Clay v. Deskins

15 S.E. 85, 36 W. Va. 350, 1892 W. Va. LEXIS 80
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 2, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 15 S.E. 85 (Clay v. Deskins) 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
Clay v. Deskins, 15 S.E. 85, 36 W. Va. 350, 1892 W. Va. LEXIS 80 (W. Va. 1892).

Opinion

LüCAS, PRESIDENT :

On the 5th day of February, 1886, Patton Bros, instituted a suit in chancery in the Circuit Court of Logan county to enforce a judgment against L. S. Deskins, who with others [351]*351was made a defendant. At the October term, 1886, a decree was entered directing alarge tract of land comprising ,five thousand one hundred and eighty five acres, to be sold by a special commissioner. At the subsequent October term, 1888, Sheppard and Shumate were appointed special commissioners in lieu of the former commissioner with power in either one to act as such commissioner, and they were directed to carry out the decree of sale. In the mean time, while the suit was pending, on the 25th day of May, 1888, the plaintiffs in the present suit, Samuel Olay, Jr., and George W. Headley, entered into a contract with the defendant,'L. S. Deskins, and others for the purchase of five thousand one hundred and eighty five acres, being the land decreed to be sold in said cause, at the price of three dollars per acre, of which two hundred and thirty dollars was paid in hand, and the remainder was to be paid within ten months from the date of the contract. It was also understood that Olay & Headley were to have the land surveyed at once. This executory contract was not signed by Clay & Headley, but was signed and sealed by L. S. Des-lcins and by William Blaclcham and wife, who seemed to have some interest in the property.

In pursuance of the decree of sale rendered in the cause of Patton Bros. v. L. S. Deskins, et al, Shumate, as special commissioner, advertised a tract of five thousand one hundred acres belonging to L. S. Desldns to be sold at public outcry on the 1st day of April, 1889. The land was accordingly sold to one W. H. Desldns, son of L. S. Desldns, at the price of ten thousand dollars; but the commissioner, upon being advised that an upset bid would be filed, advised the purchaser that he could not recommend a confirmation unless said purchaser would authorize him to raise «the bid to fifteen thousand dollars, which was done accordingly, and the sale was confirmed to W. II. Desldns at that price. The purchaser complied with all the terms of the sale by paying enough in hand on the day of sale to satisfy all costs of suit, and executing two bonds with approved security bearing interest from the day of sale for the deferred instalments of purchase-money.

Some thirteen days afterwards, on the 15th day of April,

[352]*3521889, the purchaser, W. II. Deskins, united with L. S. Des-kins and wife, and William Blackham and wife, in a contract with Stuart Wood, by which they sold real estate amounting to five thousand, one hundred and eighty five acres, also an additional tract of one hundred and fifty to two hundred acres, the larger tract at the price of four dollars per acre. This larger tract was the same which the commissioner had sold to said W. II. Deskins. Stuart Wood paid one thousand dollars in cash, and was to pay the remainder upon the delivery to him of an approved deed. It appears that with this one thousand dollars all the liens upon the larger tract were paid off and satisfied.

At the july term following, 1889, of said Circuit Court, Olay & Ileadley filed their bill in chancery against W. II. Deskins, L. S. Deskins, Shumate and Sheppard, commissioners, William Blackham, and Stuart Wood, in which the plaintiffs charge a conspiracy on the part of the defendants to defraud the plaintiffs of the purchase-money, two hundred and thirty dollars, which they had paid on said lands ; and they prayed that the sale made by the special commissioner Shumate to W. H. Deskins be annulled and set aside; and that the defendants L. S. Deskins and William Blackham, upon the payment of the balance due them upon the contract of May 25, 1888, be compelled to make conveyance of said lands.to the plaintiffs, according to the terms of said contract; that the commissioner Shumate be enjoined and prohibited from making a deed of conveyance of said lands to W. II. Deskins or to Stuart Wood, or to any other person, until the termination of this suit; .and that W. II. Deskins be restrained and inhibited from paying the commissioner any further purchase-money; and that Stuart Wood be enjoined from paying to W. II. Des-kins any of the purchase-money for said lands, until the further order of the court.

The several defendants filed demurrers to the plaintiffs’ bill, and the plaintiffs joined, but there is no formal entry of any action of the court upon these demurrers, nor are they mentioned in the final decree. Answers were then filed, with general replications thereto, and numerous depositions were taken by the respective parties.

[353]*353On the 19th clay of October, a final decree was entered by which the Circuit Court set aside the order of the 2d of April, 1889, which confirmed the sale to W. Ii. Deskins, and set aside and declared null and void, the sale itself, and decreed that the plaintiffs should recover from the defendants their costs. This decree closes as follows : “And the purposes of this cause having been fully accomplished, the same is ordered to be stricken from the docket.” Thus, in this final decree, no notice whatever is taken of the prayer for specific performance, and none of the restraining orders asked for in the bill appear to have been granted or effectuated.

From this decree the defendants below have appealed to this Court.

As the court below seems not to have acted upon the demurrers formally, and as we shall place our decision upon the broad merits of the case and the equities between the parties, I shall omit to discuss further the points raised by counsel on the demurrers to the bill.

This is a bill for specific performance, and, it will be un-necssary to discuss the regularity of the sale by the special commissioner, Shumate, to W. II. Deslcins, since that question and all incidental questions connected therewith are matters in which the plaintiffs can have no interest, unless they are themselves entitled to specific performance of their contract. Are they so entitled?

In order to answer this question, the court will consider all the facts and circumstances as disclosed by the record and evidence. These plaintiffs were pendente lite purchasers and are presumed to have had knowledge of the pen-dency of the suit, and that the very lands they were then contracting for, the court had ordered to be sold. If ever there were a case where time was of the essence of the contract, such, surely, was the character of this sale by a debtor whose lands were then resting under a decree of court to be sold at public outcry for whatever they might bring, to satisfy the liens existing again.-t them. The stipulation of the contract was that the purchasers should have the land surveyed at once, and should pay the full purchase-money within ten months from the date of [354]*354the agreement, which bore date the 25th day of May, 1888. The time of payment, therefore, expired on the 25th day of March, 1889. The lands were advertised on the 6th day of March, 1889, to be sold on the 1st of April following at public auction, and this advertisement was inserted for four successive weeks, expiring a few days before the day appointed for sale.

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Bluebook (online)
15 S.E. 85, 36 W. Va. 350, 1892 W. Va. LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clay-v-deskins-wva-1892.