Helm v. Lynchburg Trust & Savings Bank

56 S.E. 598, 106 Va. 603, 1907 Va. LEXIS 127
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 14, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 56 S.E. 598 (Helm v. Lynchburg Trust & Savings Bank) 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
Helm v. Lynchburg Trust & Savings Bank, 56 S.E. 598, 106 Va. 603, 1907 Va. LEXIS 127 (Va. 1907).

Opinion

Cardwell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The purpose of the bill filed in this case was to* have declared null and void a deed of trust to one O. B. Fuqua, appearing on the records of the Corporation Court of the city of Boanoke, to secure to the Lynchburg Trust and Savings Bank, of Lynchburg, Va., a corporation, the payment of the sum of $1,500, evidenced by one negotiable note payable three years after date, and the interest thereon payable semi-annually, evidenced by separate notes of $45.00 each, upon the ground that both this deed of trust and the notes it secured were forgeries. The deed bears date the 8th day of August, 1899, and purports to have been acknowledged by Mary K. Helm (appellant here) before J. W. Boswell, a notary public, qn the 10th day of August, 1899.

The appellant, whose maiden name was Mary B. Kimbrough, is a resident of the state of Arkansas, and the widow of Thomas C. Helm, lately a resident of that state, who died in 1895. Her husband was a former resident of Boanoke, and a brother of Mrs. Fannie P. Jones, formerly the wife, now the widow, of the late S. E. Jones, an attomey-at-law of the latter city.

The lot conveyed in the deed in question, to-wit: Lot Ho. 1, section 22, of the Lewis Addition to the city of Boanoke, lies in that city, .and appellant’s husband purchased an undivided one-half interest in the lot from Mrs. Jones, which was deeded [605]*605to him in November, 1891, by deed duly recorded, and Jones and wife conveyed the remaining undivided half interest to appellant’s husband in January, 1893, hut it seems to be conceded that this latter deed was made merely for the accommodation of Thomas 0. Helm, and after his death the appellant recognized that Mrs. Jones still had an undivided one-half interest in the lot. By the will of appellant’s husband she acquired title to his interest in the lot, and in 1901 she purchased of Mrs. Jones and her husband the remaining undivided interest therein, paying therefor the sum of $1,300; so that she became the absolute owner of the lot in question, and is and has been in possession thereof ever since January, 1901.

It appears that in February, 1898, appellant, together with S. E. Jones and wife, and solely for the accommodation of S. E. Jones, executed a deed of trust, by which they conveyed the said lot to one Gilliam and others, trustees, to secure to the Lynchburg Perpetual ■ Building and Loan Company the payment of the sum of $500, evidenced by a penal bond executed in accordance with the custom of the building and loan company, which deed was duly recorded; that at the time of appellant’s purchase of the undivided interest of Mrs. Jones in this lot the question of the existence of the lien for $500 came up, and S. E. Jones wrote to appellant, who was then in Arkansas, and enclosed to her what purported to he a certificate from the clerk of the court in which the deed of trust securing the $500 was recorded, to the effect that the deed of trust had been paid off and released, which certificate turned out after-wards to he a forgery.

In the year 1902 S. E. Jones died under circumstances indicating suicide, his body being found near the town of Parkersburg, W. Va., in the Ohio-river, and his clothes, containing a bottle of chloroform, found on the bank near where, the body was recovered. The death of Jones resulted in discoveries being made by appellant as to other frauds committed upon her by him, which led up to the further discovery a few [606]*606days after his death, and for the first time, as she contends, of the deed of trust on her property to Fuqua, trustee, above mentioned, which is the subject of the controversy in this suit. In February, 1902, appellant was notified that the Lynchburg Trust and Savings Bank held her note for $15.00, dated August 8, 1899, payable August 8, 1901, and that the same represented the interest of a $1,500 note, supposed to have been executed by the appellant, both notes being secured by the deed of trust above mentioned; that the $15.00 note was then in default and if it was not paid at once the $1,500 note would become due and payable, and the deed of trust securing the same would be enforced by a sale of her property. At the time appellant was in the city of Koanoke, at the residence of her father-in-law, B. B. Helm, with whom she consulted as to what course to pursue, the result being that B. B. Helm approached J. W. Boswell for the purpose of obtaining some explanation of the matter, and it was then ascertained that the deed of trust above mentioned had been acknowledged before J. W. Boswell, who was a notary public for the city of Boanoke, and presented by him for recordation in the clerk’s office of the Corporation Court; and to avoid an immediate exposure to sale of her property appellant paid off the $15.00 note.

It further appears that at the time of the execution of the deed of trust in August, 1899, the deed of trust to Gilliam and others, trustees for the Lynchburg Perpetual Building and Loan Company was unsatisfied, and there was a balance due thereon of $121.15; and that upon the delivery of the deed to the Lynchburg Trust and Savings Bank it paid off the amount of that deed of trust to the Lynchburg Perpetual Building and Loan Company, about $136.92, in interest, taxes and expenses, and the residue of the loan, amounting to $935, was paid by check of A. E. King to the order of Mrs. Mary B. Helm, which was delivered by King to J. W. Boswell, and upon its presentation at the bank with the names, first, of Mary B. Helm, and then of S. E. Jones, attorney, endorsed thereon, it was paid to Jones.

[607]*607The allegations of the hill put in issue that the signature “Mary B. Helm” to the deed of trust in question, and to the notes it purported to secure, were forgeries, and that the endorsement on the hack of the check for $935.63, given by A. E. King as attorney for the Lynchburg Trust and Savings Bank, payable to the order of Mrs. Mary B. Helm, was likewise a forgery; the theory of appellant being that through the connivance and fraud of S. E. Jones he secured someone to impersonate her and appear before J. W. Boswell, notary public, and acknowledge the execution of the deed of trust in question, and that the same person who fraudulently affixed the name of Mary B. Helm to the deed also affixed that name to the notes it purported to secure and endorsed it on the back of the check given by King, which was collected at hank by S. E. Jones. The bill denies any knowledge whatever of these various transactions by the appellant, in person or by any one authorized by her, and declares that she had no knowledge of what had transpired touching her rights in the premises until after the death of Jones.

The Lynchburg Trust and Savings Bank demurred to the bill, on the ground that the National Exchange Bank, upon which the check of King was drawn, was a necessary party thereto. Its demurrer was sustained, and thereupon the court ordered that the National Exchange Bank and A. E. King be made parties defendant to the bill, which was accordingly done.

The bill having been thus amended, the Lynchburg Trust and Savings Bank and A. E.

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Bluebook (online)
56 S.E. 598, 106 Va. 603, 1907 Va. LEXIS 127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/helm-v-lynchburg-trust-savings-bank-va-1907.