Hart v. Haynes

1 Va. Dec. 201
CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedFebruary 15, 1877
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Va. Dec. 201 (Hart v. Haynes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hart v. Haynes, 1 Va. Dec. 201 (Va. Ct. App. 1877).

Opinions

Wingfield, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

By á written contract between Ira E. White and George L. Haynes, executed on the 30th of January, 1866, White [203]*203sold to Haynes a tract of 223f acres of land in Caroline county, at the price of five dollars an acre, at which time Haynes paid him the sum of $794.67, part of the purchase money, and White bound himself by the contract to make to Haynes, upon the payment of the balance of the purchase money, £ £a good and sufficient deed for the said land when thereto required.” . The contract was signed and sealed by both parties, and attested by two witnesses, and was after-wards, on the 11th of June, 1866, acknowledged by White before a justice of the peace, and regularly certified by the justice ; but the contract was never recorded.

Oh the 21st of May, 1866, White and wife, by deed of that date, conveyed the land to Haynes with general warranty ; and on the same day it was regularly acknowledged by White and wife before justices, and their acknowledgment duly certified ; on which it was, on the next day (the 22d), admitted to record in the clerk’s office of Caroline county.

At the time of the execution of the deed, Haynes owed a balance of $311.83, of the purchase money, with interest from the 1st of January, 1866, for which he was requested by Ira E. White, to execute his bond to the appellee, Smith J. E. White, instead of himself (Ira E. White), which, with the assent of Smith J. E. White (who was present) he accordingly did.

On the 16th of May, 1866, during the term of the county court of Caroline, which commenced on the 14th of that month, the appellants recovered judgments against Ira E. White, which were regularly entered on the lien docket of that county on the 6th day of June, 1866. On the 11th of February, 1861, Eobert Gr. Allen recovered a judgment against I. E. White, which was entered on the lien docket on the 16th of May, 1866 ; and on the 29th of May, 1866, at a term of the circuit court of Caroline, the appellee, [204]*204Dandridge Pitts, recovered a judgment against I. E. White, which was docketed on the 2d of July, 1866.

After the bond given to Smith J. E. White for the balance of the purchase money of the land fell due, he brought suit on it and obtained a judgment for its amount. And then the appellee, Haynes, ■ exhibited his bill in the circuit court of Caroline county, setting forth the facts in relation to the purchase of the land and the recovery of the before-mentioned judgments against Ira E. White, and alleging that the said judgment creditors of Ira E. White, claim that their judgments are liens upon the land sold by him to the complainant ; and further averring that he is advised that if they are liens at all, they are only equitable liens and extend only to the unpaid purchase money due on the bond given to Smith J. R. White, which he professes a willingness to pay, and asks that the same may be appropriated to the proper parties, and that he may be quieted in his title to the land so purchased by him. The bill makes Smith J. R. White and the judgment creditors parties, and praj^s for an injunction against the judgment obtained by Smith J. R. White until the rights of all parties can be ascertained, determined and adjusted, which was granted.

The appellants, Hart, Hayes & Co., filed their answer whereby they insisted that their j udgments were liens on the land in question, because the contract of the 30th of January, 1866, was void as to the creditors of Ira E. White for never having been recorded ; and the deed of conveyance was likewise inoperative and void as to them, as it was never made until after their judgments had been obtained ; and that in virtue of the provisions of § 6 and 8 of chap. 186, and the 4th, 5th and 7th sec. of chap. 118 of the Code, they are entitled to have the land in question subjected to the payment of their judgments ; and moreover, that they and Thomas L. Jones’ representative (who ob[205]*205tained judgment at the same time) are entitled to preference over the other judgment creditors — over Allen, because his judgment was in 1861, and was not docketed until 16th May, 1866, more than twelve months after its recovery and not ninety days before the conveyance to Haynes, therefore no lien on the land conveyed to him, as it is not alleged or shown that he (Haynes) had notice of its existence at the time the deed was made ; and over Pitts, because his judgment was after theirs, indeed after the deed, and therefore no lien at all.

Smith J. B>. White also answered, admitting that the bond on which he had obtained judgment against Haynes was executed for the balance of the purchase money of the land; but insists that it was given to pay a debt due from Ira E. White to him ; and that although the j udgments of the appellants were liens upon the land, they are no liens on the bond given, to him, and that he is not affected by any equity Haynes may have against Ira E. White, but is, in any event, entitled to collect the same as held by him on a valuable consideration from said Ira E. White.

And the cause coming on, on the bill, answers, replications and exhibits (the latter consisting of the contract, deed of conveyance and copies of the judgments against Ira E. White), the circuit court dissolved the injunction as to Smith J. B. White and decreed that Haynes should pay to him the amount of the judgment recovered on the bond given to him for the balance of the purchase money of the tract of land and costs ; and perpetually enjoined the appellants and the other judgment creditors of Ira E. White from proceeding to enforce their judgments against the land sold by him to Haynes. [Judge Wingfield, after reciting chap. 186, sec. 6 and 8, and chap. 118, sec. 4, 5, and 7 of the Code of 1860, proceeds :]

Under the statute of 1819, which provided “that all bar[206]*206gains and sales and other conveyances whatsoever of any 'lands, whether made for passing any estate of inheritance,” &c., should be void as to all creditors and subsequent purchasers for valuable consideration without notice, unless they should be proved and lodged with the clerk to be recorded according to the directions of the act — see 1 Revised Code, page 362 — it was decided in the case of McClure v. Thistle’s Ex’ors, 2 Gratt. 182, by a full court: That a house and lot in the city of Wheeling, sold and conveyed by David Agnew to McClure in 1835, and which he had fully paid for and been in possession of from the date of his deed and purchase (but which deed, although duly acknowledged and certified at the time of its date, was not recorded until May, 1812), was void as to the creditors of Agnew, who had obtained judgments subsequent to the purchase of the lot by McClure and before the recording of the deed. This decision would seem to be plainly in accordance with the letter and policy of the statute last cited, which was the existing law on the subject at the time it was made.

But in the case of Withers v.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Va. Dec. 201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hart-v-haynes-vactapp-1877.