Gross v. Lewis

46 S.E. 174, 54 W. Va. 433, 1903 W. Va. LEXIS 140
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 16, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 46 S.E. 174 (Gross v. Lewis) 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
Gross v. Lewis, 46 S.E. 174, 54 W. Va. 433, 1903 W. Va. LEXIS 140 (W. Va. 1903).

Opinion

Milleh Judge :

George W. Gross, at the August rules, 1899, filed his bill in chancery in the clerk’s office of the circuit court of Tucker County, against James Lewis and Peter W. Schmidt. Plaintiff also sued out in said cause an attachment against the estate of said defendants, which was, by the sheriff of said county, levied upon a tract of land situated in the county aforesaid, described as [434]*434containing four hundred and ninety-seven acres. Both the bill and affidavit for the attachment aver that the defendants are non-residents of this state. The bill alleges that the defendants are indebted to the plaintiff in the sum of three hundred and twelve dollars and fifty cents; that theretofore, to to-wit: on the 14th day of February, 1898, the plaintiff and defendants entered into a contract whereby defendants sold to plaintiff all the hemlock timber on the ITaddix Run side of a certain tract of land, owned by them, containing four hundred and ninety-seven acres, situated on Iladdix and Clover Runs in Tucker County, fully described in a deed of conveyance by Charles W. Mayer to defendants, bearing date on the 18th day of June, 1889. A copy ■of the deed is filed with, and made part of, the bill. The plaintiff further avers that the contract price for the said timber on said lands, was fifty cents per thousand feet; that he took possession of said timber, and, in May, 1899, sold the same to A. McCauley, at the price of one dollar and twelve and one-half cents per thousand feet; that immediately after he entered into the contract for the sale of said timber to McCauley, and when said McCauley was about to begin the manufacture of said timber into lumber, the defendants repudiated the sale made to plaintiff by them, and refused to allow McCauley to carry out his contract with plaintiff for the purchase of said timber; that defendants, without any cause whatsoever, repudiated and refused to• comply with their contract with him for the sale of the timber, and prohibited him from selling said timber to Mc-Cauley, or any one else, and prevented him from cutting, and causing said timber to be cut, and sold, and the funds to be realized thereon by plaintiff at the price of one dollar and twelve and one-half cents aforesaid, whereby plaintiff would have made the profit of sixty-two and one-half cents per thousand feet, upon the whole quantity of said timber; that there was on the said land five hundred thousand feet of hemlock timber, bought by him from the defendants as aforesaid, and by him sold to McCauley, at the price aforesaid; and that he has been damaged in the sum of three hundred and twelve dollars and fifty cents, by reason of the refusal of defendants to carry out their said contract with him, and because defendants prohibited him from delivering said timber to McCauley. The plaintiff also alleges that the defendants are the owners of said four hundred and [435]*435ninety-seven acres of land; and further says that defendant, James Lewis, who was then, and still is, the owner of the undivided half of said four hundred and ninety-seven acres, did, on the first day of November, 1895, convey his said interest therein by deed to his co-defendant, Schmidt, for the pretended consideration of fifteen hundred dollars cash; but plaintiff charges that no consideration was paid, or to be paid, by Schmidt to Lewis for said land; that said conveyance was made in fraud and without any consideration. The plaintiff prays that he may have a decree to subject said land to the payment of his said demand of three hundred and twelve dollars and fifty cents with interest thereon, and the costs of his suit; that said deed from Lewis to Schmidt to be set aside and canceled ns to his demand; and that the said land be sold, to satisfy the same.

The deed from said Charles W. Mayer and his wife to said Lewis and Schmidt, bearing date as aforesaid, for said four hundred and ninety-seven acres of land, reserves on its face a lien upon said land in favor of Mayer to secure the payment of two notes for five hundred dollars each, executed by the defendants, bearing the same date as the said deed, and payable to Mayer, on the first day of January and July, respectively, 1890, being for parts of the purchase money for the land; but Mayer is not made a party to said cause.

On the 23rd day of November, 1899, the said circuit court entered a decree in the cause, reciting that it was heard upon the bill and exhibits, the order of publication as to the defendants, and the order of attachment against-the property of the defendants, levied as aforesaid. The decree then finds that there is due the plaintiff from the defendants the sum of three hundred and twenty dollars and thirty-one cents, and declares the said sum to be a lien upon the tract of four hundred and ninedy-sevon acres of land. “And it appearing that the said defendant Lewis hath conveyed his half interest in the said tract of land to his co-defendant Peter W. Schmidt, which conveyance is without consideration and fraudulent and void as to the said debt of the plaintiff, and to that extent be set aside, canceled and annulled.” The decree further provides for a sale of the land, in default of the payment of the sum decreed, against the defendants.

On the Tth day q| March, 1900, the defendants tendered to [436]*436the court tlieir petition, accompanied by proper bond, praying that the proceedings in said cause might be reheard, which petition and bond were accepted by the court and filed, the bond approved, and said defendants permitted to make defense, as in such case is provided by statute.

Defendants’ petition seems to have been intended for, and treated as, their answer to the bill. This could be done, so far as it contains proper matter for an answer. Sturm v. Fleming, 22 W. Va. 404. It specifically denies every material allegation of the bill. The defendants aver therein that it is not true that petitioner, Lewis, without any consideration, or with any fraudulent intent, conveyed his one-half interest in said tract of four hundred and ninety-seven acres of land to Schmidt, but it is true that said Mayer, on the 18th day of June, 1889, conveyed said tract of land to petitioners; that on the first day of November, 1895, petitioner, Lewis, conveyed to Schmidt his moity of the same, and that Schmidt paid him for it. They further deny that Lewis is a joint owner of said tract of land in equity or otherwise. A copy of said last mentioned deed is in the record, from which it appears that it was duly admitted to record in the county of Tucker on the 5th day of February, 1896. Depositions for both plaintiff and defendants were taken and filed in the cause.

The plaintiff, in answer to the question, “State whether you purchased the hemlock timber and bark on that certain tract of 'land, containing four hundred and ninety-seven acres on Haddix Creek, Tucker Count]'-, owned by the defendants, about February, 1898, if so, state at what price, and all about it,” said, “Why I did purchase it, I purchased all the hemlock on the Haddix Creek side of the survey at fifty cents a cord for the bark and fifty cents a thousand for the timber.” Witness further stated: “I just made the offer of fifty cents a thousand for the timber, and fifty cents a cord for the bark.” In answer to another question as to the quantity of the timber and bark on that part of the tract of land, tribuary to this Haddix Creek, plaintiff further stated, “I think there was about six hundred thousand feet of the hemlock timber. Somewhere close to two hundred and fifty cords of bark. I sawed about two hundred and fifty thousand feet of timber off of that part qf the tract, for I. H. Einard.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
46 S.E. 174, 54 W. Va. 433, 1903 W. Va. LEXIS 140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gross-v-lewis-wva-1903.