Dickinson v. Railroad Co.

7 W. Va. 390, 1874 W. Va. LEXIS 24
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 2, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 7 W. Va. 390 (Dickinson v. Railroad Co.) 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
Dickinson v. Railroad Co., 7 W. Va. 390, 1874 W. Va. LEXIS 24 (W. Va. 1874).

Opinion

HAYMOND, PRESIDENT :

Dickinson, 'be complainant, filed bis bill in 1870, against William P. Rucker, and the Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad Company, in the circuit court of the county of Greenbrier, in which he alleges that at the November term, 1869, of the district court of the United States, held at Kanawha Court House, in this State, he recovered a judgment against Rucker, now of Greenbrier county, for $1,717.38, with interest as stated in the bill, subject to a small credit, and the costs of the suit. He professes to file with his bill, a copy of the judgment marked No. 1; that upon the judgment execution issued, and was returned by the Marshal mdla bona, and the whole remains unpaid; that at the time of the judgment, Rucker was the legal owner of various tracts of land in the Bend of Gauley river, Nicholas county, on which he then resided, all adjoining each other, and [395]*395constituting one large tract of about one thousand and six hundred acres, or more; that he had made some executory contract with the Railroad Company, by which he was to have the stocks of the Company in exchange for the lands, to a large amount, but whether the contract is ever to be executed or not he (Dickinson) cannot tell; that Rucker held two other tracts of land in the same situation, one in Nicholas, and the other in Clay county; that before the judgment and execution, Rucker had settled all his personal property upon his wife; that the judgment bound all of Rucker’s realty, and the execution his personalty, including his choses in action, so that if the contract with the Railroad Company was valid, the execution was a lien on the stocks, and if not, the judgment was a lien on the lands, either of which would be sufficient to pay the debt; that Rucker is still the owner of a lot in the town of Summersville, Nicholas, county, on which the old “Kelly’s,” tavern stood, and also of a house and lot in Greenbrier, where he now resides, which are also liable to the judgment; that Dickinson is not anxious to interfere with the contract of Rucker and the Railroad Company. He, however, desires to reach, either the lands or the stocks and to have the question settled between Rucker and the Railroad Company, as to whether the contract between them is valid or not, and if he is to go against the stocks, he desires to enforce his execution lien against them in the hands of the Company. And he prays that the lands may be sold, it the sale to the Company is not valid and binding, to pay his debt, &c.; and if valid and binding that the stocks may be issued, and sold to pay the debt, &c. The bill also contains a prayer for general relief.

Rucker, in his answer, says, that at the dale of the judgment rendered against him, in the bill mentioned, he was not, nor is he now, either the legal or equitable owner, of the lands in the bill referred to, nor is he entitled to any of the proceeds arising from the sale there-; of; that on the 20th of June, 1868, he entered into a [396]*396contract with the Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad Company, through J. A. Alderson, their authorized agenC for the sale of the lands first mentioned in the bill, as lying in Nicholas and Clay counties, and, that it was therein stipulated and agreed, that the stock to be issued in consideration thereof, should be issued to Cyrus P. Bryan, as trustee, for Margaret A., the wife of Ruck-er ; that a deed conveying the lands, in pursuance of the agreement, was long before the date of the judgment, executed and delivered, by Rucker, to the vendees, and was duly admitted to record on the —— day of October, 1868, in the Recorder’s office of the counties where the lands lie; that by the contract and deed, he, (Ruck-er,) intended to, and did, transfer and convey, for the benefit of his wife, the entire proceeds arising from the sale of the land; that this was done for “valuable, and a and good valuable consideration, and, if it had been only upon the latter, it was at a time when he had other real and personal estate, amply sufficient to discharge both his present and prospective indebtednessthat the transaction was perfectly fair, and wholly without fraud, actual or constructive. He denies that he is the owner of a lot in Summersville, but says the lot was for a valuable consideration, in the year 1868, conveyed by him to Isaac Miller, by deed, of record in Nicholas county. He also denies that he is the owner of a house and lot in Greenbrier; but states, the house and lot were purchased by his wife, paid for out of her separate estate, and that the deed was made to her. He admits that he has no personal estate in this State ; all that he had was long since conveyed by him, for valuable consideration, to Cyrus P. Bryan, for the benefit of his wife. By a general clause, he denies all the allegations of the bill, not admitted or denied in the answer. He files with his answer copies of the contract and deed to the railroad company.

In May, 1871, Dickinson filed an amended bill in the cause, and made Rucker, and his wife Margaret, Cyrus [397]*397P. Bryan, and the Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad Company defendants thereto. In the amended bill it is al-ledged, that the land embraced in the contract of the 20th of June, 1868, made between Rucker and the Railroad Company, was, at the date of the contract, the property of Rucker, and that the debt due Dickinson from Rucker was contracted prior to the date of the contract; that the house and lot, near Lewisburg, where Rucker resides, purchased of Hoover and wife and her trustee, and embraced in the deed from Hoover and wife and trustee to Rucker’s v ife and filed with Rucker’s answer,were really purchased and paid for by Rucker; that on the day of-Rucker, by deed, conveyed to Bryan all his personal estate of great value, in trust to hold for the benefit of Rucker’s wife, and the deed of conveyance is duly recorded in Greenbrier county; that Rucker has thus, in form divested himself of all property, real and personal, and settled the same upon his wife, to the prejudice of his creditors ; that the deeds and contracts were voluntary, fraudulent and void, as to creditors; that the contract with the Railroad Company not having been recorded, so far as it attempts to convey the stock to Bryan, for th'e benefit of Mrs. Rucker, is, for that reason, void; that the Railroad Company, by the contract, bound themselves to deliver, a large amount of 8 per cent, preferred stock to Bryan, for Mrs. Rucker, within 3 months from the 20th of June, 1868, and the stock has not been so delivered, nor has it been delivered to any one, though long since due. And the bill charges that the stock is liable to Dickinson’s execution, and can be arrested, and sold for the payment of his debt; and that the Hoover property is liable, as well as the personal property conveyed in trust to Bryan. The bill prays that the Railroad Company be required to issue the stocks and and place the same in the hands of a receiver of the court to be sold to pay the debt; that the house and lot, and the other personal property be sold for the-same purpose; that all of said deeds, and contracts may [398]*398set aside, and declared void, and, that such other and genei’al i’elier be granted as comports with equity.

On the 25th day of November, 1871, the Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad Company filed its answer to the original and amended bills. The early part of the answer contains a general demurrer to the bill and amended bill.

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Bluebook (online)
7 W. Va. 390, 1874 W. Va. LEXIS 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dickinson-v-railroad-co-wva-1874.