Harvey v. Dwyer

158 S.E. 523, 109 W. Va. 676, 1930 W. Va. LEXIS 143
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 18, 1930
Docket6800
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 158 S.E. 523 (Harvey v. Dwyer) 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
Harvey v. Dwyer, 158 S.E. 523, 109 W. Va. 676, 1930 W. Va. LEXIS 143 (W. Va. 1930).

Opinions

Lively, President:

The question presented by this writ of error is whether defendants are jointly liable to plaintiff on the notes sued upon. Reference to the parties as plaintiff and defendants will be made as they appeared in the trial court. Defendants claim they are not jointly liable, and at the conclusion of the *677 evidence moved for an instructed verdict in their favor, which was overruled. Plaintiff, on the other hand, claims that defendants are jointly liable, and at the conclusion of the evidence moved for an instructed verdict in his favor, which was given. Defendants here insist that such action was error; and say that, at least, the question of their joint liability should have been submitted to the jury. A former trial, resulting in verdict and judgment for plaintiff, came to this Court and was reversed. Harvey v. Dwyer, 108 W. Va. 85; 150 S. E. 235. Reference to that case will give the material parts of the “declaration of trust” around which the controversy revolves, and which forms the basis of defendants’ contentions. That paper was the repository of the understanding and agreement between the defendants and their trustee relative to the 22 lots which had been purchased by him from Enslow Park Realty Company for them. The first trial was reversed because the notes sued on and set out in the special count were signed by R. P. Aleshire, Trustee, and the prima facie presumption that they were his individual notes had not been overcome by plaintiff, and therefore judgment could not'be taken against his undisclosed principals to whom the holder of the notes could not look for payment if he did not know them when he took the notes. There was nothing in the evidence in the first trial to show that either Judge Harvey or the Enslow Park Realty Company knew that Aleshire was trustee for defendants at the time the notés were taken by the latter, or purchased by the former. It was also held that plaintiff could not recover against defendants jointly on the common counts in the declaration on the theory of benefits received for the reason that on the face of the declaration of trust, the benefits appeared to be unequal in that regard. The judgment was against all of defendants jointly and was not warranted under the common counts. On this trial, the common counts are not involved. Plaintiff rebutted the prima facie presumption under the law merchant of individual liability of Aleshire by showing that the payee of the notes at the time they were given knew that defendants were principals of Aleshire, Trustee, and that *678 Judge Harvey, when he purchased the notes, also knew them to be his (Aleshire’s) principals.

Defendants conceiving that the trust agreement, an exact copy of which was presented to Judge Harvey at the time he purchased the 66 negotiable notes sued on, but not then acknowledged, was ambiguous as to the joint liability of defendants, and therefore Judge Harvey was put on notice of •their separate liability, introduced evidence showing the circumstances surrounding the parties to the trust agreement, their situation with relation to each other and the property purchased, what they did in making the purchase, and their understandings that each should be liable only for the amount of interest each had taken in the joint adventure, represented by the shares in fortieths, as set out in the trust agreement, namely, “Ten fortieths (10/40) for the use and benefit of T. P. Dwyer, Eight fortieths (8/40) for the use and benefit of S. W. Patterson,” etc., naming the fortieths held by each of the other defendants in the lots purchased. The evidence shows that Aleshire, a member of the Aleshire-Harvey Company, a real estate dealer, and Wilson, an officer of Enslow Park Realty Company, devised a method by which to make sale of the 22 lots owned by the Enslow Park Realty Company, and were assisted to some extent by Thomas W. Harvey- a nephew of Judge Harvey. The trust agreement plan was formed by which the lots were to be conveyed to Aleshire, Trustee, for a down payment and the remainder to be evidenced by notes given by the trustee secured by deeds of trust on the lots. The down payment was the money paid by those who entered into the adventure. Each of defendants paid to the trustee in cash 25 % of the amount of interest taken by each, and this money was used in part for the down payment, and each of defendants executed his separate notes, payable in one, two and three years, to the trustee for the balance owing to the common fund. Accordingly, the Enslow Park Realty Company, on October 3, 1925, deeded the lots to Aleshire, Trustee, for a down payment of $7,500.00, and the balance of $25,465.00 represented by the 66 notes sued on, signed by the trustee, payable to vendor in accordance with *679 tbe terms of 22 deeds of trust of tbe same date, executed by tbe trustee to Armentrout, Trustee, for tbe said’ Realty Company, and tbe assumption of payment by the vendor of certain liens on tbe lots. It appears that defendant Dwyer agreed to go into the trust on that day and agreed to take a ten fortieths interest, and paid to tbe trustee $2,500.00 and executed his three notes of $2,500.00 each, payable in one, two and three years. The other defendants afterwards between that date and October 13, 1925, went into the trust agreement for the interests set out to them therein, and each paid the 25% down payment and executed like notes to the trustee. None of these notes to the trustee were paid, and were found among the papers of the trustee after his death. The trust agreement was dated October 3, 1925, but was not acknowledged until the 13th of that month. Some of the parties to the trust did not know others who joined therein; and some say they did not know that Aleshire, Trustee, had executed the notes sued on; that they did not giye authority to sign for them, and did not know until a year or so after the trust was executed that he did so; and all say their understanding and conversations were to the effect that each member of the trust was liable only for the amount of the notes executed by each to Aleshire, Trustee.

The notes sued on were purchased by Judge Harvey from Enslow Park Realty Company on October 7, 1925, and he then had before him a carbon copy of the trust agreement. By that paper, he knew who were the principals of Aleshire, Trustee. They all later, on October 13th, acknowledged that paper. Thomas W. Harvey, a nephew of Judge Harvey, testified that a short while, possibly a day or so, before Judge Harvey purchased the notes on October 7th, he talked with Judge Harvey, and told him how the various interests of defendants were to be paid for. He says: “I explained the whole thing to him.1 ’ This witness says that it was his understanding that defendants, including the Aleshire-Harvey Company, were to be responsible only to the extent of the notes given by them to the trustee. He does not say explicitly that he told Judge Harvey of this understanding. It appears *680 that Judge Harvey, when he purchased the notes, required Don Miller, then reputed to be a very wealthy man, and who was interested in the Enslow Park Realty Company, to endorse the notes, as well as a Mr. Blair Wilson, sales agent for the Realty Company.

The evidence of defendants, except the notes executed by thorn to the trustee, and which were found with the papers of Aleshire after his demise, was stricken out on motion of plaintiff.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
158 S.E. 523, 109 W. Va. 676, 1930 W. Va. LEXIS 143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harvey-v-dwyer-wva-1930.