Cassiday Fork Boom & Lumber Co. v. Terry

73 S.E. 278, 69 W. Va. 572, 1911 W. Va. LEXIS 144
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 19, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 73 S.E. 278 (Cassiday Fork Boom & Lumber Co. v. Terry) 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
Cassiday Fork Boom & Lumber Co. v. Terry, 73 S.E. 278, 69 W. Va. 572, 1911 W. Va. LEXIS 144 (W. Va. 1911).

Opinions

POEEEliBARGER, JUDGE:

From a decree of the circuit court of Randolph county, dismissing its bill against Henry C. Terry, Trustee, the' Middle [574]*574Fork Coal & Lumber Company, the Roaring Creek Coal & Coke Company and Samuel B. Diller, praying relief against them in respect to two tracts of land, containing, in the aggregate, 1,788% acres, the Cassiday Fork Boom & Lumber Company has appealed.

The appellant is a corporation to which, on the second day of November, 1891, said land, known as Lots No. 16 and 17, of a certain tract, containing, respectively, 916 acres and 872% acres, had been conveyed by one O. C. Womelsdorf and wife. On the 16th clay of August, 1893, said corporation conveyed the same to the Roaring Creek Coal & Coke Company, for and in consideration of $9,000.00 of- the bonds of the Roaring Creek & Charleston Railroad Company and $131.00 in cash. At the time, there was a lien on the land for $2,500.00 of the original purchase money in favor of L N. B-. Crim and G-. B. Harvey, which sum the Roaring Creek Coal & C'oke Company agreed to pay. By deed, bearing date March 30, 1894, and admitted to record in the clerk’s office of the county court of Randolph county, on April 6, 1894, said, two tracts of land were conveyed by the Roaring Creek Coal & Coke Company to the Middle Fork Coal & Lumber Company, another corporation. On the 22nd day of May, 1894, an order was made by the directors of the Cassiday Fork .Boom & Lumber Company, instructing its treasurer to give to S. B. Diller, for the re-purchase of said two tracts of land from the Roaring Creek Coal & Coke Company, said railroad company bonds and $131.00 in cash, and $500.00 to pay to the Roaring Creek Coal & Coke Company, on account of the unpaid purchase money, which it had then paid, or was supposed to have paid, to Grim and Iiarvey, and to arrange for the payment of the remaining $2,000.00 later. Diller was the President of the Middle Fork Coal & Lumber Company, and it was understood and agreed, that he was to take the bonds and cash to the office of the Roaring Creek Coal & Coke Company in New York and have a deed made conveying these tracts to the plaintiff company. As we have seen, the Roaring Creek Coal & Coke Company had already conveyed the land to the Middle Fork Coal & Lumber Company, and, on the 21st day of September, 1894, a deed 'was made by that company, through its president, S. B. Diller, conveying the [575]*575timber on the land back to -the Roaring Creek Coal & Coke Company; and, on .the 11th day of June, 1895, said company, by Diller, its president, conveyed said two tracts of land to the defendant, Henry C. Terry, Trustee. The plaintiff alleges its ignorance, until a short time before the institution of this suit, July 21, 1898, of the conveyances made by the Roaring-Creek Coal & Coke Company to the Middle Dork Coal & Lumber Company, and, by that company, back to the Roaring Creek Coal & Coke Company and Terry, Trustee; and fraud on the part of Diller and notice thereof and participation therein, on the part of Terry, Trustee, the Roaring Creek C'oal & Coke Company and the Middle Pork Coal & Lumber Company. It further charges that the Middle Pork Coal & Lumber Company, though in form a corporation, consisted of the defendant, S. B.- Diller, and never had any legal board of directors and never authorized any conveyance by Diller to Terry and never paid anything either to the Roaring Creek'Coal & Colee Company or the plaintiff for said land.

An amended and supjolemental bill was hied, making Edward J. Berwind a party defendant, and containing the following additional allegations of fact: That the defendant, Henry C. Terry, represented said Berwind in a large number of transactions relating to real estate and other property in Randolph county, including the two tracts of land in controversy and acted as his trustee in respect thereto; that Berwind had entered into a contract with Henry G. Davis, dated Pebruary 15, 1902, by which he had sold all of said property, including said two tracts of land, to said Davis; that said contract made specific reference to the claim of the Cassiday Pork Boom & Lumber Company to said two tracts of land, wherefore Davis had notice thereof; that, although the deed made by the Roaring Creek Coal & Coke Company, bearing date March 30, 1891, conveying said two tracts of land to the Middle Pork Company, antedates the meeting of the Cassiday Pork Company, at which the money and securities were turned over to Diller with instructions to re-purchase said two tracts of land, negotiations had been pending for the re-purchase thereof through Diller long before said meeting vras held, and the Roaring Creek Company had agreed to reeonvey the same in consideration- of the railroad bonds [576]*576and cash aforesaid, and it was then understood and believed that the title to said tract of land still stood in the name of said company, that the plaintiff did not, at that time, know the same had been conveyed to the Middle Fork Company, that Diller was President of the Middle Pork Company and fully aware of the right of the plaintiff to have the legal title to the land, which the Roaring Creek Company had conveyed to said Middle Pork Company; that it had also been discovered, shortly before the institution of this suit, that the Middle Fork Company, holding the title tp said land with full notice of the plaintiff’s right thereto in equity, had attempted to convey the same to said Terry; that about the date of the deed in question here, Diller had forged a deed purporting to convey from the plaintiff to said Terry, Trustee, 5,000 acres of land, which deed had, before the institution of this suit, been declared a forgery and set aside in another suit brought by the plaintiff against Terry and others in the circuit court of Randolph county; that Terry’s participation in that fraudulent transaction, contemporaneous with the transactions complained of in this suit, and the intimate business relations existing between him and Diller since about the first day of January, 1895, and. the fact that the railroad bonds mentioned had, in some vraj, passed into the hands of Terry, trustee, all taken together, established Terry’s fraudulent participation in the transaction now in question ; that no money or other thing of value was given by Teny, Trustee, or any person claiming by, through or under Mm, for said land; that as plaintiff is informed and believes, Berwind or Terry, Trustee, had, about the middle of April, 1896, advanced to Diller, on account of the purchase of certain lands and property, about $148,672.09, in consideration of which Diller, on demand for additional security therefor, undertook to transfer and convey said 5,000 acres and 2,000 acres of plaintiff’s lands; that these conveyances were made in fraud of the rights of the plaintiff and accepted with notice of the fraudulent intent; that, if said lands were conveyed as security, Berwind had sold the same, together with other property of Dilleffs, for a sum largely in advance of the indebtedness, to-wit, $875,000.00, and besides, Berwind had received large returns from the property as proceeds of coal and timber taken therefrom; and that Davis, in [577]*577the purchase of said lands and other property, did not estimate said two tracts of land as having any value to1 him, in view of the claim of the plaintiff thereto, and did not pay anything therefor.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
73 S.E. 278, 69 W. Va. 572, 1911 W. Va. LEXIS 144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cassiday-fork-boom-lumber-co-v-terry-wva-1911.