Harrison & Wife v. Manson

29 S.E. 420, 95 Va. 593, 1898 Va. LEXIS 21
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedFebruary 3, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 29 S.E. 420 (Harrison & Wife v. Manson) 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
Harrison & Wife v. Manson, 29 S.E. 420, 95 Va. 593, 1898 Va. LEXIS 21 (Va. 1898).

Opinion

Keith, P.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Harrison and wife hied their bill in the Circuit Court of Brunswick county, asking to have a deed executed by Bobert Turnbull, trustee, to B. W. Manson, dated December 20, 1894, annulled, upon the ground of fraud. The defendant answered, and, the cause coming on to be heard upon the pleadings and proof, the bill was dismissed, and it is before us upon appeal.

Bobert Turnbull was trustee in a deed of trust given by Sallie E. Harrison, in which her husband united, to secure a debt due by bond to Mary L. Tillman for the sum of $685, with interest from December 1, 1888. Mrs. Tillman having died, her executrix, Mrs. J. D. Elam, became the owner of this debt, and instructed Turnbull, the trustee, to advertise the real estate conveyed to him for sale, unless the Harrisons could arrange for its payment before a given date. Ho such arrangement was made, and, on December 5, 1894, Turnbull, trustee, sold the land, and reported B. W. Manson as the purchaser at the price of $900 in cash, and, on the 20th of December following he executed a deed conveying this land to the purchaser.

At the time this land was sold there was a lien upon it subsequent to the deed of trust, in favor of H. S. Harrison, and also a balance due him by Mrs. Sallie E. Harrison on account of money advanced to pay interest upon the Tillman bond. H. S. Harrison was a kinsman and friend of Mrs. Sallie E. Harrison, and a brother-in-law of Bobert Turnbull. He spent the night of December 4th at the house of Turnbull, and, in a conversation between them with reference to the sale of this land and the debt due by Mrs. Sallie E. Harrison to him, Turnbull, as he states in his answer, told him that he hoped the land would sell for enough to pay his debt, but that, in case it did not, he (Turnbull) would do his best to protect his interest. The land [595]*595was offered for sale on the 5th of December, when Mr. Elam bid enough to cover the principal and interest on the Tillman debt, and the land was cried by the auctioneer for some time at that bid, H. S. Harrison having in vain endeavored to induce others to bid for the property. Thereupon Turnbull, trustee, directed the auctioneer to cry a bid of $900, which was somewhat in excess of the amount necessary to satisfy the Tillman debt. Turnbull, before the land was cried off, being asked the name of the bidder by James H. Harrison, replied that “he did not as yet know.” Subsequently R. W. Manson was declared to have beien the purchaser at the price of $900, and, as has already been stated, a deed was made to him.

The contention in the bill is that Turnbull made the bid upon the land in his own interest, and that he himself was the purchaser, but the fact is, as shown by the evidence, that the bid was made by Turnbull in the interest of H. S. Harrison, in order to enable him, if possible, to realize something upon the debt due him by Sallie E. Harrison, which would otherwise be wholly lost.

At the January term of the County Court of Brunswick county, an action of unlawful detainer was instituted in the name of R. "W". Manson against James H. and Sallie E. Harrison for the recovery of the possession of the land in controversy, they having declined to surrrender it. In this action the defendants pleaded “not guilty,” and, upon the trial, judgment was rendered for the plaintiff. Harrison and wife had in the mean time, become so far informed of the true situation as to doubt whether Manson was the real purchaser. They presented a bill to the Circuit Court of Brunswick county praying for an injunction to the judgment requiring them to deliver possession of this property, but the injunction was refused. They made a second ineffectual attempt to enjoin that proceeding, and finally they filed the bill in this cause.

The defendant Turnbull contends that having pleaded “not guilty” to the action of unlawful detainer, was such an election [596]*596between tbe remedies open to tbe appellants as concludes them by the result of tbe trial upon tbat issue; tbat courts, both of law and equity, bave jurisdiction to entertain controversies, and give relief in cases of fraud, and tbat an election to pursue a remedy in one forum precludes a resort to tbe other.

Tbe action of unlawful detainer was brought in tbe name of Manson- against Harrison and wife. Tbe only question in issue there was as to tbe right of possession. Had tbe defendants successfully defended tbat suit, and bad a judgment been rendered in their behalf, tbe deed from Turnbull to Manson would still bave been upon record, and bave constituted such a cloud upon tbe title as would bave given jurisdiction to- a court- of equity in a suit for its removal. Tbe issue, as well as tbe parties before tbe court in the unlawful detainer suit, was altogether different from tbe issue presented in tbe present controversy. Here we bave tbe familiar case of cestuis que trust calling a trustee to account in a court of equity, and asking relief in tbat forum for an act done by him, prejudicial to their interest, and 'to bave a deed set aside by which their rights bave been injuriously affected. We bave no difficulty in bolding tbat tbe jurisdiction of a court of chancery can, with propriety, be invoked in such a case.

On behalf of the appellants it is claimed tbat tbe sale which took place in December, 1894, was tbe culminating act in a deliberate and well-concerted scheme contrived by tbe trustee to defraud Mrs. Harrison, and to enable him to- purchase at a sacrifice for bis own benefit tbe property conveyed to- him by her in trust to secure her creditors.

In order to make good this charge, tbe record in tbe chancery suit of Harrison against Walton’s executors is vouched. Tbat was a suit instituted by Sallie E. and James H. Harrison against Eobert Turnbull as tbe executor of Emma E. Walton, tbe mother of Mrs. Harrison, for tbe settlement of Mrs. Walton’s estate. It was, in its inception at least, a friendly suit, and Turnbull appeared as counsel for tbe plaintiff, and was himself, [597]*597as the executor of the will of Mrs. Walton, the defendant. The appellants charge that in the conduct of this suit Turnbull was guilty of many acts of impropriety; that he purchased claims against the estate of Mrs. Walton, when it was his duty to defend her estate against all claims asserted against it; and that in particular he preferred against the estate of his decedent a claim of Mrs. Harrison against her mother, who had been her guardian, for a sum of money greatly in excess of what was actually due, having failed to insist upon a credit to which the guardian was entitled, and which appeared of record; that these omissions of duty and positive acts of dereliction on the part of Turnbull were parts of the design which he had formed to render a sale of the real estate of which Mrs. Walton had died seised necessary.

There was a decree for a sale, and at that sale Mrs. Harrison became the purchaser, paying the greater part of the purchase money with the decree which had been rendered in her favor against her mother’s estate, but the balance due, over and above that decree, 'with some other debts which she had to pay, was the cause of her subsequently borrowing money from Mrs. Tillman, and giving the deed of trust To secure it, for default in the payment of which her land was ultimately sold.

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Bluebook (online)
29 S.E. 420, 95 Va. 593, 1898 Va. LEXIS 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harrison-wife-v-manson-va-1898.