Honaker v. City of Princeton

25 S.E.2d 772, 125 W. Va. 672, 1943 W. Va. LEXIS 41
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 18, 1943
Docket9409
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 25 S.E.2d 772 (Honaker v. City of Princeton) 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
Honaker v. City of Princeton, 25 S.E.2d 772, 125 W. Va. 672, 1943 W. Va. LEXIS 41 (W. Va. 1943).

Opinion

Kenna, Judge:

This chancery cause was brought in the Circuit Court *673 of Mercer County by P. T. Honaker and -Fay H. Cunningham, committee for Louise H. Hubbard, nee Honaker, holders of the interest of W. B. Honaker, deceased, against the City of Princeton, for the purpose of asserting an equitable interest in a part of the land which comprises the airport near Princeton, owned by the City. The prayer of the bill of complaint is for alternative relief to consist either of the specific performance of an alleged contract to convey, entered into between those then holding the Honaker donor’s interest and the City of Princeton, or the sale of the land and distribution of the proceeds, the land having been acquired and held in trust as a donation from W. B. Honaker and others to the trustee of Emory and Henry College for the sole purpose of being used as a site for a branch of that college known as a Fitting School, the purpose of the donation having failed of accomplishment, its beneficial ownership as a consequence reverting to the donors. Proof was taken upon the issues ‘ raised by the allegations of the complainants’ amended and original bill and the City’s answer in the nature of a cross bill, denying many piaterial allegations of complainants’ and praying to have certain deeds to P. T. Honaker, executed by other heirs at law of W. B. Honaker, conveying to him their interests in the airport property, cancelled as a cloud upon the title of the City of Princeton. From a decree in favor- of the plaintiffs ordering the land partitioned ■ if susceptible' and appointing commissioners for that purpose, the City of Princeton was granted this appeal.

There is little conflict in the testimony which shows that in the year 1921 citizens of Princeton became very, much interested in the establishment of a Fitting School, near Princeton, as a branch of Emory and Henry College and by voluntary donations collected the sum of twenty-five thousand, twenty-one dollars, all of which was intended to be and was spent in acquiring two tracts of land lying on Glady’s Fork of Brush Creek, immediately beyond the City’s corporate limits. The two tracts of land were conveyed to A. I. Bratton, Trustee, and consisted of eight and one-half acres, with which we are only inci *674 dentally concerned, and fifty-four acres from W. B. Hon-aker and wife, the latter apparently being ten acres of an agreed value of three hundred fifty dollars per acre as £ contribution from the grantor, which, when supplemented by one thousand dollars given by W. B. Honaker, piade the total of his donation forty-five hundred dollars.

For some reason interest in the Fitting School project failed and the trustee apparently was not concerned in preserving his title to the trust property. However, before interest in the college project became cool, apparently Wysong & Bengston had been employed by its sponsors as architects to plan the proposed buildings, so that their claim of fifteen hundred dollars was reduced to judgment, the defendants evidently including Bratton, Trustee. A chancery proceeding was shortly thereafter brought in the Circuit Court of Mercer County to subject the entire boundary to the discharge of that judgment.

In 1927 W. B. Honaker died.

In 1933 or 1934 active interest developed in the establishment of an airport, with the result that that interest settled on these Glady’s Fork tracts as being the most adaptable to the intended purpose, being located near the town. Apparently, both the tract of eight and one-half and fifty-four acres which had been conveyed to A. I. Brat-ton, Trustee, had been permitted to be returned delinquent and eventually to be dropped from the land books, the original donors to the school property not having pressed their interest which, under the circumstances, amounted to reversion of the equitable title or a resulting trust. Heiskell v. Trout, 31 W. Va. 810, 8 S. E. 557; Staats v. Mc Cuskey, 98 W. Va. 26, 126 S. E. 337; 2 Bogert on Trusts and Trustees, sec. 468.

In this rather awkward legal situation involving the ownership of real property, the City of Princeton procured assignments of their equitable interest from a large number of the donors to the unsuccessful college undertaking, amounting to sixteen thousand eight hundred and sixty-two dollars, the aggregate of all donations having been twenty-five thousand and twenty-one dollars, the *675 heirs at law of W. B. Honaker, ten in number, refusing to assign their interests to the City and the remaining donors having been numerous contributors of small amounts. Realizing that a redemption of the land by it would have to be followed by a chancery proceeding to vest the legal title to the land in the original donors and their assignees, the City of Princeton concluded to appear and present its interest in a chancery proceeding then pending as the consolidated causes of Wysong & Bengston, against A. I. Bratton, Trustee, and Elbert O. Hale; Commissioner of School Lands of Mercer County, against A. I. Bratton, Trustee, the first having been brought for the purpose of subjecting the land to a judgment lien, and the second to subject it to the payment of past due taxes, penalties, interest and costs. The City of Princeton asked to be made a party for the purpose of establishing the extent to which its assignments from the original donors entitled it to be adjudged the actual owner of the land held by Bratton, Trustee, subject, of course, to intervening liens. This cause was referred to a commissioner in chancery after the City of Princeton had been made a party and after all of the known donors of the' college project had been brought in by process and order of publication, for the purpose of reporting the liens of record and the equitable owners. This was done and upon the incoming of the commissioner’s report it was apparently confirmed without exception and followed by a decree of sale.

The Princeton Bank & Trust Company became the purchaser and immediately upon receiving a deed, it in turn conveyed the property to the City of Princeton in consideration of the assignment by the City to the Bank of paving certificates which were liens on property in the City of Princeton then owned by the Bank. This transfer is attacked due to the alleged illegality of the consideration paid by the City for the transfer. We regard this contention as collateral and one that can have no direct bearing upon the interests of the parties now before this Court, since the Princeton Bank & Trust Company is not a party. *676 Therefore .its deed is not subject to attack for failure of consideration.

One of the contentions of the complainants’ is that prior to the day of sale an understanding was reached between them and the City of Princeton by which its and their interests would be jointly represented in the bidding. The City emphatically denies this and points to the fact that it did not directly participate in the bidding and, to the contrary, that the Princeton Bank & Trust Company, the then holder of the Wysong & Bengston judgment lien, became the purchaser, bidding against Louise Honaker and R. L. Farley, who in fact represented the interests of Fetter Honaker, regarded locally as the spokesman for the Honaker heirs.

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Bluebook (online)
25 S.E.2d 772, 125 W. Va. 672, 1943 W. Va. LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/honaker-v-city-of-princeton-wva-1943.