French v. Waterman

79 Va. 617, 1884 Va. LEXIS 121
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedDecember 4, 1884
StatusPublished

This text of 79 Va. 617 (French v. Waterman) 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
French v. Waterman, 79 Va. 617, 1884 Va. LEXIS 121 (Va. 1884).

Opinion

Lacy, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court:

The case is as follows: In March, 1876, the appellee, Simon Waterman, brought this suit to subject the lands in the bill mentioned to the payment of a note executed by the appellant, Laura J. French and her husband, James S. French, for the payment of the sum of $333.31 to said Waterman on the 18th of December, 1874. It appeared from the original and amended bills of the plaintiff, and the exhibits filed therewith, that on the same day the land in question was conveyed to the appellant, Laura J. French, she and her husband united in a deed conveying the same, in trust, to a trustee, to secure, first, the [619]*619payment of certain debts therein specified as due from her said husband to Mrs. Sallie Carter and W. D. Corse & Co., respectively, and then to indemnify one E. E. Garnett against any claims or charges against a tract of land in the county of Tazewell, which had been conveyed to him by the appellant, Laura J. French, and her husband, by deed of even date therewith. It further appeared that the said appellant and her husband, for the purpose of securing the payment of debts due from him, had united in three several deeds of trust upon said land, one of them having been executed on the 2d of October, 1872, one on the 5th day of February, 1874, and the other on the 20th day of April, 1874. It further appeared by an exhibit filed with the said original and amended bills, that one James Mc-Culloch, by deed dated 11th of March, 1859, had conveyed certain real estate, situated in the city of Alexandria, to Robert S. French, upon trust, that the said Robert S. French should permit the appellant, Laura J. French, to occupy, possess and enjoy the same, and to take the rents, issues, and profits thereof, for and during her life, for her support, and for the sustenance of her children by her said husband, James S. French, born and to be born, free and clear of, and from all manner of charge and encumbrance of her said husband, or any husband she might thereafter have; and upon the further trust, that should she die before her husband, James S. French, the said property should pass to her children to the exclusion of him; and in the event of the death of any of her children before arriving at age or being married, and before the death of the said Laura J. French, the proportion to which he or she would be entitled, should pass to the said Laura J. French and her children remaining, to the exclusion of her husband, the said James S. French ; but should he survive both his wife and his children by her, the property was to pass and belong to him; power being given in the deed to the said Laura J. French to sell the said real estate and invest the proceeds of such sale in other property, to be held upon the same trusts and limitations.

[620]*620It further appeared, by an exhibit filed with the said bills, that under the power thus given her, the said appellant, Laura J. French, and her trustee, Robert S. French, in April, 1875, sold said real estate in the city of Alexandria for the sum of five thousand dollars and invested said amount in the purchase of the said tract of land in the county of Culpeper above mentioned, which had been conveyed to her separate use by Robert E. Garnett, as mentioned above as having been encumbered by the several named trust deeds, a large portion of said amount being applied to the payment of the encumbrances stated above.

Accordingly, on the 28th day of April, 1875, the said Laura J. French and her husband, and the trustees and creditors in the trust deeds of 5th of February, 1874, and 20th of April, 1874, in consideration of said sum of $5,000, paid and applied as aforesaid, united in conveying said tract of land to the said Robert S. French as trustee for the said Laura J. French and her children, upon the same trusts and with the same limitations declared and set forth in said trust deed of March 11th, 1859, executed by James McCulloch.

The appellee, Waterman, having set forth all these facts, made the appellant, Laura J. French, and her children, and husband, and the trustees and beneficiaries in each of the said deeds of trust, defendants; called upon the parties secured by said deeds to answer and say how much, if anything, was due them respectively, and asked for all necessary accounts to he taken, and asked for a decree to subject the land in question to the payment of his claim, claiming that inasmuch as dhe note for the same was executed before the conveyance of April the 28th, 1875, said land was chargeable therewith.

On the 6th of June, 1878, the cause came on to he heard upon the answer of the infant defendants by guardian ad litem, appointed by the court, a general demurrer filed by Laura J. French and her husband to the original and amended hill, and upon said bills taken for confessed as to all of the other defendants. Whereupon the court, by decree entered in the cause, [621]*621overruled the demurrer and referred the cause to one of its commissioners to take:

First. An account of the separate estate of Laura J. French in the tract of land conveyed to her by deed of E. E. Garnett and wife, of November 6th, 1871; of the fee simple and annual value of the same; and also of the balance of her separate estate, if any, liable for the plaintiff’s debt under the deed of April 28th, 1875, filed as an exhibit with the amended bill; and to report whether the separate estate which the said Laura J. French had under the deed from E. E. Garnett is liable for the plaintiff’s debt.

Secondly. To take an account of the plaintiff’s debt, and of all other debts constituting liens upon said separate estate, with their priorities, if any.

On the 12th day of October, 1878, the commissioner filed his report under said decree, by which it was made to appear that there was due to Rohert E. Garnett, on account of amounts paid by him on the Tazewell lands, $650 with interest and $536.88 with interest, which constituted the first lien, and the'plaintiff’s debt of $333.31, which constituted the second lien, and that all the other liens thereon had been paid; that the land was worth $4,277.50, and its annual value $150.

This report was recommitted, and again reported without change.

In June, 1879, James S. French answered. And on the 7th of November exceptions were filed by Laura J. French and her children to both reports of the commissioner:

1st. Because E. E. Garnett was allowed two debts stated above without proof that any debt was due him at all.

2d.. Because the plaintiff, Waterman, was allowed a debt of $407.36 as a charge on the separate estate of Laura J. French, when it appeared by the record that the separate estate she had when she executed the negotiable note filed with the bill, was subsequently sold for a valuable consideration; sold and con[622]*622veyed by deed of record before the institution of this suit; and the separate estate acquired since is not liable for said debt.

On the same day these exceptions were filed, a decree was entered overruling them, confirming the commissioner’s report,- and appointing commissioners to sell so much of the land as was necessary to pay the debts appearing to be due by the said commissioner’s report.

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Bluebook (online)
79 Va. 617, 1884 Va. LEXIS 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/french-v-waterman-va-1884.