Cheuvront v. Horner

59 S.E. 964, 62 W. Va. 476, 1907 W. Va. LEXIS 51
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 12, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 59 S.E. 964 (Cheuvront v. Horner) 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
Cheuvront v. Horner, 59 S.E. 964, 62 W. Va. 476, 1907 W. Va. LEXIS 51 (W. Va. 1907).

Opinion

Robinson, Judge:

In the circuit court of Doddridge county, at the October Rules, 1904, Joseph Cheuvront instituted this suit in chancery, presumably under section 2, chapter 133 of the Code, for the purpose of enforcing a claim against William J. Horner, and in pursuance of such object to set aside and cancel, as made in fraud of his rights as a creditor of said Horner, certain transfers of‘real estate and personal property made by said Horner to to his wife, Maggie Horner.

It may be proper to make reference to the opinion of this Court in the case of Cheuvront v. Cheuvront, 54 W. Va. 171, for a statement of the facts explaining the-source of this litigation. It is useless for us to repeat them at length here. To a great extent, in the view we take of this case, they have nothing to do with it.

' It is there shown, as it is shown in this suit, that Joseph Cheuvront on the 30th day of October, 1899, placed in-the hands of William J. Horner the'sum of $750.00 with which to compromise a certain divorce suit then pending1 between said Joseph Cheuvront and his wife, Elizabeth Cheuvront, and took his receipt for such sum, in which receipt there are certain stipulations hereinafter referred to;, that said Horner went to Parkersburg, where the said Eliza-abeth resided, and where his wife then also resided, it. being shown that there was intimacy between these two-women, taking with him a contract which had been prepared by the attorney of Joseph Cheuvront, and which affected materially the rights of the wife in her husband’s-property, and, to use the language then employed by the parties, compromised said divorce suit; and that the said Elizabeth was induced by the said Horner and his wife to-execute the same. This contract expressed a consideration of $750.00, but only $400.00 of such sum so furnished him by Joseph Cheuvront was paid Elizabeth Cheuvront by Horner, and he retained from the $750.00, the residue of $350.00, less $5.00 paid to the notary for taking the acknowledgment, and less the further sum of $18.00 afterwards paid by Horner on certain costs of said divorce suit. Subsequently, at the suit of said Elizabeth, the contract so obtained was set aside and annulled by a decree of the [478]*478circuit court of Harrison county, which was affirmed upon ax>peal to this Court, reported as aforesaid, as having been obtained by fraud upon the said Elizabeth Cheuv-ront.

Thereupon, after the affirmance of said decree, this suit was instituted to recover back the money so placed in the hands of said Horner, and to recover the costs and expenses to which Joseph Cheuvront had been put in the suit to set aside and annul said contract. In that suit, .Joseph Cheuvront maintained, as he does in this suit, that whatever fraud was committed in the procurement of the execution of said contract from the said Elizabeth was the act of the said Horner and wife, and not his, and that Horner was only authorized by him to pay her the full sum entrusted to his hands for the purpose aforesaid, in case she would execute the contract, and was not authorized by him to make any other representations. Certain it is, however, that said1 Horners not only deceived the said Elizabeth as to the amount for which the contract called, but to induce her to sign same represented that her husband would immediately come and reside with her again. In fact, there is a long story connected with all this, enough of which is shown in said former opinion for the purposes of this case, and really little of which pertains to the real questions now before this Court. Joseph Cheuvront was held by the adjudication in the suit to set aside said contract to be bound by the act of Horner, who was held to be his agent in the transactions aforesaid, and further than setting aside said contract, the Court refused to decree to him the return of the $400.00 paid to his wife as aforesaid, or in legal language, to place the parties in stakt quo. The reasons for this are clearly stated by the learned judge of this Court through whom that opinion was handed down.

In the plaintiff’s bill, his claim is founded upon the receipt given him by Horner for the $750.00, in which writing it is expressed that the said sum is to be used in such compromise, and to be paid Elizabeth Cheuvront in case she signed the contract, and in which Horner guaranteed to return to Joseph Cheuvront said sum “in case same should be lost or any accident to same, if not paid to her upon said compromise.” The bill also sets up the fact that [479]*479plaintiff liad prior to the filing of the bill instituted an action at law in said circuit court of Doddridge county upon his aforesaid claim, for one thousand dollars, in unmnn/psit, against said Horner, and claims that he had office judgment which became final and was erroneously set aside. It appears, however, that plaintiff’s contention in this particular is not well founded, and that he must rest upon his right to recover in this suit. In fact, his counsel has, we infer, abandoned that contention. The plaintiff’s bill also exhibits the record and opinion in said former case, which are asked, to be read in connection therewith. This fact it is important to note here, as appellants insist that it is thereby disclosed that the money which Horner received from Cheuvront as aforesaid and now demanded back was paid Horner for an illegal purpose and that therefore the law gives no action therefor.

The bill further charges that after the adjournment of the term at which said office judgment was set aside, the said Horner, on the 11th day of August, 1904, with intent to hinder, delay and defraud plaintiff from collecting his debt, by deed' of that date, conveyed to M. K. Horner, trustee, a certain lot or parcel of ground in the town of West Union, on which Horner, his wife and family resided, and a drug store in said town and all fixtures and appurtenances connected therewith and the soda fountain therein, for a pretended consideration, and that in furtherance of his purpose to hinder, delay and defraud plaintiff, the'said M. K. Horner, trustee, on the next day conveyed the whole of said property as described in said deed to Maggie Horner, the wife of the said William J. Horner. The said M. K. Horner, trustee, is shown to be the brother of William J. Horner. The bill is distinct and definite, in its averments of facts constituting a fraud upon the creditors of William J. Horner, by the transfers of the property aforesaid, and after making proper averments relative to a vendor’s lien which rested upon the property, prays for a decree against William J. Horner, requiring him to pay complainant the debt in question, and that the conveyances aforesaid be set aside and declared null and void as to plaintiff’s claim, and the said property sold to satisfy the debt, and for general relief.

[480]*480A demurrer to the bill was interposed on behalf of the said William J. Horner and Maggie Horner, and as ground thereof they assigned want of equity jurisdiction, multifariousness, want of sufficient averments and omissions. The demurrer was overruled and a day given to answer. William J. Horner and Maggie Horner filed their joint and separate answer to the bill, and such answer denies the claim of plaintiff and the charges of fraud in the transfers of the property aforesaid by Iiorner to his wife. It admits that the $850.00, less the two small deductions, was retained by Horner, and claims the same as compensation for his services in getting said contract signed. It denies the right of recovery also, in effect upon the maxim in pari delicto-potior est conditio defendentis.

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Bluebook (online)
59 S.E. 964, 62 W. Va. 476, 1907 W. Va. LEXIS 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cheuvront-v-horner-wva-1907.