Flynn v. Yeager

109 S.E. 604, 89 W. Va. 520, 1921 W. Va. LEXIS 206
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 25, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 109 S.E. 604 (Flynn v. Yeager) 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
Flynn v. Yeager, 109 S.E. 604, 89 W. Va. 520, 1921 W. Va. LEXIS 206 (W. Va. 1921).

Opinion

Poffenbarger, Judge:

On this appeal from a decree adjudicating right in the plaintiffs to enforcement of an express trust in real estate and referring the cause to a commissioner for ascertainment of facts essential to final settlement and determination of the rights of the parties, it is contended that the demurrer to the bill should have been sustained on the ground of its alleged disclosure on its face, of fraud on the part of the plaintiffs, laches and lack of equity, and also that the trial court’s finding on the issue of fact, made by the pleadings, is contrary to the 'weight of the evidence.

No revelation of fraud is found in the allegations of the bill. They show that the plaintiffs employed the defendant, Yeager, as their agent to procure extensive and valuable tracts of timber and timber rights in Pocahontas County, upon his representation that he was a real estate agent and could procure said properties for them, at reasonable prices, and that it was agreed, among other things, that, in every case in which the owners of the lands optioned should refuse or fail to pay him a commission of five per cent, on the purchase price, they, the plaintiffs, should pay it. There is no occasion to inquire whether a secret arrangement or connivance between them and Yeager as agent of the vendors of the timber and lands, by which the transactions should be so conducted or manipulated as to make his principals pay the commissions, would preclude the relief sought by the bill, on the ground of fraud. It suffices to say the bill makes no admission of concealment, secrecy or obliquity of conduct on the part of the agent, participated in by the plaintiffs. The allegation relied upon as being an admission or making a dis[522]*522closure of fraudulent purpose respecting the vendors is clearly consistent with openness and frankness on the part of the agent with all parties concerned in every transaction. Not a word in the bill imports an admission or charge that knowledge of the relation between the plaintiffs and Yeager was to be withheld from the vendors. An agent or broker, and especially a mere middleman, may represent both parties to a contract and be compensated by each of them, if both are fully informed as to his attitude and all elements of the transaction, as these parties may have been in all of the instances mentioned or referred to in the bill. Peters v. Riley, 73 W. Va. 785; Runnion v. Morrison, 71 W. Va. 254; Cassidy Fork B. & L. Co. v. Terry, 69 W. Va. 572.

Nor is there any disclosure of facts or circumstances on the face of the bill, constituting laches. The properties in question are but two of more than thirty tracts with reference to which the parties dealt, and part of the timber on another, and the time intervening between the acquisition of the titles by Yeager and the institution of this suit, was less than four years. In that period, they transacted a large amount of business, and the lands in question were not fully paid for until a date within two years just preceding the institution of this suit. The plaintiff, James Flynn, Trustee, paid $100.00 on -it as late as April 4, 1916, and this suit was brought in August, 1917. The bill sets forth correspondence dated in September and December, 1915, containing admissions by Yeager, of Flynn’s interest in these two tracts of land. Laches runs against an express trust, but the rule does not apply with the same degree of rigidity as in the case of contracts, in which' there is no relation of trust or confidence. The illustrations of its application in cases of express trusts, found in Roush v. Griffith, 65 W. Va. 752, make it manifest that the elements essential thereto do not appear here.

In the evidence, the argument submitted on the theory of laches has less foundation than in the bill. Flynn testifies that, from the beginning of his transactions with Yeager, in 1913, down to June, 1917, there was no repudiation of the alleged trust by Yeager, and the correspondence between them corroborates his testimony. The Spice Run Lumber [523]*523Company, a corporation, represented by Flynn, as trustee, in his transactions with Yeager and, through him, with others, seems to have become financially embarrassed about the year, 1916, and its enterprise was taken over and operated by the Brookville Title and Trust Company. About the time it took charge of the property, the general manager of- the Spice Run Lumber Company, appointed at its instance, approached Yeager for information concerning these two tracts of land, and was told they did not belong to the company.. He reported this to Flynn who says Yeager denied it when he spoke to him about it and promised to make up a statement of the cost of the land and convey it to Flynn or his company. The dates of these alleged conversations are not disclosed; but, in April, 1916, Flynn made a payment on the purchase money of these lands, and, on June 1, 1917, he requested Yeager in writing to make up a statement of the amount due on the property, and told him the president of the Brookville Title and Trust Company would pay it at once. This demand was repeated by a letter dated, July 6, 1917. The fact that Yeager had conveyed one of the tracts to S. A. Sparks by a deed dated, February 14, 1914, -and recorded, April 7, 1914, reserving the timber, has no important bearing upon this inquiry. If Flynn knew it, he did not abandon his claim of right. He probably had no objection to the conveyance of the land, since his real interest centered in the timber, which Yeager still held. As the bill does not seek disturbance of Sparks’ title, the element of estoppel is not involved. The delay has not been unreasonable in point of time, no loss of evidence has occurred and no disturbance is sought of any right acquired by a third party.

The bill does not admit any delegation of discretionary powers by .the trustee, if, in the event of his having done so, Yeager could complain of it. He simply employed Yeager as his agent to make contracts or procure offers of sale, subject to approval by his employer.

As the bill alleges an express trust and the relation of principal and agent, making Yeager a trustee as to the tracts of land in their entireties, and not a resulting trust, it was not necessary to disclose the proportion the money paid by the [524]*524principal bears to the whole amount of purchase money. Shaffer v. Fetty, 30 W. Va. 261, has no application.

The two tracts of land contained, respectively, 234 acres and 135 acres, and were owned by the heirs of William Dean. Yeager claims to have commenced his negotiations for purchase thereof, in 1912, but he had accomplished nothing with reference to them, in June, 1913, when he seems to have succeeded in enlisting Flynn’s interest in the. timber of the section in which they are situated, and he included them in lists of prospective purchases, he rendered to Flynn. No money was paid on account of either tract earlier than July, 1913. On September 29, 1913, Flynn gave his cheek for $900.00 to J. A. Sydenstrieker, cashier of the First National Bank of Marlinton, to pay for four interests in one of the tracts and five in the other, and the money was so applied.' A check for $400.00 drawn September 30, 1913, by Yeager and payable to him out of Flynn’s account, was applied on the Dean land purchase money. Another for $318.00 drawn by Flynn, Trustee, payable to Yeager and dated, September 21, 1914, was so applied. One for $100.00 drawn by Flynn, payable to the cashier and dated, April 4, 1916, was applied on a purchase money note owned by Mrs. Nancy R. Dean.

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Bluebook (online)
109 S.E. 604, 89 W. Va. 520, 1921 W. Va. LEXIS 206, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flynn-v-yeager-wva-1921.