Byars v. Stone

42 S.E.2d 847, 186 Va. 518, 1947 Va. LEXIS 173
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 9, 1947
DocketRecord No. 3192
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 42 S.E.2d 847 (Byars v. Stone) 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
Byars v. Stone, 42 S.E.2d 847, 186 Va. 518, 1947 Va. LEXIS 173 (Va. 1947).

Opinion

Buchanan, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This suit was brought by the administrator of A. J. Lore (for whom the present appellee administrators were after-wards substituted) against some of the appellants and others, to enjoin a sale by the appellants’ trustee of a house and lot near Bristol, upon which Lore’s administrators claimed to have a prior lien. The additional object of the suit was to have the claim of Lore’s estate established as superior to the claim of the appellants and to subject the property to the Lore debt.

J. C. Byars was not a defendant to the original and amended bills, but was made so by the final decree on his motion, and filed his answer. He is the husband of Mrs. Jane B. Byars, and the father-in-law of J. A. Caldwell, the other two appellants, and was the real defendant in the case. [522]*522When the name Byars is used herein, he is referred to unless otherwise indicated.

In a written opinion, after carefully analyzing the evidence, the trial court held with the contention of Lore’s administrators, and entered the decree appealed from, granting to the complainants a judgment against Mr. and Mrs. Byars for the amount of their debt, and against them and J. A. Caldwell for costs. In accordance with a suggestion, in the opinion, the parties agreed that a sale previously made of the property by Byars to Mrs. Preston should be carried out. Mrs. Preston had paid Byars $1,950 on the purchase before the suit was brought, and afterwards she paid the balance to the court’s commissioners who conveyed the property to her. The decree directed that the amount in the commissioners’ hands, $3,287.50, after certain deductions, be applied on the complainants’ judgment.

The conflicting claims arose out of these involved occurrences:

On November 5, 1928, F. G. Leonard and wife executed a deed of trust on said lot to James L. Davis, trustee, to secure a note for $500, due May 5, 1929, and four notes for $1,000 each, due November 5, 1931, with interest, payable semi-annually. A. J. Lore was the owner of these notes and they were in his possession at his death on July 29, 1944.

The deed of trust provided that if any note was not paid at maturity, the whole indebtedness would become due. The $500 note was not paid, and on September 12, 1929, Davis, trustee, sold the property for $4,865 and executed a deed therefor to Mrs. Willie Pierce Gannaway. This deed was dated September 12, 1929, but not recorded until March 12, 1931. It recited that Mrs. Gannaway had paid the purchase price in full. In fact, she paid only $365 and executed and delivered to Davis a negotiable note- for $4,500.

This note was dated April 2, 1930, nearly six months after the sale, was payable April 2, 1932, to bearer, with interest payable semi-annually, evidenced by four coupons [523]*523attached. To secure payment of this note, Mrs. Gannaway and her husband executed a deed of trust, also to Davis as trustee, dated April 2, 1930, and recorded June 6, 1930.

J. C. Byars, in 1944, under circumstances hereinafter related, bought Mrs. Gannaway’s equity of redemption in the property for $10, and had it conveyed to his wife, and he also bought the Gannaway $4,500 note from Mrs. Cochran, who had got it from Davis.

Davis, the trustee, was an attorney in Bristol and engaged extensively in lending money for others. About the time of the Gannaway transaction he had become very much involved, and wrote to Lore in 1941 that he had nothing left—not even the necessities of life. He died about the time this suit was instituted. It is not shown whether he lent Lore’s money to Leonard, or' transferred Leonard’s notes to Lore after they were made. On December 27, 1928, Davis wrote to Lore enclosing an insurance policy on the property, which he said he did not have when he handed him the other papers in connection with the loan the day before. Leonard never paid anything on the principal or interest of these notes.

Complainants contended that Lore did not authorize the sale by Davis, trustee, to Mrs. Gannaway, and never knew anything about it; but there was evidence that he was present when the sale was made by Davis, and the trial court correctly held that it was a valid sale, binding on Lore and his estate.

Davis, the trustee, did not turn over to Lore the Gannaway note, but kept it himself, and apparently also the cash payment and the papers relating to the Gannaway sale. Mrs. Gannaway moved into the property in the summer of 1930, soon after the date of her note, but several months after the date of her deed. She lived in the property about seven years and moved out in the fall of 1937. During that time she paid to Davis $30 a month. On moving out, Mrs. Gannaway apparently abandoned the property arid paid nothing more.

From that time Lore dealt with the property as his own. [524]*524From 1934 to 1944 he paid the taxes on the property on tax tickets made out against Mrs. Gannaway. He kept the property insured from 1937 through 1945. About 1938 he rented the property to Paul Maine, who stayed in it until the fall of 1943 and paid rent to Lore. During that tenancy, Lore installed a new furnace, repaired the roof, and made other expenditures on the property.

In the 1941 letter mentioned above, Davis referred to the property as being owned by Lore. In 1942, J. D. Baumgardner (an attorney of Bristol, Tennessee, who was a friend of Lore’s and helped him with his affairs, and in whose office Lore kept his papers and was a frequent visitor), advised Lore to get Davis’ resignation as trustee under the Leonard deed of trust and have that deed of trust foreclosed. Baumgardner apparently did not know of the Gannaway sale and did not think that Lore did. Baumgardner prepared a resignation and Davis executed it on August 27, 1942, acknowledged it, and it was recorded September 11, 1942.

That instrument recites that Davis had moved away from Washington county and for that and other reasons was no longer able to act as trustee. About that time Lore was advised by Mr. Parks, an attorney at Abingdon, who examined the records in 1943 when Lore was trying to sell the property to Cox, that it was better to proceed by chancery suit, and Baumgardner thought that would have been done except that Lore was “too close” to go into court over something he felt he owned absolutely. He said he had frequently heard Lore try to sell the property, and it was impossible to convince him he did not own it.

In the meantime, Davis, trustee, had transferred the Gannaway note to Mrs. Janie A. Cochran, at a date much in controversy and under circumstances later to be mentioned. In June, 1944, Lore became sick, was brought to a Bristol hospital in July, and, died there July 29, 1944. About a week before he died, Baumgardner had a conference with Mrs. Cochran in his office for the purpose of buying the note for Lore. At her suggestion they went to the office [525]*525of J. A. Caldwell, attorney and son-in-law of Byars, as mentioned, where the circumstances with respect to the property were fully discussed, and Mrs. Cochran offered to take 11,000 for the note, which Caldwell advised her he thought was a fair price. Baumgardner said he would see Lore at once about it, and went to the hospital for that purpose, but Lore was then too sick to discuss it, and died before anything further was done about it.

In May, 1944, the month before Lore got sick, Byars went to see Lore in Baumgardner’s office about selling the property to Underwood.

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Bluebook (online)
42 S.E.2d 847, 186 Va. 518, 1947 Va. LEXIS 173, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/byars-v-stone-va-1947.