that the property was liable to the levy. The jury confined its verdict to a single issue which was the breaching of the contract, although another issue, based on the charge that W. T. Lipscomb had taken from the Willeroy premises certain farming implement parts which belonged to Willeroy, was ignored; therefore the court ordered that Willeroy recover the same of Lipscomb.

The court sustained the verdict of the jury and enjoined the sale of the property which had been levied upon and [38]*38enjoined Willeroy and the Ludlams from any proceeding against Lipscomb relating to any claim for rent theretofore sued for and from the enforcement of the collection of the judgment obtained by them and further decreed that Willeroy, or someone for him, should forthwith mark the said judgment satisfied.

The case presents such a factual complexity as to render it difficult to state it in satisfactory sequence. The appellant quite accurately states this circumstance when he says: “In fact, the several matters are so completely interwoven and interlocked throughout and the chancery proceeding is so completely dependent upon what took place in the distress case which was prior to the chancery cause, that it will be pra.ctically impossible to pass upon the questions raised in the chancery cause without knowing the facts in the distress case. In fact, the chancery cause calls for a decision of the matters in dispute in the distress case without giving the court necessary and sufficient facts to make an intelligent decision.”

By the distress warrant, and the levy thereunder, the collection of the rent claim was sought. Upon W. T. Lipscomb’s claim that, the property under levy was not his own, notice under section 6156 of the Code was served upon him in person and as the agent of the claimant of the property. Lipscomb made defense by filing an affidavit that he was unable to give the bond required by section 6518 of the Code and that he had a valid defense under section 6522 and that under section 6519 he wished the property levied on to remain in his possession at his risk and asked the court to pass upon the same. It is alleged by the appellant, which is not controverted, that at the hearing of the case on May 3, 1937, the sole defense was that most of the property levied upon was not that of W. T. Lipscomb, but belonged to his son and a brother, heretofore referred to, who personally and actively urged this defense and introduced numerous witnesses in their behalf.

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Bluebook (online)
200 S.E. 756, 172 Va. 33, 1939 Va. LEXIS 218, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boswell-v-lipscomb-va-1939.