First Nat. Bank of Cumberland v. Parsons

24 S.E. 554, 42 W. Va. 137, 1896 W. Va. LEXIS 60
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 8, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 24 S.E. 554 (First Nat. Bank of Cumberland v. Parsons) 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
First Nat. Bank of Cumberland v. Parsons, 24 S.E. 554, 42 W. Va. 137, 1896 W. Va. LEXIS 60 (W. Va. 1896).

Opinion

Holt, Piiesident :

On appeal from a decree entered on the 21st day of June, 1895, by the Circuit Court of Tucker county in four chancery causes heard together.

The facts are as follows: Defendant "Ward Parsons, the debtor complained of, together with his wife, by deed dated the 14th day of March, 1892, sold and conveyed to his son, Lemuel W. Parsons, all his real estate, viz., “the home farm on which Ward Parsons now resides, containing, with contiguous tracts, four hundred and twenty acres; seven other tracts, containing four hundred and sixty eight acres, on Backbone Mountains; and a tract of twenty two acres in Horseshoe Bottom, all in the county of Tucker.” The consideration was eight thousand and three dollars, to be paid as follows: To G. M. Wicks, for the use of M. W. Dun-ham, a judgment for seven hundred and eighty seven dollars and thirty cents and fourteen dollars and forty eight cents costs; to the First National Bank of Piedmont, W. Va., the sum of two thousand, four hundred and eighty dollars, evidenced by two notes; to the Bank of Kingwood, the sum of three hundred and eighty six dollars; to Sarah A. Parsons, the wife of Ward Parsons, in eighteen months, the sum of one thousand, two hundred and thirty dollars, the amount being money borrowed by Ward Parsons of his wife, Sarah A., being her separate estate, derived from her father’s estate, and borrowed from her, as evidenced by writing held by her; to A. H. Bonnefield, administrator, etc., seventy dollars; to W. H. Glover, the sum of sixty dollars; to the board of education of Black Pork district the sum of two hundred and sixty eight dollars and twelve cents and twelve dollars and twenty cents costs, a judgment; and two thousand and nine hundred dollars to be retained for lab)r and services rendered by Lemuel W. Parsons to his father, Ward Parsons, from the time of his majority, in 1886, to the present time; and to secure the payment of these sums as directed Ward Parsons expressly reserved on the face of the conveyance a vendor’s lien for said creditors on the real estate thereby conveyed.

The-four several creditors of Ward Parsons by their four several bills in equity attack this deed as' fraudulent and [142]*142void, as made with intent on the part of the grantor to defraud, hinder, and delay them in the recovery of their debts, of which frauds the grantee had notice, and in which he participated. It is conceded that all four bills base then-right to overthrow the deed on precisely the same grounds, and therefore appellants have had copied into this record only the bill, etc., filed in the case of the First National Bank of Cumberland,

The detailed statement of the nature of plaintiff’s claim is as follows: On the 15th day of August, 1891, "Ward Parsons, together with Charles H. Barrett, under the latter part of section 10 of chapter 106 of the Code, as sureties of William A. Barrett, the attachment debtor, executed to the Potomac Paper Company, the attachment creditor, a re-plevy bond, with condition to perform the decree of the court in the said cause, which being accepted by the officer as sufficient, he released from the attachment the whole of the property attached. The circuit court of Tucker county was then in session, and had, on the 18th day of August, 1891, entered a personal decree against Barrett, the attachment debtor, who had appeared in favor of the paper company, for two thousand four hundred and seventy six dollars, with interest from date — the debt here in question — and directed the' attached propety to be sold to satisfy the same. But the court being still in session on the 17th day of August, 1891, the court, on motion of Barrett, the replevy bond being produced, set aside the personal decree and the order directing the sale, and by “consent of parties no decree was to be entered in the cause in favor of the plaintiff at that term of the court.” On the 23d day of November, 1891, the court gave a final personal decree against Barrett for two thousand four hundred and seventy six dollars, with leave to sue out execution, which was sued out, and duly returned “No property found.” Suit was then brought on the joint and several replevy bond against the surety, Ward Parsons, to which he pleaded conditions performed, and a special plea that plaintiff the paper company, without the knowledge or consent of defendant Ward Parsons, who was only the surety of Barrett, consented to and had set aside the decree against Barrett of 13th Au[143]*143gust, 1891, as aforesaid, by reason whereof the condition was performed, and he was discharged, and plaintiff had no demand against him etc., to which plaintiff replied, and, the cause being submitted to the court on 13th day of March, 1893, the court found for plaintiff’, and gave judgment therein for the sum of two thousand seven hundred and eight dollars and two cents; that prior thereto the paper company had for a full and adequate consideration assigned the said claim to the plaintiff the National Bank of Cumberland, and that, as to the whole controversy in that respect, it is res judicata; that then defendant Ward Parsons conceived the fraudulent design and purpose of conveying and transferring to his son, defendant Lemuel W. Parsons* all his property, both real and personal, and accordingly as to his land executed the deed of 8th of May, 1892, already mentioned, which plaintiffs allege was at the time worth at least twenty thousand dollars Plaintiff alleges that all the debts therein mentioned and secured are just, except the one to Lemuel W. Parsons, Sarah A. Parsons, and the one to the First National Bank of Piedmont, that the one was the son and the other the wife of the debtor, WardParsons; that both were “trumped up claims,” without any validity, gotten up as color to cover their fraudulent design; that the claim of the Piedmont Bank was a just and true one, but that it was due from S. B. Walmsley as principal; that Ward Parsons was only surety, and had standing against the land of his son-in-law, Walmsley, a decree for the sale of a valuable tract of laud worth eight thousand dollars— more than sufficient to save him harmless, etc. — praying that the deed from Ward Parsons to his son, Lemuel W., may be set aside as having been made to- defraud plaintiff, and that the debts of the son and wife be set aside as invalid as against plaintiff', and that the claim of the Piedmont National Bank be held to be primarily the debt of S. B. Walmsley, and that it be first enforced against the land of S. B. Walmsley before Ward Parsons be made liable, etc., .and for general relief.

Ward Parsons appeared, and demurred, because W. A. Barrett, Jr., & Co. were not made parties defendant. Plaintiff amended his bill, making the two Barretts parties. On [144]*144the 8th day of March, 1894, Ward Parsons demurred to the amended bill, and, the same being overruled, he filed his separate answer, denying all the allegations of the bill specifically, and at the November term, 1894, Lemuel W. Parsons and Sarah A. Parsons each filed their separate answers, to which three answers plaintiff filed general replications. The court, on the 29th day of November, 1894, entered an order of reference in which the court holds that the deed of Ward Parsons to Lemuel W.

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Bluebook (online)
24 S.E. 554, 42 W. Va. 137, 1896 W. Va. LEXIS 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-nat-bank-of-cumberland-v-parsons-wva-1896.