Flanary v. Kane

46 S.E. 681, 102 Va. 547, 1904 Va. LEXIS 102
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 10, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 46 S.E. 681 (Flanary v. Kane) 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
Flanary v. Kane, 46 S.E. 681, 102 Va. 547, 1904 Va. LEXIS 102 (Va. 1904).

Opinions

Buchanan, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a creditor’s suit to subject the lands now owned by James P. Barron, and certain lands formerly owned, or [550]*550claimed to have been owned, by him, to the payment of the * judgments asserted in this case.

O. E. Elanary, one of the petitioners for appeal, assigns as error the action of the court in holding the “Hall tract” of land now owned by him liable to said judgments.

The ground of his contention is that Barron never had any such interest in the Hall land as could be subjected to his debts, or, if he did, that he, Elanary, was a bona fide purchaser for value without notice of such interest.

Elanary claims that about the 2d of December, 1891, Barron offered to sell the Cove Hill tract of land to J. A. G. Hyatt, at the price of $1,000, who declined at first to purchase it, but afterwards purposed to do so if Barron would accept in payment thereof certain property, among which was the Hall tract of land, valued at $2,000.00. Barron declined Hyatt’s proposition, but afterwards returned to Hyatt’s house and accepted it. On both occasions, when Barron was negotiating with Hyatt, he was accompanied by W. ET. G. Slemp, from whom Barron was endeavoring to purchase the tract of land known as the Bruce tract. After the first interview between Barron and Hyatt, Slemp proposed to Barron that if he and Hyatt .traded, he would take the Hall tract of land in part payment of the purchase price of the Bruce tract, and, with this understanding, Barron returned to Hyatt’s and accepted his proposition, and also entered into a contract with Slemp for the purchase of the Bruce land. Barron executed a title bond to Hyatt by which he sold and agreed to convey to him the “Cove Hill” tract of land upon the payment of the consideration stated above. In that title bond it is provided that, “The said Hyatt is then to convey said Barron at the price of $2,000 the Hall tract of land.” At the same time Barron executed a title bond, by which he sold the Hall tract of land to Slemp at the price of $2,000, and bound himself to make, or cause to be [551]*551made, a good title thereto. It was then agreed that deeds should be prepared, one by which Barron and his mother should convey the Cove Hill land to Hyatt, another by which Slemp and wife should convey the Bruce land to Barron, and a third by which Hyatt and wife should convey the Hall tract to Slemp. Hyatt prepared all the deeds, and on or about the 11th of that month they were .executed. There was no tripartite agreement between Hyatt, Barron and Slemp, as Mr. Flanary insists, by which Slemp purchased the land from Hyatt, or Hyatt sold it to Barron for Slemp. Slemp was no party to the agreement between Barron and Hyatt; Hyatt was not a party to the agreement between Barron and Slemp. Barron paid Hyatt the consideration for the Hall land, and by his direction Hyatt conveyed it directly to Slemp. Barron was clearly the equitable owner of the Hall tract of land, when by his direction it was conveyed to Slemp. Mr. Flanary insists that, even if this be so, he had no notice of it when he purchased and paid for the Hall land, and that he is entitled to protection as a bona fid& purchaser for value and without notice. There is no evidence that Mr. Flanary had actual notice that Barron was ever the equitable owner of the Hall tract of land, but the recorded deed from Hyatt to Slemp of December 11, 1891, contains a statement which shows that Barron had an interest in the land. That statement is as follows: “Witnesseth: That the parties of the first part, for and in consideration of a deed executed by James P. Barron and Louisa J. Barron for 200 acres of land on Gove Hill, being lots Hos. 4, 5, 6 and 1, as partitioned among B. F. Harber’s heirs, to the parties of the first part, in which the following conveyance was taken and is considered at the price of two thousand dollars, the parties of the first part doth, by these presents grant, bargain, sell, and convey unto the said W. H. Q-. Slemp, at the instance of the said James P. Barron, the following described tract or parcel of land, being [552]*552the lot deeded to Joannah Hall and her husband, John Hall, by the heirs of John W. Slemp, and by them deeded to said J. A. G. Hyatt, which tract of land is bounded as follows:” Then follows a description of the land by metes and bounds. This deed was a link in the chain of title under which Elanary ■claimed. It was his duty to examine it before purchasing. Means of knowledge, with the duty of using it, is equivalent to knowledge itself. Jameson v. Rixey et als., 94 Va. 342, 26 S. E. 861, 64 Am. St. 126, and cases cited. Fulkerson v. Taylor (decided at this term of court), ante p. 314, 46 S. E. 309.

The second error assigned by C. E. Elanary is that the court erred when it decreed said land (Hall tract) to be sold, in not substituting or subrogating W. M. G. Slemp, to the sum of $2,000, which was the purchase price of said land, and which he had paid to Barron for Hyatt, and which Hyatt had paid for Barron towards the purchase price of the “Bruce” land. This assignment of error seems to be based upon the view that Slemp was a party to the agreement by which Barron purchased the Hall land from Hyatt. As we have before seen in discussing the first assignment of error, Slemp was no party to the agreement between Barron and Hyatt of December 2, 1891. He did not pay Hyatt $2,000, the purchase price of the Hall land, for Barron. Barron paid the purchase price thereof himself, and had the land conveyed directly to Slemp in part payment of the purchase price of the Bruce land.

The third and last assignment of error made by O. E. Elanary is, that if he is wrong in the first and second assignments of error, then he is advised the court erred in decreeing a sale of the entire Hall tract, but should only have decreed the sale of one-half thereof.

It is true that the mother of J. P. Barron united with him in his deed to Hyatt, conveying the Cove Hill land) and that Said land was paid for in part by the Hall land, but there is [553]*553nothing in the record to show that she claimed any interest in the Hall land. Flanary in his answer does not raise this question. The commissioner in his report of liens and of the lands which are liable to their payment, reports that the Hall land is liable to the payment of all the liens in statement 0, except as to certain named judgments. There was no exception to this report upon the ground that Mrs. Barron, the mother, owned any interest in the land. That question was not raised in the Circuit Court, and it is too late now to raise it here after the report of the commissioner, that the entire tract was liable to the judgments, was confirmed without exception on that ground.

The Virginia and Southwestern Bailway Company, B. S. Clarke and Thomas Clyde assign as error the action of the court in holding that certain judgments against «Tames P. Barron were liens upon the right of way of said railroad company, with the improvements thereon, through lots Hos. 21 and 22 of the W. H. G. Barron, Sr., land, lying in Lee county.

Whether or not the said strip of land is subject to the judgments for the payment of which the court decreed its sale, depends upon the construction of a deed executed by W. H. G. Barron, Sr., and wife to the Bristol Coal and Iron Harrow Gauge Bailroad Company, on the 6th day of January, 1881. The deed describes the land conveyed as lying in Wise county.

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Bluebook (online)
46 S.E. 681, 102 Va. 547, 1904 Va. LEXIS 102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flanary-v-kane-va-1904.