Eagle v. McKnown

142 S.E. 65, 105 W. Va. 270, 1928 W. Va. LEXIS 50
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 28, 1928
Docket5836
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 142 S.E. 65 (Eagle v. McKnown) 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
Eagle v. McKnown, 142 S.E. 65, 105 W. Va. 270, 1928 W. Va. LEXIS 50 (W. Va. 1928).

Opinion

MILLER, PRESIDENT:

The purpose of tbis suit was to enforce plaintiff’s judgment against the defendant I. H. McKown, by a sale of Mc-Kown ’s alleged one-half interest in a tract of land. From a decree of sale, the defendant Jennie MeKown, the wife of I. H. MeKown and the claimant of the sole ownership in the property, prosecutes this appeal.

The bill alleges that the plaintiff secured a judgment against I. H. MeKown on November 29, 1921,- that at that time and for some time thereafter the said McKown was the owner of an undivided one-half interest in a tract of seventy-three acres of land which had been conveyed to him and Jennie McKown by Mary Summers and J. Y. Summers, her husband, by deed dated February 24,. 1921; that on November 10, 1922, these defendants conveyed the whole of the tract to the defendant Dorothy Noe, .their daughter; that plaintiff was informed and believed that the purchase money notes made by the MeKowns to Mary Summers had been paid off and the vendor’s lien securing the same satisfied, or if not, that the purchase money paid by I. H. McKown was in excess of one-half the total purchase price, in which event his interest should be sold free from the lien retained by Mary Summers.

Mary Summers answered the bill, alleging that of the $950.00 represented by the purchase money notes, but $200.00 had been paid; that upon her information and belief the defendant I. H. McKown never owned any interest in the land conveyed by her; that it was through a mistake of her husband, J. Y. Summers, who prepared the deed, that the name of I. H. MeKown was inserted therein as one of the grantees; that she was informed and believed that the team of horses *272 representing the $500.00 cash payment on the land was the sole property of Jennie McKown, and that the $200.00 paid on the purchase money notes was paid by her out of her own means and property. Mary Summers did not pray to have her lien enforced against the land, but only to be dismissed from the suit, with her reasonable costs, etc. Only a part of the unpaid purchase money notes were due at that time.

By her answer Jennie McKown denied that her husband had any interest in the land, and explained in detail the transactions concerning the purchase thereof; that J. V. Summers, a resident of Nicholas county, came to her home, which was. about a mile distant from the seventy-three acre tract of land, and offered to sell the same for $1,450.00, and to take as a cash payment of $500.00 a team of horses, the balance of the consideration to be paid in yearly installments of $200.00 each, except the last installment to be $150.00; that she agreed to thes,^ terms provided her step-son P. O. McKown, who owned one of the horses, would agree to- allow her to put in his horse as a cash payment on the land; that later Summers returned to her home with a deed signed and acknowledged by Mary Summers and himself; .that she objected to her husband’s name §,s one of the grantees, but that she accepted it, when Summers explained she could have it corrected by her husband making a deed to. her, because it would require some time for Summers to make a trip home and have a new deed executed; that her husband later went to a justice of the peace to have a deed prepared transferring the sole title to her; that the justice explained this would have to be done through some third party, and prepared a deed from her and her husband to Dorothy Noe, and one from Mrs. Noe to her, which were promptly executed; that the deed to Dorothy Noe was placed on record, but that the deed to respondent had not been put on record; that she had paid but one of the purchase money notes, and obtained the money to take this one up from her father; and she prayed to be dismissed from the suit.

Upon the bill, answers, general replication to. each, and the depositions taken and filed on behalf of the defendant Jennie McKown, .over the objection of Mrs. McKown, the *273 circuit court referred the cause to a commissioner, who found that the defendant I. H. McKown was the owner of an undivided one-half interest in the seventy-three acre tract, that the vendor’s lien reserved by Mary Summers and husband was a first lien on all the property in the amount of $648.83, and that plaintiff’s judgment was a second lien thereon. The court overruled Jennie McKown’s exceptions to the commissioner’s report, and entered a decree in accordance therewith, ordering a sale of the land.

The plaintiff took no exceptions and filed no evidence in the cause. The defendant Jennie McKown filed the depositions of herself, her husband, J. V. Summers, P. 0. McKown, Dorothy Noe, A. S. Reynolds, the justice of the peace who prepared the two latter deeds mentioned in the answer, and other witnesses with whom she had had transactions in regard to the money used in the purchase of the horses given as part consideration for the farm. There is no evidence that I. H. McKown contributed any money or other property in the purchase of the land. It is true he signed the deferred purchase money notes, and the note given to Mrs. McKown’s father a.t the time the money, was borrowed from him to pay one of the original notes. Mrs. McKown explains where and how she got the money to pay for the horse she claims to have owned when she purchased the property. P. G. McKown testified that he turned the other horse over to his step-mother to be applied on the purchase price of the land, in order to assist in securing a home for her and the children. J. V. Summers testified that he made the deal with Mrs. McKown; that it had always been customary with him to make joint deeds, and that he gave the lawyer who wrote the deed the names of Mr. and Mrs. McKown; that Mrs. McKown objected to taking the deed in the form it' was presented to her, and refused to do so until he explained to her that her husband could deed the one-half interest to her; that he had both parties sign the notes because the deed was made jointly to them.; and that he offered to pay the expense of having a new deed made. Mrs. McKown explains the delay in having the transfer of the title to the half interest from her husband to herself made, that they did not know how to proceed, and it was some distance from their *274 Rome to the county seat where they could obtain the necessary information. She says she did not have the deed from Dorothy Noe to herself recorded, because she did not have the money for the recording fee at the .time the other deed was admitted to record, and afterwards just neglected to do so.

It appears from the testimony of I. H. and Jennie Mc-Kown that Mrs. McKown espected to secure the greater part of the money to- pay for the land from her father, now deceased, and that he had told his daughter he would help her •buy a farm. -

There is no evidence that I. TI. McKown contributed anything whatever to the purchase of the land, or that he ever claimed any interest in it. No fraud is alleged or attempted to be proved. Plaintiff appears to rely wholly on I. H. Mc-Kown’s apparent ownership of a half interest in the property. This theory is not supported by the evidence; and any presumption arising from the fact that I. H. McKown’s name appears in the deed, is overcome by the evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
142 S.E. 65, 105 W. Va. 270, 1928 W. Va. LEXIS 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eagle-v-mcknown-wva-1928.