Gall v. Cowell

190 S.E. 130, 118 W. Va. 263, 1937 W. Va. LEXIS 13
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 16, 1937
Docket8493
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 190 S.E. 130 (Gall v. Cowell) 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
Gall v. Cowell, 190 S.E. 130, 118 W. Va. 263, 1937 W. Va. LEXIS 13 (W. Va. 1937).

Opinion

Riley, Judge:

This is a suit in equity brought by C. E. Lawhead, the then receiver of the Bank of the Monongahela Valley against Wesley Alvin Cowell and Glenn Hunter for the purpose of having set aside a contract of sale of a certain judgment in favor of the said Lawhead and against Max DeLynn and Isaac A. DeLynn, brothers, entered on September 10, 1932, in the principal amount of $25,868.-53, which contract of sale was entered into on March 19, *265 1935, with the said Lawhead, receiver, as vendor and the defendant, Wesley Alvin Cowell, as vendee. During the course of the suit, the said C. E. Lawhead had resigned as receiver and O. H. Gall having been appointed in his place, he was substituted as a party plaintiff for the said Lawhead. On demurrer to the bill of complaint, a defect of parties plaintiff having been raised, the Bank of the Monongahela Valley was made a party plaintiff by order of the court. From a final decree in favor of the defendants, entered on June 22, 1936, the plaintiffs appeal.

The defendant, Glenn Hunter, is a lawyer who has practiced at the bar of Monongalia County for many years. He had been the attorney and a director for Union Bank & Trust Company, which bank, on August 2, 1930, by assignment, had transferred all of its assets to the Bank of the Monongahela Valley. At the time of this transfer, he had in his hands as such attorney for said Union Bank & Trust Company, several small items of business in the court of bankruptcy which he continued to have charge of on March 19, 1935, the date of the contract under consideration. The work of handling these items of business simply entailed Hunter’s appearance on occasions at creditors’ meetings in the Bankruptcy court and the payment of dividends to the receiver. On August 2, 1930, Hunter had been elected a director of the Bank of the Monongahela Valley and continued to serve in that capacity until the failure of said Monongahela Valley Bank on December 31, 1930, on which date the said C. E. Lawhead was appointed by the banking commissioner as the receiver of said bank. The record does not disclose the removal or resignation of the said Hunter. For the severance of his relationship as a director of the bank, he relies wholly upon its failure and the appointment of the receiver.

On March 19, 1935, the date of the contract in question, Hunter was indebted to the receiver of the Bank of Monongahela Valley in the amount of $19,546.46, subject to certain credits in the amount of $3,918.09. In addition to these credits, Hunter claimed an additional *266 credit for unpaid attorney’s fees in the amount of about $4,000.00. Of the total indebtedness, all except $630.50, the balance of double liability on the stock owned by Hunter in the Bank of the Monongahela Valley, consisted of original indebtedness based on notes and double liability for stock owed to the Union Bank & Trust Company.

The judgment debtors, Max DeLynn and Isaac A. De-Lynn, owned an undivided one-half interest in three certain parcels of real estate situated in the City of Morgan-town. For purposes of convenience, these parcels of real estate will be called the Woolworth property, the Standish building and the McNeill property. Of these parcels of real estate, the Woolworth property was by far the most valuable. It is with this parcel that this case is largely concerned. One Sampson Finn was the owner of the other undivided one-half interest in said three parcels of real estate.

The building on the Woolworth property was built by F. W. Woolworth Company and leased by the DeLynns and the said Sampson Finn to said company under a fifty year lease which began April 1, 1927, and will expire March 31, 1977. This lease contains various provisions as to insurance and other matters which do not enter into this suit. The rent reserved in the lease for the first ten years was $10,000.00 per year and the lease provided for an increase in rent at the rate of $2,000.00 every ten years’ period during the course of the lease. By agreement between the lessor and lessees, the rentals were reduced under the lease by a sum of $500.00 per year for the first three ten-year periods. In 1924, the De-Lynns and Finn executed a deed of trust in favor of the Fidelity Trust Company of Pittsburgh on the Woolworth property to secure the sum of $50,000.00, the principal of which indebtedness as of March 19, 1935, was in the amount of $40,000.00; and in 1930, the same parties executed a deed of trust on the Standish property (improved) , to secure a loan of $50,000.00, from the aforesaid company. Approximately $44,000.00 of the latter loan remains unpaid.

*267 On November 22, 1927, by an assignment duly recorded, the DeLynns assigned all their interests in the rents under the Woolworth lease to Bankers Trust Company of Philadelphia to secure the payment of an indebtedness in the amount of $46,000.00 with the provision that upon the repayment of said sum, said rentals shall revert to the lessees. The DeLynns’ share of the rentals under the Woolworth lease ranged from $5,000.-00 per year up to $9,000.00 per year.

At the time of the appointment of the receiver for the bank, the DeLynns were also indebted to the bank in the amount of about $25,000.00. The foregoing included a $15,000.00 and a $10,000.00 loan made early in 1930, a deed of trust having been given on the Woolworth property to secure the former, and on the Standish, to secure the latter. This indebtedness was reduced to a judgment in favor of the receiver in the amount of $25,868.53, by judgment order entered on September 10, 1932. This judgment was later secured by an assignment to the receiver of the Bank of the Monongahela Valley of the Woolworth rents, dated January 31, 1933, which assignment, of course, was subject to the previous assignment made to the Bankers Trust Company.

Sampson Finn, the DeLynns’ co-tenant, was financially sound and, as the record disclosed, was prompt in the payment of his obligations. However, the DeLynn brothers were unable to comply strictly with the terms of their contract to the Fidelity Trust Company, and, during the course of two years, had been delinquent in the payment of their interest. It was because of Finn’s financial worth and responsibility that the Fidelity Trust Company had extended the original time of payment upon its loan on the Woolworth property from December 16, 1929, to December 16, 1934, without requiring any deductions of principal and had, at least through one of its officers, consented to the assignment to the Bankers Trust Company.

At one time, Hunter made an effort personally to purchase for himself the DeLynn judgment and later, that is, in March, 1933, as the attorney for Finn, he again *268 tried to purchase this judgment and made an offer of $9,500.00, but the receiver refused to take less than $10,-000.00. The price of $10,000.00 was determined by the receiver, Lawhead, with the approval of the banking commissioner and, as Lawhead himself testified, this sum of $10,000.00 was the purchase price for the judgment from the very date the judgment was entered, and was regarded by the receiver as a fair and reasonable price for said judgment. The approval of the banking commissioner was given in May, 1933. After the receiver refused to accept the Finn offer of $9,500.00, Finn, for some unexplained reason, withdrew as a possible purchaser.

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Bluebook (online)
190 S.E. 130, 118 W. Va. 263, 1937 W. Va. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gall-v-cowell-wva-1937.