Cooper v. Cooper

98 S.E.2d 769, 142 W. Va. 847, 1957 W. Va. LEXIS 57
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 25, 1957
Docket10864
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 98 S.E.2d 769 (Cooper v. Cooper) 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
Cooper v. Cooper, 98 S.E.2d 769, 142 W. Va. 847, 1957 W. Va. LEXIS 57 (W. Va. 1957).

Opinion

Ducker, Judge:

The plaintiff below, Myrtle Cooper, brought this suit in chancery against her husband, Clifford J. Cooper, and others, in the Circuit Court of Nicholas County, seeking partition in kind or, if not partitionable in kind, a sale of specifically described real estate and personal property owned equally and jointly by plaintiff and her husband, the payment of all lien indebtedness against the same and the payment to her of that portion or part of the remaining proceeds to which plaintiff may be entitled. The bill of complaint alleges the several items of lien indebtedness against the property, making the lienholders parties defendant to the suit. Upon a reference to a Special Commissioner in Chancery, the several lien creditors proved their claims and the Commissioner reported the priority thereof in order, from first to twelfth, inclusive. Among the lien claims reported by the Commissioner was the claim of the appellant, Virginia Hall Kuhn, defendant below, who had obtained a judgment for $12,-500.00 in an alienation of affections suit against said Myrtle Cooper, which judgment lien was designated as fifth in priority, and the claim of Ned H. Ragland and W. Hayes Pettry, evidenced by a note of Myrtle Cooper for $10,000.00, representing attorneys’ fees and secured by two deeds of trust, one on the interest of Myrtle Cooper in the real estate and the other on her interest in personal property, which deed of trust lien was designated as sixth in priority. Upon exception by Ragland *849 and Pettry to the report of the Commissioner, the Circuit Court, by decree entered on September 4, 1956, held that the deed of trust on the real estate in favor of Ned H. Ragland and W. Hayes Pettry was entitled to be fifth in order of priority and that the judgment lien of Virginia Hall Kuhn was entitled to be sixth in order of priority, and it is from this part of the decree of the Circuit Court that the defendant below, appellant here, appeals.

As the appellant, Virginia Hall Kuhn, in her petition, upon which this appeal was granted, claims that it was prejudicial error for the Circuit Court to relegate her judgment lien to sixth in priority and subordinate it to the deed of trust in favor of Ragland and Pettry, it is evident that the parties to this appeal fear, or have concluded, that the proceeds of the property to be sold to satisfy the liens will not be sufficient to pay off such liens to the extent of those fifth and sixth in priority, and hence the importance of the order of their priority. The sole issue in this appeal then is whether the judgment lien of Virginia Hall Kuhn or the deed of trust lien of Ragland and Pettry is entitled to be fifth in priority.

The appellant’s lien claim is based on a judgment rendered by the Circuit Court of Kanawha County on the 17th day of November, 1953, in the sum of $12,-500.00, in accordance with a jury verdict in that amount, with interest from October 15, 1953. With service of process on the defendant on June 13th, 1953, the case was matured and the said judgment was rendered at the September, 1953 term of the said Circuit Court of Kana-wha County which began on Monday, the 2nd day of September, 1953.

The appellant, Virginia Hall Kuhn, in her answer avers that the lien of her judgment has priority over the deed of trust lien of Ragland and Pettry because the latters’ deed of trust was executed during the trial of the suit for alienation of affections against Myrtle Cooper, and that appellant is informed and believes that said trust deed was executed “in order to endeavor to deprive this *850 defendant (Virginia Hall Kuhn) from collecting her said judgment and therefore said trust deed was executed as a scheme to defraud this defendant and other lien creditors of the plaintiff, Myrtle Cooper.” Furthermore, she also alleged that the fees charged by Ragland and Pettry were exorbitant and that other arrangements were made by plaintiff for their payment.

The defendants Ragland and Pettry filed an answer in the nature of a cross-bill setting up their claim secured by the deed of trust executed by plaintiff, Myrtle Cooper, upon her property, dated October 13, 1953, securing a note for $10,000.00 for expenses and attorneys’ fees, and said deed of trust was duly recorded in the Nicholas County Clerk’s Office on October 14, 1953. The claim of Ragland and Pettry was in the sum of $11,524.31, but claimants waived the amount in excess of the amount due on the $10,000.00 note. The evidence shows the plaintiff, at the time of the execution of the note and deed of trust, was involved in several matters of litigation, needed counsel and, as found by the Circuit Court, could only engage counsel by giving to them the note and deed of trust. The legal services rendered by Ragland and Pettry as attorneys for Myrtle Cooper included a mandamus proceeding, an adultery case, the alienation of affections damage case in which Virginia Hail Kuhn was plaintiff, a chancery suit of Virginia Hall Kuhn to enforce her judgment, a chancery case of the Qualified Range Company, and this partition suit. Particular note is made of the fact that Ragland and Pettry were the attorneys for the defendant, Myrtle Cooper, in the alienation of affections suit of Virginia Hall Kuhn against Myrtle Cooper, and that they were in the trial of that case at the time of the execution and delivery to them by Myrtle Cooper of the deed of trust securing the note of $10,000.00 representing their expenses and fees.

Although the appellant, Virginia Hall Kuhn, in her petition for this appeal, specifies nine assignments of error to the decree of the Circuit Court, it is necessary for a decision of this case to consider only one of them, *851 as the question raised by it is entirely controlling, rendering any other assignment immaterial. The one assignment of error so determinative of the rights of the parties is that under Code 38-3-6 the judgment in favor of appellant rendered on November 17, 1953 related back and became effective on September 2, 1953, the first day of the September, 1953 term of the Kanawha Circuit Court at which term said judgment was rendered.

Code 38-3-6 is in the following language:

“Every judgment for money rendered in this State, other than by confession in vacation, shall be a lien on all the real estate of or to which the defendant in such judgment is or becomes possessed or entitled, at or after the date of such judgment, or if it was rendered in court, at or after the commencement of the term at which it was so rendered, if the cause was in such condition that a judgment might have been rendered on the first day of the term; but if from the nature of the case judgment could not have been rendered at the commencement of the term, such judgment shall be a lien only on or after the date on which such judgment or decree could have been rendered and not from the commencement of the term; but this section shall not prevent the lien of a judgment or decree from relating back to the first day of the term merely because the case shall be set for trial or hearing on a later day of the term, if such case was matured and ready for hearing at the commencement of the term, nor merely because an office judgment in a case matured and docketed at the commencement of the term does not become final until a later day of the term * *

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
98 S.E.2d 769, 142 W. Va. 847, 1957 W. Va. LEXIS 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooper-v-cooper-wva-1957.