Dobyns' Adm'x v. Waring

82 Va. 159, 1886 Va. LEXIS 19
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 30, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 82 Va. 159 (Dobyns' Adm'x v. Waring) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dobyns' Adm'x v. Waring, 82 Va. 159, 1886 Va. LEXIS 19 (Va. 1886).

Opinion

Richardson, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a controversy as to priority of right between a judgment creditor, asserting the lien of a judgment on a certain [160]*160real estate on the one hand, and subsequent purchasers of said real estate on the other hand, who claim by deed under one who took the same as purchaser from one of the judgment debtors,'who conveyed by deed made and recorded subsequent to the rendition and docketing of the judgment, there being of record no prior executory contract.

Omitting many things that occurred in the progress of the cause, which are not material to the question to be decided by this court, the case, briefly stated, is this: Judith E. Dobyns, in her lifetime, to wit: on the 14th day of November, 1861, recovered in the circuit court of Essex county a judgment at law against Richard H. Waring, Robert. P. Waring, Thomas L. Waring, and Fannie A. Carter, for $3,924.54, to be discharged by the payment of $1,952.27, with interest from the 21st day of January, 1861, and costs. In January, 1872, Lucy E. Dobyns, administratrix de bonis non, with the will annexed, of said Judith E. Dobyns, deceased, instituted a suit in chancery in the county court of said county in behalf of, herself and others, lien creditors of said Richard H. Waring and Thomas L. Waring, to enforce the lien of said judgment against the real estate of said Warings.

The bill alleges that said Richard EL and Thomas L. Waring, on the 5th day of January, 1866, conveyed by deeds to John Wilson, trustee, all the real estate of which they were possessed, for the benefit of certain parties named in the deeds, and that the judgment aforesaid, which was duly docketed on the 30th day of September, 1865, is a lien on said real estate, and paramount to the lien of said trust deed; and prayed for an account of the liens and their priorities, and for a sale of the real estate to satisfy the same, and for general relief; and the said Richard EL Waring and Emily, his wife; Thomas L. Waring and Mary, his wife; Robert EL Waring, Wm. Austin Waring, Thomas L. Waring, Jr., Adie Waring, John EL Wil[161]*161son, trustee, and Andrew Rutherglenn, assignee in bankruptcy of said Richard H. Waring, and Thomas L. Waring, were made parties defendant to the bill.

On the 19th of March, 1872, a decree was entered directing an account of the real estate of the said Richard H. and Thos. L. Waring, of the liens thereon and their priorities, and also of the actings and doings of said Wilson, trustee. Accordingly, on the 13th day of July, 1872, the commissioner returned his report showing the real estate conveyed in trust by the said Richard H. and Thomas L. Waring, as aforesaid, and reported the judgment aforesaid as the first lien thereon; and in the list of lands of which the said Richard H. Waring was possessed or entitled, at or after the 14th day of November, 1861, the date of said judgment, the commissioner also reported a tract of 260 acres in Essex county, called “ Bathurst,” which, the commissioner reports, “ was sold and conveyed to Walter S. Jones on the 16th day of June, 1866.”

On the 16th of December, 1872, the cause was removed to the circuit court of said county.

On the 4th of October, 1878, the plaintiff filed her amended bill, reiterating the statements in the original bill, and adding such statements and averments as were necessary to assert the lien of said judgment, also on the said 260-acre “Bathurst>f tract reported by the commissioner as sold and conveyed by Richard H. Waring to Walter S. Jones, on the said 16th day of June, 1866, subsequent to the rendition and docketing of the judgment aforesaid. The amended bill further alleges that the said Walter S. Jones, by his deed, admitted to record on the 6th of September, 1869, conveyed the said “Bathurst” tract to Thomas Groxton, agent for the creditors of Ross A. Cauthorn'; and then sets forth that the property embraced in the two deeds to John H. Wilson, trustee, and the parties interested therein, was under the jurisdiction and control of the Dis[162]*162trict Court of the United States for the Eastern District of Virginia, and that an order had been entered 'by said district court, in a suit pending therein, for the sale of said property. To this amended bill, Richard H. Waring, Robert P. Waring, Thomas L. Waring, Thomas Croxton, agent for the creditors of Ross A. Cauthorn, and James M. Matthews, assignee in bankruptcy of said Richard H. and Thomas L. Waring, were made parties defendant.

On the 19th of February, 1873, it appearing that the jurisdiction of the federal court had attached as to the property, real and personal, conveyed by said deeds to Wilson, trustee, prior to the bringing of this suit, the said circuit court of Essex, by its decree, relinquished its jurisdiction as to the property so conveyed, but not as to the said “Bathurst” tract of 260 acres, as to which the said federal court had not acquired jurisdiction as aforesaid. Subsequently, to wit: on the 6th of November, 1878, a decree was entered by the said circuit court dismissing the said original and amended bills in this cause as to all the defendants except Richard H. and Thos. L. Waring, Robert P. Waring, James M. Matthews, assignee, and Thomas Croxton, agent, and dismissing the original bill “so far as it seeks to subject the real estate of the said defendants, Richard H. and Thomas L. Waring, surrendered by them in the bankrupt court,” of which the “ Bathurst” tract, of 260 acres, is no part, and referring the cause to a commissioner to enquire and report whether the judgment of the plaintiff’s testatrix was a subsisting lien on the said “Bathurst” tract, conveyed by Rich’d H. Waring to Walter S. Jones, and by said Jones to Croxton, agent for Cauthorn’s creditors. It seems that no report was ever made under this decree.

On the 7th of July, 1880, a second amended bill was filed, reciting the facts set forth in the original and first amended bill, and making Walter S. Jones a party defendant; [163]*163and on the 25th of July, 1881, the said Jones filed his answer, stating that “ he purchased ‘Bathurst’ of R. H. Waring, in 1859, possession to be given in January, 1860 ; payment to to the amount of $5,500 to be made in bonds, and that he took the property, and paid for it as agreed ”; and having thus directly responded to the averments of the bill, he adds in a separate sentence, “no written contract was entered into between Waring and this respondent”; and he further states: “The condition of the country for some years prevented the usual attention to business, and hence the delay in obtaining the deed.” .

Richard H. Waring also answered, and in his answer says: “That he sold the farm called ‘Bathurst,’ as alleged, to Walter S. Jones in July, 1859, and entered into a written contract with him, which contract this respondent assigned to L. H. Garnett, and took his receipt therefor (see paper maiked ‘ B,’ filed herewith, and asked to be read as part of this auswer).” And said Waring, in his answer, further says: “The contract was that Jones was to pay for the farm in bonds on the 1st day of January, 1860. When these bonds were settled, then this respondent was to make a deed to Jones for the land. This was not done until 1867. Whilst the deed from this respondent, and Emily C., his wife, is dated in 1866, it was not passed over or surrendered to Jones and recorded until 1867, from the fact, and for the reason, that the contract of sale was not fully complied with until that time, to wit: 1867, about September.”

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Bluebook (online)
82 Va. 159, 1886 Va. LEXIS 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dobyns-admx-v-waring-va-1886.