Gill v. Barbour

80 Va. 11, 1885 Va. LEXIS 34
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 8, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 80 Va. 11 (Gill v. Barbour) 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
Gill v. Barbour, 80 Va. 11, 1885 Va. LEXIS 34 (Va. 1885).

Opinion

LACY, J.,

delivered the opimon of the court.

In the suits of Barbour v. Barbour a tract of land called "Fleetwood," situated in the county of ()ulpeper, was ordered [12]*12to be sold; and on the 21st of August, 1855, the said tract of land was sold to Henry Miller, at. the price of $80,000, by. special commissioners of the court. This sale was reported to. court and confirmed.

In 1862 Henry Miller died intestate, leaving $3,055.07 of the purchase-money for this land still unpaid.

In April, 1866, J. G. and II. B. Miller & Co. and other creditors of Henry Miller instituted a chancery suit in the circuit court of Culpeper to subject the real estate of Henry Miller to the payment of his debts, the personal estate proving insufficient; and Barbour and Thompson, the special commissioners of the circuit court of Fauquier, who had made the sale of “Fleet-wood” to Henry Miller, were made parties defendants. The bill was a general creditors’ bill, and set forth that the whole of the purchase-monej'for “Fleetwood” had been paid.

In June, 1866, a decree was entered in this suit for accounts, it not appearing to the court that Henry Miller had fully paid the purchase-money for “Fleetwood.”

In November, 1866, the Barbour suits were removed from the circuit court of Fauquier to the circuit court of Culpeper, and there docketed, and ordered to be heard with the suit of Miller v. Miller.

In the same month a decree was entered for the sale of “Fleetwood,” to pay the debts of Henry Miller, and commissioners appointed to make the sale, an account ordered of the balance due to the commissioners of the court in the Barbour suits, Barbour and Thompson, and the purpose of the court declared to pay to them the balance due them out of the proceeds ■of the sale of “Fleetwood.”

Menefee and Gibson were appointed commissioners of the court to make the sale, and on the 16th of September, 1867, they sold “Fleetwood” to J. G. Miller, at the sum of $26,590.50, which sale was reported to and confirmed by the court on the 9th of November, 1867. J. G. Miller was the largest creditor of Henry Miller, holding a trust-deed lien of $13,000 on [13]*13“Fleetwood.” He became the owner of the other debts against Henry Miller by purchase, and the same were assigned to him, except the lien due on the original purchase by Henry Miller in the Barbour suits. This amount is called in the subsequent proceedings the Barbour lien.

In April, 1874, a decree was entered in the causes, continuing the report of the commissioner as to the amount of the Barbour and other liens, and commissioners Menefee and Gibson directed to collect the balance of the purchase-money due upon the purchase of “Fleetwood,” allowing J. G. Miller to retain so much of the said purchase-money as he was entitled to by purchase. And they were directed to deposit the money so collected in the Bank of Culpeper. On May 1st, 1874, the same commissioners were directed not to deposit this money when collected in the said bank, but to pay it to the court commissioners in the Barbour suits, Barbour and Thompson, upon the execu-cution by the said Barbour and Thompson of a bond, in the penalty of $10,000, properly conditioned, it being a matter in controversy whether this money belonged to the devisees of Mrs. Barbour’s father, James Byrne, or to the creditors of Mrs. Barbour; and a reference ivas had to a commissioner to ascertain and report upon that question.

After a rule against J. G. Miller-to show cause against it, at the February term, 1875, a decree was entered upon the return of the fide, directing J. G Miller to pay this money to the commissioners of the court, Menefee and Gibson, within sixty days, in default of which the said commissioners were directed to sell “Fleetwood” again, and the decree directing the payment to commissioner's Barbour and Thompson ivas set aside as to that direction.

In the meantime J. G. Miller had sold “Fleetwood” to J. G. ITewes, and at the request of said Ilewes conveyed the same to the appellants, Gill and Bringman. And at the April term, 1875, the said trustees filed their petition in the cause, setting forth the fact that they had become the purchasers of “Fleet-[14]*14wood”; had assumed the payment of the Barbour lien still subsisting thereon; that they were prepared to pay the same, amounting on that day to §5,450.18, and had deposited that sum in the Bank of Culpeper, taking a certificate for the same; praying the court to receive, and disburse as was right the same, and set aside the decree of the February term directing a resale to pay the said lien, and that they he relieved of the lien of the said Barbour debt. The Bank of Culpeper was in the town of Culpeper, in which the court was then being held.

On the 6th of April the court, by decree in the cause, gave the petitioners leave to file their petition and the said certificate of deposit, and sot aside the decree which had been entered in the cause at the February term preceding, to sell the said land to satisfy the said Barbour lien; and on the next day, by its order, drew out of the said bank §500 of the said sum of money so deposited to pay to the said commissioners, Men-efee arid Gibson, their commissions then unpaid on the said sale.

On the 5th of July following the causes were, by decree en- ■ tered therein, removed to the circuit court of Fauquier for further proceedings to lie had therein.

On the 24th of December, 1875, the circuit court of Fauquier entered a decree directing one of the said commissioners of the court, Gibson, to withdraw from the papers in the causes the certificate of the Bank of Culpeper, and to collect the same.

The Bank of Culpeper was unable to pay the said sum, and it was lost.

"Whore does the loss fall — on those entitled to the Bai’bonr lien, or on the purchasers of the land — the appellants? The circuit court of Fauquier, by its decree of December 23d, 1876, held that the sum of §5,450.18, paid -in cash in the Bank of Culpeper, was received by the circuit court of Culpeper as a payment on account of the purchase-money of the realty called “Fleetwood” due by J. G. Miller, the purchaser thereof, and was a credit to these causes in said bank, and that the said sum not having been appropriated by decree made subsequently [15]*15-to said 5th day of April, 1875, to any claim to any party to these causes (save and except a portion thereof paid to the commissioners of sale for their commissions), if the same be lost by the insolvency of said bank, such loss is to be borne by the general fund in the causes, and not to fall upon the devisees of Janies Byrne, deceased; and that the Barbour lien is still due and unpaid, and is the first lien upon the land called “Fleet-wood.” By the decree of April, 1879, the court received and dismissed the petition of the appellants for a rehearing, and by the decree of December, 1881, decreed a sale of “Fleetwood,” to satisfy the Barbour lien, that appearing to be the only lien unsatisfied.

From these decrees the appellants applied for and obtained an appeal to this court, which was awarded July 14th, 1882.

The sole question in this cause in dispute in this court is whether the loss of this fund in the Bank of Culpeper, deposited in the bank under the foregoing circumstances, should fall on the purchaser or on the creditor.

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Bluebook (online)
80 Va. 11, 1885 Va. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gill-v-barbour-va-1885.