Hunter v. McNinch

138 S.E. 753, 104 W. Va. 70, 1927 W. Va. LEXIS 152
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 7, 1927
Docket5883
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 138 S.E. 753 (Hunter v. McNinch) 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
Hunter v. McNinch, 138 S.E. 753, 104 W. Va. 70, 1927 W. Va. LEXIS 152 (W. Va. 1927).

Opinion

Litz, Judge:

The defendant, Dunn Station Oil & Gas Company, appeals from a decree of the circuit court enforcing a mortgage of *71 certain gas and gas rights in favor of the plaintiff, C. H. Hunter.

By deed dated December 23, 1915, and recorded February 12, 1918, the Natural Gas Company of West Virginia, a corporation, assigned and conveyed to Timothy Ross certain, oil and gas leases covering sixteen tracts of land in Marshall County.

By deed dated December 22, 1915, and recorded February 12, 1918, Timothy Ross conveyed all the gas and gas rights in said tracts of land to the plaintiff, C. IT. Hunter, to secure the payment of a note for $15,000.00, of even date, signed by Ross as maker, and payable to Hunter four months after date. Ross also agreed in said instrument to transfer to Hunter $15,000.00 of stock in The Londensville Oil & Gas Company, a corporation, as further security for the payment of said note.

The said Timothy Ross, James Wilson and three other.persons entered into a writing dated December 10, 1915, agreeing to incorporate The Loudensville Oil & Gas Company, and thereafter, January 13, 1916, obtained a charter therefor from the State of West Virginia. However, before it came into existence Ross and Wilson had attempted (by deed of December 13, 1915, and recorded October 20, 1919) to convey to The Loudensville Oil & Gas Company all their right, title and interest in and to the gas and oil leases covering ten of said tracts of land.

At July rules, 1918, Wilson filed his bill in chancery against The Londensville Oil & Gas Company, Timothy Ross, C. H. Hunter, E. J. Lesser and others, for the appointment of receivers to take charge of and manage the affairs of The Loudensville Oil & Gas Company, because of the alleged mismanagement thereof by the defendants Timothy Ross, ex-president, C. IT. Hunter, president, and E. J. Lesser, treasurer and general manager, of the company, pursuant to a fraudulent scheme on the part of Ross, Hunter and Lesser to acquire control of its assets for their own benefit. Receivers having been appointed as prayed for, a decree was entered October 31, 1918, referring the cause to.a commissioner in chancery to ascertain and report, inter alia, “all leaseholds belonging *72 to the defendant, The Loudensville Oil & Gas Company, a corporation, or in which it has any interest; * * * the liens upon the leaseholds and other personal property of The Loudensville Oil and Gas Company, a corporation, by whom held, their respective amounts and priorities.”

August 12, 1919, the commissioner submitted his report finding that The Loudensville Oil & Gas Company “o-wns or has an interest in” all but one of the leaseholds described in the mortgage, and other property; that the corporation owed numerous debts, mentioned therein; and further reporting :

‘ ‘ The claim of C. II. Hunter is represented by a note for $15,000.00, bearing date of December 22nd, 1915, signed by Timothy Ross. The evidence before me does not show that The Loudensville Oil and Gas Company is liable for this clawn.”

And it appearing from said report, which the court confirmed, that the corporation was insolvent, a decree was enr tered June 21, 1920, directing the sale of “the leaseholds in which The Loudensville Oil & Gas Company owns or has an interest together with the personal property hereinbefore described, situated upon said leaseholds”, or so much thereof as may be necessary to pay off and discharge the lien debts against said corporation according to their respective priorities.

The special commissioner, appointed to make sale, reported that on October 9, 1920, he had sold to the Dunn Station Oil & Gas Company “the leaseholds and personal property in the bill and proceedings mentioned * * * more fully described in the notice of sale hereto attached and made a part of this report.” The property is described in the notice of sale as “all the right, title and interest of the Loudensville Oil & Gas Company”, in and to the said oil and gas leases and personal property.

By decree of November 13, 1920, the circuit court confirmed the sale and directed the special commissioner to execute a proper deed with covenants of special warranty, “covering the title to said Leaseholds and Personal Property of The Loudensville Oil <& Gas Company, a corporation, to the Dunn Station Oil & Gas Company, a corporation”.

*73 By deed dated May 20, 1921, said special commissioner attempted to convey to the purchaser, Dunn Station Oil & Gas Company, among other property, complete title to said leaseholds. This deed was never confirmed by the court.

The plaintiff, C. H. Hunter, filed his bill in this case at December rules, 1923, against P. A. McNinch, as administrator of the estate of Timothy Ross, deceased, and Dunn Station Oil & Gas Company, and others, seeking the enforcement of the mortgage from Ross to Hunter securing the payment of the $15,000.00 note.

Dunn Station Oil & Gas Company in’ its separate answer to the bill, admitted the execution of the mortgage and the transfer of $15,000.00 stock in The Loudensville Oil & Gas Company to Hunter as further security for the payment of the note; but averred that it had acquired complete and indefeasible title to the leaseholds covered by said mortgage, as purchaser thereof in the suit of James Wilson against said O. H. Hunter and others, hereinbefore mentioned, exhibiting with its answer as part thereof authenticated copies of the papers and proceedings in said • cause.

The parties' submitted the case upon the following stipulation of facts:.

“3. It is agreed that the Plaintiff, C. H. Hunter, can prove that on December 22, 1915, he loaned to Timothy Ross, deceased, decedent of P. A. McNinch, Administrator, the sum of $15,000.00 as alleged in the Bill of Complaint and evidenced by the note described therein; that this money was used by Timothy Ross to purchase from the Natural Gas Company of West Virginia, a corporation, the gas and gas rights underlying the leaseholds described in the Bill of Complaint and its Exhibits thereto; that Timothy Ross executed the mortgage agreement alleged in the Bill of Complaint and its Exhibits thereto and delivered the same together with the conveyance to him by the Natural Gas Company of West Virginia to the Plaintiff on or about the 23rd day of December, 1915; that the note of $15,000.00 dated December 22, 1915, secured as aforesaid together with the interest thereon from date has not been paid to the Plain *74 tiff and that the same is due and owing to him together with the interest thereon to this date, except for an interest credit of $3,648.00 paid as alleged in the Bill of Complaint; that the mortgage agreement between Plaintiff and Timothy Boss, deceased, and the conveyance of the Natural Gas Company of West Virginia to Timothy Boss was placed on record in the office of the Clerk of the County Court of Marshall County, on the 12th day of February, 1918; that said mortgage agreement has never been released of record by the Plaintiff. * * •*
“4.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Pyles v. Coiner
164 S.E.2d 435 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1968)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
138 S.E. 753, 104 W. Va. 70, 1927 W. Va. LEXIS 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hunter-v-mcninch-wva-1927.