Calhoun County Bank v. Ellison

54 S.E.2d 182, 133 W. Va. 9, 1949 W. Va. LEXIS 5
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 14, 1949
Docket10048
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 54 S.E.2d 182 (Calhoun County Bank v. Ellison) 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
Calhoun County Bank v. Ellison, 54 S.E.2d 182, 133 W. Va. 9, 1949 W. Va. LEXIS 5 (W. Va. 1949).

Opinions

Haymond, President :

This suit was instituted in the Circuit Court of Calhoun County in August, 1945, by The Calhoun County Bank, as plaintiff, to set aside as fraudulent as to creditors a deed dated July 3, 1945, made by William M. Ellison to his son, J. M. Ellison, for four tracts of land in that county which constituted all the real estate of the grantor. William M. Ellison, administrator of the estate of W. A. Ellison, deceased, William M. Ellison, J. M. Ellison, and Edna Lock-ard, the appellant, were made defendants to the suit. From a final decree entered April 23, 1947, which granted some of the relief prayed for by Edna Lockard in her answer and cross bill and in her amended and supplemental cross bill, but which denied certain claims asserted by her against William M. Ellison and refused to set aside the deed of July 3,1945, and two subsequent deeds of trust made by J. M. Ellison in favor of the bank, in so far as *12 they affect her claims, this appeal was granted by this Court upon her petition.

The bill of complaint, filed at September Rules, 1945, alleged that the execution of the deed in question was the result of a scheme and device entered into between William M. Ellison and J. M. Ellison to hinder, delay and defraud the creditors of William M. Ellison and especially the bank, a contingent creditor of William M. Ellison by reason of the prior mistaken or unauthorized payment by it to him of $5,206.44, in satisfaction of certain certificates of deposit claimed by the defendant, Edna Lockard; that she had demanded payment of the certificates which the bank had refused; that there was a contingent liability upon the bank to see that the proceeds of the certificates were repaid to Edna Lockard and to that extent the bank was a creditor of William M. Ellison; that it had demanded from William M. Ellison repayment of the amount paid to him but that he had refused to make such repayment; that the deed was wholly voluntary and that no consideration whatever was paid by J. M. Ellison for the property conveyed; that the deed divested William M. Ellison of practically all the tangible property owned by him or that could be reached by legal process; that William M. Ellison was insolvent; that J. M. Ellison, a son of William M. Ellison, had no money or property of sufficient value to pay for the land conveyed by the deed; that William M. Ellison had continued to reside upon the land and to occupy it in the same manner as he did before the conveyance; that the deed required the grantee to maintain and support the grantor so long as he lives and reserved to him the use and the occupancy of the residence upon the land; and that William M. Ellison, administrator of the estate of W. A. Ellison, had made ho settlement of his accounts as such administrator.

The bill of complaint further alleged that Edna Lockard obtained a judgment against William M. Ellison for costs which had not been paid and that he also had possession *13 of certain cattle formerly owned by W. A. Ellison, who had transferred them to her, and that William M. Ellison probably was indebted to her for the value of the cattle. It also averred that the bank, as a creditor of William M. Ellison, had the right to maintain this suit for the purpose of setting aside the deed of July 3, 1945, in so far as its rights and the rights of other creditors of William M. Ellison were concerned and to invoke the aid of a court of equity to subject the land so conveyed to sale for the repayment to it of the amount paid by it to him for the certificates of deposit.

The prayer of the bill of complaint was that the deed be canceled, annulled and set aside, in so far as it affects the rights of the bank and the other creditors of William M. Ellison; that the land be sold under a decree of the court; that the proceeds of sale be used to repay to the bank the amount paid by it to him for the certificates of deposit, with interest; and that the plaintiff be granted general relief.

On October 1, 1945, the defendant, Edna Lockard, filed her answer and cross bill in which she asked affirmative relief against the bank and William M. Ellison and J. M. Ellison as defendants to the cross bill. In the answer she admitted the allegations in the bill of complaint as to the fraudulent character of the deed of July 3, 1945, between the Ellisons; denied that the bank had paid William M. Ellison, administrator, the amount of $5,206.44 for the certificates of deposit; and charged that the bank owed her the money due for the certificates which she claimed to own. She alleged that the liability of the bank to pay her for the certificates of deposit was not contingent but absolute; denied that the bank believed it had the right to pay William M. Ellison, administrator, for them; and charged that it then knew that they were assets of the estate of W. A. Ellison to which she was entitled. She averred that the bank knew of her claims against William M. Ellison, administrator, and had refused to pay her the amount of the certificates of deposit and deliver to her other property of the W. A. Ellison estate held by it; *14 that she had a judgment against William M. Ellison, J. M. Ellison and others for costs amounting to $381.82 which was due and unpaid and owed to her by William M. Ellison ; that he also owed her for the value of cattle which he forcibly had taken into his possession; and that William M. Ellison, administrator of the estate of W. A. Ellison, the assets of which she claims as owner, had made no settlement of the estate or of his accounts as such administrator.

By her cross bill, seeking affirmative relief against the bank and William M. Ellison and J. M. Ellison, she charged that it owed her the amount of the certificates of deposit and of United States Government bonds and other evidences of indebtedness, assets of the estate of W. A. Ellison owned by her and which the bank had in its possession and refused to pay or deliver to her; that William M. Ellison was indebted to her in the sum of $5,793.33 for personal property, assets of the estate of W. A. Ellison, owned by her, which he had taken into his possession and converted to his own use, and in the sum of $10,000.00 represented by United States Government bonds which he had also taken into his possession and converted to his own use, and for all of which he had failed to account; that her claims against William M. Ellison amounted to $16,175.15; that the bank knew of her claim to the certificates of deposit before it made the alleged payment of $5,206.44 to William M. Ellison, administrator, for the certificates; that the deed of July 3,1945, made by William M. Ellison to J. M. Ellison, his son, and the alleged transfer of $5,206.44 by the bank to William M. Ellison, were part of a scheme and device upon their part to aid William M. Ellison in disposing of his real estate and placing it beyond the reach of the defendant and other creditors of William M. Ellison,' and to enable the bank then to institute this suit for the ostensible purpose to establish its claim of $5,206.44 against William M. Ellison as a first lien upon real estate conveyed by the deed, though it still holds and controls that sum of money, and by that means, to defeat the defendant in the collection of her claims against Wil *15 liam M. Ellison, who is also largely indebted to numerous other persons; that William M.

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Bluebook (online)
54 S.E.2d 182, 133 W. Va. 9, 1949 W. Va. LEXIS 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/calhoun-county-bank-v-ellison-wva-1949.