Garnett v. Loven

80 Va. 456, 1885 Va. LEXIS 83
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedApril 16, 1885
StatusPublished

This text of 80 Va. 456 (Garnett v. Loven) 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
Garnett v. Loven, 80 Va. 456, 1885 Va. LEXIS 83 (Va. 1885).

Opinion

Faustleroy, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from two decrees of the circuit court of Caroline county, rendered, the one September 10th, 1880, and the other September 14th, 1882, in a chancery proceeding brought in the said court by George Loven against R. 33. Gar-nett and others.

In 1870, certain creditors of T. C. Martin, then deceased, filed their bill against the heirs of the said Martin, to enforce their claims against the real estate of said Martin, consisting of a farm of some eight hundred or more acres of land, lying partly in Caroline county, and partly in King and Queen county. The said real estate of said T. C. Martin, deceased, had been surveyed and divided off into parcels, and partitioned among the children and heirs of the said Martin; and a decree was entered in the suit of Wright and others against Martin’s administrator and others, on the 14th of April, 1873, confirming the report of the master commissioner ascertaining the estate and the debts of the deceased, and directing a sale to be made, by commissioners appointed for the purpose, of the said real estate of the said T. C. Martin, deceased.

In execution of said decree, the commissioners of sale, R. 0. Peatross and J. hi. Hudgin, proceeded to offer to sell at public auction, on the premises, May 24th, 1873, the real estate in the bill and proceedings mentioned, upon the terms provided in said decree: and, in accordance with the wishes of bidders, and that they might the more readily effect sales, they offered the property in lots or parcels, and did, thereby, sell the said land [458]*458in detail to- sundry and independent bidders: which said sales they reported duly to the circuit court of Caroline, and they were approved and confirmed by the said court; and deeds were executed and delivered by the said commissioners to the said several purchasers of the several and separate parcels of land.

On the 9th day of August, 1875, the said commissioners executed and delivered their deed to R. B. Garnett, in which they recite that “whereas the said R. B. Garnett (who was one of the purchasers at the sale aforesaid) has paid the said commissioners in full for two hundred and eighty and one-half acres, the receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged, before the signing and delivery of this deed; now, therefore, this deed between the said parties, witnesseth that the parties of the first part do hereby grant and convey, with special warranty, unto the party of the second part, all that tract or parcel of land situated in the county of King and Queen, and lying east of the creek below the mill-dam (of Martin’s mill) to a point on said creek at which it intersects with that portion of the land allotted to A. M. Handley; and thence, etc., to the starting point — the mill-dam — containing in all two hundred and eighty and one-half acres, be the same more or less.” The said commissioners of sale made their deed on the 9th day of August, 1875, to George Loven, who had purchased at the aforesaid sale, and subsequently, several pieces or parcels of said real estate, in which they recite, that for and in consideration of the sum of fifteen hundred and ten dollars, with interest, paid by the said George Loven to said commissioners, the said parties of the first part hereby grant, sell and convey with special warranty, all their right, title and interest in and to the said three several tracts or parcels of land (including “Martin’s mill”) aggregating one hundred and eighty-seven acres, be the same more or less; said land is situated on both sides of the main road leading from Central Point to New Town, and west of the mill-pond and creek, and adjoining the land of 'Willis Pitts and others, it being [459]*459that 'portion of Thomas C. Martin’s estate lying in Caroline county.” At the May term, 1876, of the circuit court of Caroline, this suit of Wright and others v. Martin’s administrator and others was finally disposed of by the following order entered in the cause: “And it further appearing to the court that the costs have all been paid, and the object of the suit obtained, that the same be dismissed.”

In February 1880, without any motion, suggestion or order, for reviving or reinstating the aforesaid cause of Wright, &c., v. Martin’s administrator and others (a creditor’s bill, which had been ended, dismissed, and stricken from the docket nearly four years before,) George Loven filed his petition in the said cause, praying for an injunction to restrain the said II. B. Garnett from recovering a portion of the land purchased by the said Garnett at the said sale, made as aforesaid, under the proceedings in the said creditor’s suit, and for which he had fully paid and obtained and recorded his deed as aforesaid, upon the ground that there was a mistake in his deed, and on the 7th day of February, 1880, an injunction was awarded, to restrain “R. B. Garnett, his agents and attorneys, and all others, from further proceeding in and under a case of unlawful detainer, brought by him against the petitioner, George Loven, in the county court of King & Queen county, until the further order of the circuit court of Caroline.”

To the filing of this petition by the said George Loven, the said R. B. Garnett demurred; and he demurred to the said petition and answered. On the 10th day of September, 1880, the cause coming on to be heard upon the said petition, and the demurrer and answer thereto, the court overruled the said demurrer, and treated the petition as an original bill.

On the 14th day of September, 1882, the cause came on for final hearing, upon the papers formerly read in the cause, and upon depositions taken and filed in the papers of the cause; whereupon, the court decreed, that “Reuben B. Garnett make [460]*460a deed, with, special warranty, conveying to George Loven the thirty-two and one-half acres of land lying south of the Mill creek, in King & Queen county, Virginia; which land was, through mistake, conveyed to R. B. Garnett by Commissioners Hudgin and Peatross, in this cause”

We are of opinion that the circuit court of Caroline erred in overruling the demurrer to the petition, and in treating it as an original bill. It should have been dismissed, for want of equity upon its face. E. B. Garnett was a purchaser of a distinct and separate, and well defined piece or parcel of land, sold by commissioners of the circuit court under decrees rendered in the suit of Wright & others v. Martin, &c., which had been ended and dismissed for four years; and the petitioner, George Loven, had no privity or relation, or cause of action against the said R. B. Garnett whatever in that suit, or any equity arising from any proceedings had therein. If he had any whatever, it was against the commissioners of sale in the ended and dismissed chancery suit of Wright, &c. v. Martin, &c. If he had cause of complaint, his redress was at law against Hudgin and Peatross, commissioners of sale; or in equity, against the creditors of Thomas C. Martin, who had participated in the proceeds of the sale of the said land. The petition and statements in evidence of George Loven, show that the defendant, E. B. Garnett, has, at the least, equal equities in the land in question, and has secured the legal title, by a good and approved and recorded deed from the circuit court; and there is neither fraud nor mistake shown, as between the parties, such as a court of equity should correct, in this proceeding. Vide, Lea’s ex’or v. Eidson,

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Bluebook (online)
80 Va. 456, 1885 Va. LEXIS 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garnett-v-loven-va-1885.