Gayle v. Wilson

30 Gratt. 166
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 15, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 30 Gratt. 166 (Gayle v. Wilson) 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
Gayle v. Wilson, 30 Gratt. 166 (Va. 1878).

Opinion

STAPLES, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellant claims under John C. Edwards, who purchased from his brother. Nathaniel Edwards, in the year 1860. At the time of this purchase the land was subject to four deeds of trust: the first and second of which were for the benefit of Dr. Tames Cornick. the third for the benefit of the Portsmouth Orphan Asylum, and the fourth for the benefit of Beaton’s estate. John C. Edwards, after his purchase, paid a part of the debts secured by the Cornick deeds, and the appellant, as his assignee, now claims to be substituted to the lien of those deeds, and thus to obtain priority over the debt due the [69]*69Orphan Asylum. The fund being insufficient to pay all the liens, it becomes important to determine its proper application.

The evidence shows that John C. Edwards, when he made the purchase, was fully apprized of the existence *of these deeds of trust. Indeed, the conveyance from Nathaniel Edwards to him declares that it is made subject to them. Although John C. Edwards does not expressly undertake to pay them, there is no doubt that such was the understanding of the parties. His deposition was taken by consent, and in it he gives a history of the transaction. He states that both as endorser and surety he was responsible for his brother to a considerable amount, along with A. Emmerson and George W. Grice; that before his brother’s death the latter, without consultation with the witness and without his knowledge, had the deed prepared; that witness was sent for to go to Emmerson’s office, and he (Emmerson) explained that if the witness paid all the debts mentioned, and the mortgages, then the land would belong to witness. The latter said the land was not worth it. He, however, signed the deed, agreeing to pay all the debts of Nathaniel Edwards, for which Emmerson, Grice and himself were bound. From this it is apparent that while John C. Edwards expressed the opinion that the value of the land was not equal to the debts, he nevertheless consented to the arrangement, and agreed to take the land upon the terms suggested, [f he was not willing to accede to these terms, he ought to have said so and refused to sign the deed. Further on in his deposition he admits, on cross-examination, the only benefit he expected at the time to derive from the purchase was whatever might remain from the sale of the land “after the payment of the deeds of trust.” I do not think Nathaniel Edwards would have sold the land, except with the understanding that, as between him and the purchaser, the land was to remain the primary fund for the payment of the incumbrances. It is very certain that John C. Edwards would never have paid his brother the full value of the land, with the incumbrances upon it, and trusted solely to the covenants in the deed for his indemnity. Whilst, therefore, John C. Edwards did not make himself personally liable for the trust debts, it is very certain, I think, they were considered a part of the purchase money, and that he agreed to take the land, and, as he himself states, rely for his indemnity upon any surplus remaining after satisfying the incumbrances. As a general rule, a conveyance of property subject to a mortgage imposes no personal liability on the grantee. It, however, raises a presumption that the purchaser buys the property to the extent stated, and that he takes his chances of realizing out of the property enough, over and above the mortgage, to indemnify him for his advance of purchase money. The fair inference is, that the purchaser does not pay the vendor the full value of the property, but that the amount of the mortgage debt is reserved in his hands as so much purchase money for the purpose of discharging the lien. In such case, the land conveyed is as effectually charged with the amount of the mortgage as if the purchaser had expressly assumed its payment. As between the vendor and the purchaser of the equity of redemption, the land is the primary fund for the liquidation of the incumbrance. See Daniel v. Leitch, 13 Gratt. 195, 206; Jumel v. Jumel, 7 Paige R. 591, 11 Paige 28; Stebbins v. Hall, 29 Barb. R. 524; Jones on Mortgages, §§ 736, 740-8-9, 756.

In Wedge v. Moore, 6 Cush. R. 8-10, Chief Justice Shaw, in discussing the rights of the purchaser who had discharged the mortgage and claimed the benefit of it, said: “'Such a payment made no difference. He (the purchaser) took his conveyance subject to that incumbrance, and it may be presumed that the consideration paid was less by the amount of that incumbrance than he otherwise would have paid, tie paid off the incumbrance to clear his own estate and took a discharge. The tenant (that is the purchaser) must have agreed to pay off and discharge this mortgage as part of the purchase, *for otherwise he would, if evicted, have had a remedy under his general or special warranty against the grantor. The fact that the tenant obtained a discharge of the mortgage and did not take an assignment, leads to the conclusion that he was to pay the mortgage himself as in effect part of the purchase money.” These observations are as directly applicable to (he present case as to the one in which they were made. They relieve me of the necessity of any further discussion of this branch of the case. See also Eaton v. Simonds, 14 Pick. R. 98; Thompson v. Chandler, 7 Greenl. R. 377, In Spengler v. Snapp. 5 Leigh 678, Judge Carr said Joseph Stover bought the land under his deed of trust with proclamation that it was sold subject to Christian’s mortgages. These mortgages then became a part of the purchase money which Joseph Stover gave for the land.

We have still further proof that John C, Edwards was to pay off and discharge (he deeds of trust as part of the purchase money for the land. It appears that for ten successive years, commencing in 1860 and ending in 1870, he made payments to the Orphan Asylum upon the debt due that institution, amounting in the aggregate, principal and interest, to nearly two thousand dollars. According to the present pretension, he was under no obligation to make these payments. Why, then, did he make them? How can they be accounted for, except upon the supposition that the trust debts constituted a part of the purchase money, and as such he had agreed to pay them, and he well understood it was only by paying them (prior and subsequent) he could obtain a valid title to the land? His conduct in other respects sustains this view. For from 1860 down to 1871 he never, at any time during all that period, claimed that he could hold the Cornick deeds of trust for his own benefit, so far as he had paid them, to the entire exclusion of the Orphan Asylum. Not until the spring [70]*70of 1871, after the *land was sold and the proceeds in the hands of the trustee for distribution, was this claim asserted. It is clearly an after-thought growing out of the decline -in the value of the land, and the failure of the security. In opposition to .this view it is said that the value of the land would not have justified John C. Edwards in paying the incumbrances. Let us see how this is. The trust debts in round numbers amounted to a.bout nine thousand dollars. The debts for which he was bound as security amounted to about four thousand dollars — in all, thirteen thousand dollars, and certainly a very liberal estimate. The only evidence we have of the value of the lands is that of John C. Edwards, who proves ■ that his brother received an offer for it of twenty-two • thousand dollars two years before the war, and refused it. This statement is not contradicted or impugned in any respect. There is no countervailing testimony, and it must lie taken as proof of the value.

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30 Gratt. 166, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gayle-v-wilson-va-1878.