Foley v. Ruley

55 L.R.A. 916, 40 S.E. 382, 50 W. Va. 158, 1901 W. Va. LEXIS 96
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 23, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 55 L.R.A. 916 (Foley v. Ruley) 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
Foley v. Ruley, 55 L.R.A. 916, 40 S.E. 382, 50 W. Va. 158, 1901 W. Va. LEXIS 96 (W. Va. 1901).

Opinion

Po F F ENBARGER, JuDGE :

The appellant, B. W. Foley, having obtained two judgments against F. J. Ruley and D. C. -Ruley partners, doing business as F. J. Ruley & Bro., brought a chancery suit in the circuit court of Doddridge County to subject their real estate to the payment and satisfaction of said judgments, one of which was after-wards found by the commissioner to amount to three hundred and eighteen dollars and fifteen cents as of the 6th day of September, 1894, and the other to amount to seven hundred and eleven dollars and thirty-two cents, as of the same date. F. J. Ruley & Bro. wyre the owners of a tract of land containing one hundred and twenty-five acres and another containing twenty-six acres. F. J. Ruley and D. C. Ruley were the joint owners of other tracts of land containing respectively, two hundred and one and one-lialf acres, two hundred acres, one hundred and three and one-fourth acres, three hundred and fifty-six and one-half acres, one hundred and eighty-four and one-half acres, one hundred and nine acres and one hundred and twenty-nine acres. F. J. Ruley owned tracts containing respectively fifteen acres, one hundred and eight and one-half acres and one hundred and ninety-seven and three-fourths acres. The Ruleys as partners and as individuals were largely indebted to numerous persons, some .of whom were lien holders by deeds of trust, and others by judgment, while still others were simply contract creditors who afterwards acquired judgments and came in by petition. After this suit was instituted, W. S. Stuart brought another suit against the same parties and some additional persons, alleging in his bill the recovery of a judgment against F. J. & D. C. Ruley, A. C. Holmes, and J. W. Hammond for the sum of one thousand and twelve dollars, to be discharged by the payment of five hundred and fifty-six dollars and forty-seven cents and fifteen dollars and eighty cents cost, but subject to a credit of forty-five dollars. [160]*160In addition to tbe necessary allegations, respecting the land here-inbefore mentioned, he charges in his bill that a tract of two hundred and twenty-seven acres of other land had been conveyed to Anne E. Ruley, wife of D. C. Ruley, by Thomas R. Douglas and C. H. Douglas for about the sum of two thousand two hundred and seventy dollars, of which about eight hundred dollars was paid by the said Anne E. Ruley, and the balance by F. J. Ruley and D. C. Rulejr, and that except as to the said sum of eight hundred dollars, the conveyance to said Anne E. Ruley was fraudulent and voluntary on the part of F. J. & D. C. Ruley, and Was made to hinder, delay and defraud the creditors of said F. J. & D. C. Ruley. This last bill was died on the first Monday in February, 1894. A. 0. Holmes and J. W. Hammond had become liable for the Stuart judgment and several others, by having become sureties in forthcoming bonds executed by F. J. & D. C. Ruley, in which default had been made and thereupon judgments were taken by motion upon notice as provided by law. They were made parties to the first bill and Holmes filed his answer thereto at March rules, 1894. In that answer he made the same allegation of fraud as to the two hundred and twenty-seven acre tract of land and prayed that the deed might be set aside as fraudulent and the land subjected to sale to satisfy the debts of F. J. & D. C. Ruley. The two causes were consolidated and referred to commissioner M. F. Snyder, who completed and filed his report on the 16th day of July, 1894. On the 6‘th day of September, 1894, F. J. & D. C. Ruley filed their joint answer under oath to the bills in the consolidated causes, in which they admit that Anne E. Ruley had paid only eight hundred dollars of the purchase-money of said two hundred and twenty-seven acre tract of land, and that the entire purchase-money was about three thousand four hundred dollars, and aver that she would be entitled to about one-third of the land and they to the balance of it. On the same day the court, after overruling the exceptions to the report of the commissioner, confirmed it, adjudicated the amounts and priorities of the several liens upon the several tracts of land, except the two hundred and twenty-seven acre tract of land, and decreed the sale of all the land of all the lien debtors, except said two hundred and twenty-seven acres. As to that tract the following provision was made in the decree: “Any decree concerning the tract of two hundred and twenty-seven acres conveyed to'the defendant Anne [161]*161E. Ruley as set forth in the bill of complaint in the second named cause is postponed by the court until after the sale of the said lands of the said Ruleys above decreed to be sold.” From this decree, the Ruleys obtained an appeal to this Court and the cause was decided here April 28, 1897, and is reported in 43 W. Va. 513. The decree was affirmed. At December rules, 1897, G. W. Farr, filed his petition in the causes, alleging a judgment in his favor against F. J. Ruley for the sum of twenty-six dollars and thirty cents and attaching the conveyance of the two hundred and twenty-seven acres of land as fraudulent. At the same time W. S. Stuart, administrator of the estate of C. J. Stuart, filed his petition, setting up a decree in his favor for four hundred and thirty dollars and eighteen cents against the Ruleys, Holmes and Hammond and likewise attacking the conveyance of the two hundred and twenty-seven acre tract. At the same time J. B. Markev filed his petition setting up a decree in his favor for two hundred and. eighty-four dollars and sixty-seven cents against the Ruleys, Holmes and Hammond and attacking said conveyance as fraudulent. At the same time the Merchants National Bank filed its petition alleging a decree in its favor against the same parties for six hundred and twenty dollars and fifty-seven cents and attacking said conveyance. The amounts set up in these petitions had been adjudicated to the petitioners in the decree of the 6th day of September, 1894, and the lands of the defendant, except the two hundred and twenty-seven acre tract and the lands of A. C. Holmes, had been sold under that decree but the proceeds had been insufficient to pay these amounts, as well as the sums decreed to Foley who had filed the first bill. Farr’s claim was made the eleventh lien on the lands of F. J. Ruley. The claims of Stuart, administrator, and Marlcey had been made the tenth lien on the three hundred and fifty-six and one-half acre tract and the ninth on all the other lands of the Ruleys except the one hundred and nine acres upon which they were the seventh. The claim of the Merchants National Bank of West Yirginia had been made seventh lien on the three hundred and fifty-six and one-half acres and sixth on the other lands except the one hundred and nine acres. The three hundred and eighteen dollars, and fifteen cents claim of Foley was one of the eighth liens on the three hundred and fifty-six and one-half acre tract, seventh on all the other lands except the one hundred and nine acres upon which it was one of the sixth. The [162]*162seven hundred and eleven dollars and thirty-two cents claim of Foley was made the ninth lien on the three hundred and fifty-six and one-half acre tract, eighth on all the other lands except the one hundred and nine acre tract upon which it was the seventh. On the first day of December, 1897, the court entered another decree in which it set aside, annulled and vacated the deed by which Douglas and wife conveyed to Anne E. Ruley the two hundred and twenty-seven acre tract of land as to thirteen-seventeenths of said tract of land, and decreed that Anne E. Ruley have and hold the other four-seventeenths of it.

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Bluebook (online)
55 L.R.A. 916, 40 S.E. 382, 50 W. Va. 158, 1901 W. Va. LEXIS 96, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/foley-v-ruley-wva-1901.