Charlton v. Pancake

127 S.E. 70, 98 W. Va. 363, 1925 W. Va. LEXIS 55
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 3, 1925
DocketNo. 5218.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 127 S.E. 70 (Charlton v. Pancake) 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
Charlton v. Pancake, 127 S.E. 70, 98 W. Va. 363, 1925 W. Va. LEXIS 55 (W. Va. 1925).

Opinion

Miller, Judge :

In a proceeding upon notice of a motion for judgment, plaintiff, on June 5, 1924, recovered a verdict and judgment against defendant for $5,179.00, with interest and costs. To that judgment the present writ of error was obtained.

By the notice, dated April 19, 1924, and filed in the clerk’s office April 21, 1924, the defendant was warned that on May 16, 1924, which was the May term thereof, he would move the Circuit Court of Cabell County for a judgment against him for the sum of Five Thousand Dollars, with interest thereon from May 1, 1923, and costs of such motion, upon two certain promissory notes executed by him, dated November 1, 1923, as follows: One for two thousand dollars, payable in 90 days, to "W. A. Charlton, Trustee, at' the Kanawha Valley Bank of Charleston, "W. Va., with six per cent interest; the other for'the sum of three thousand dollars, payable to W. A. Charlton, in 180 days, at the Kanawha Valley Bank of Charleston, W. Va., with six per cent interest.

On the return day of the notice defendant appeai’ed and moved the court to quash it, on the ground that it was not sufficient in law; which motion was overruled. He then tendered and filed a special plea in writing, to which plaintiff *365 demurred; which was overruled; and there was a general replication by the plaintiff thereto; and issue was joined on said plea.

The plea was in effect fraud and circumvention in their procurement, and failure of consideration in whole and in part for the notes sued on, and in substance was that plaintiff fraudulently and falsely represented to defendant: First, that the business of the Pence Springs Water Company was a profitable one, and that large sums of money could be made by way of profits out of the terms of the contract which he had with Messrs. Hatfield and Hughes, and which he then assigned to defendant: second, that the material, machinery, bottles, washers and other equipment owned by the Pence Springs Water Company was in good condition, and was suitable for the purpose for which it was being used; third, that the business of bottling the Pence Springs water and selling the same to the wholesale and retail trade was a profitable one; fourth, that his contract with Hatfield and Hughes, which lie undertook for said notes to transfer to defendant, was a transfer and sale of all the outstanding stock of the Pence Springs Water Company, a corporation: all of which representations, the plea avers, were false, and known by plaintiff to be false, at the time they were so made to him, but were relied on by defendant; and that in fact said stock was worthless and of no value, though falsely represented by plaintiff to be of great value.

On the hearing here the first point of error is that defendant’s motion to quash the notice should have been sustained; first, on the ground that the notice, which as held in Hastings v. Grump, 89 W. Va. 111, served the double purpose of process and pleading, does not show with reasonable certainty the nature and basis of the demand or obligation which it is proposed to reduce to judgment, that the same was due and owing by defendant to plaintiff, and that the demurrer thereto should have been sustained, but with leave to amend. This proposition was affirmed in Pelley v. Hibner, 93 W. Va. 169.

The first specification of defect in the notice relied on is the general charge, after describing the notes, “and neither *366 of which notes were paid but are now pa/rt due and unpaid A stipulation in writing between counsel filed on the hearing, is that the word “part” should read “past”, and that the record in the circuit court showed. With this correction of the record, there can certainly be no lack of certainty as to the nature or basis of plaintiff’s demand.

The basis of the action is the two notes described, and that they were past due and unpaid to plaintiff, who is the payee therein. There is no such defect in the notice as rendered the notice in Anderson v. Prince, 60 W. Va. 557, susceptible to demurrer. The notice in that case failed to connect in any way tlie defendant Smith with the note sued on. He was neither maker, payee nor endorser so far as the record showed, although .he was notified that judgment on the note would be demanded against him. In this case the defendant is the maker of the notes, and the plaintiff is the payee therein.

The second ground for quashing the notice is that the $3,000.00 note described therein was not in' fact due at the time the notice was served on defendant. The return of the service itself is not found in the record; but the order of the court in reference thereto recites that it was served on April 19, 1924; and the’ clerk of the circuit court in making-up the record has copied the endorsement thereon as follows: “Filed April 21, 1924, O. R. Seamonds, Clerk C. C. C. C.” If we may look to the endorsement on demurrer to the notice, we find that at the time of service thereof on defendant, and also when filed in the clerk’s office, the $3,000.00 note was not due, but when judgment was moved, on May 16, 1924, that note was due. This being so, plaintiff’s'counsel contend that action on such note had matured when the suit was begun. As it is agreed that the note for $2,000.00 was due before the service and the filing in the clerk’s office, the motion to quash was properly overruled.

The question of the right to recover on the $3,000.00 was again presented on the trial, by objection to its introduction in evidence, and on the ruling of the court on defendant’s motion to set aside the verdict and award him a new trial. So it may not be out of place to consider here this question in connection with the motion to quash. Our statute, section *367 6, chapter 121, Code, relating to the subject, says that a person entitled thereto may “obtain judgment for such money after twenty days’ notice, which notice shall be returned to the clerk’s office of such court fifteen days before the motion is heard.” The requirement that defendant shall have twenty days’ notice, and that the notice shall be returned to the clerk’s office fifteen days before the motion is heard, are mandatory. But inust the demand sued for be a matured one at the time of the service of notice, or at the time it is returned to the clerk’s office? Plaintiff’s counsel say that it need not be matured at the time of service, that as plaintiff in this case might have withheld notice until after maturity of the $3,000.00 note before filing it, and still have had time to file it fifteen days before the day of the motion, the prior filing can not deprive him of the right to judgment on the $3,000.00 note. Certainly in the application of the statute of limitations, and for other purposes, some time must be fixed as the date of the lis. In Virginia the statute, unlike ours, requires the notice to be returned to the clerk’s office within five days after the service thereof. Construing the Virginia statute. Judge McDowell, in Schofield v. Palmer, 134 Fed. 753, held that if the notice is served before the liability of the defendant has matured, it would be subject to a plea in abatement, the same as a declaration prematurely filed would be.

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Related

Slater v. United Fuel Gas Co.
27 S.E.2d 436 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1943)
Citizens National Bank of Philippi v. Auvil
156 S.E. 111 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1930)
Cardwell v. Employers' Liability Assurance Corp.
141 S.E. 789 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1928)
Hughes v. Charlton
141 S.E. 1 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1927)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
127 S.E. 70, 98 W. Va. 363, 1925 W. Va. LEXIS 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/charlton-v-pancake-wva-1925.