James v. Gibbs

1 Patton & Heath 277
CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 15, 1855
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1 Patton & Heath 277 (James v. Gibbs) 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
James v. Gibbs, 1 Patton & Heath 277 (Va. Ct. App. 1855).

Opinion

CLOPTON, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Harrison M. Gibbs, by deed executed and admitted to record on the 22d day of April, 1839, conveyed to David Rodes in trust to secure to John Gibbs the payment of $425 and $1,000, all his said Harrison M. Gibbs’ right, title, interest, claim, or demand of every character and description of, in and to the estate real and personal, of Christopher Roberts, deceased, (Christopher Roberts, the decedent, was the brother of the wife of Harrison M. Gibbs, and had died intestate and without issue). On the 22d of May, 1839, the appellants, plaintiffs in the court below, recovered judgments against Harrison M. Gibbs, and on these judgments sundry executions of fieri facias were issued and returned “no property found.” On the 7th of August, 1839, the Hustings Court of Lynchburg, in a suit between the heirs of Christopher Roberts for partition of his real estate, decreed a sale of the whole real estate to be made by corn-[551]*551missioners for the purpose of division. In this suit, in which Harrison M. Gibbs and *Mary Ann, his wife, were defendants, Mary Ann Gibbs filed her separate answer, in which she consents to the sale of the said real estate, “provided her interest in the proceeds of said sale be so protected and guarded as to be secured to her sole and separate use during her life, and to her children at her death.” On the 22d of August, 1840, the appellants issued ca.' sas. on their judgments against Harrison M. Gibbs, under which he was taken and was discharged on the 27th of August, upon taking the oath of insolvency. On the 4th of November, 1840, the Hustings Court at Dynch burg appointed H. Dunning-ton commissioner to make sale of the lands of Christopher Roberts, decreed by that court on the 7th of August, 1839, to be sold; on the next day, the 5th of November, 1840, David Rodes, the trustee in the deed from Harrison M. Gibbs, sold all the interest of said Gibbs in the real estate of Christopher Roberts, and John Gibbs, the cestui que trust in that deed, became the purchaser at the price of $250; and on the same, day Rodes executed and acknowledged before two justices a deed conveying that interest to John Gibbs, the purchaser, but this deed was not delivered. At December rules, 1840, the appellants filed their bill, in which they attack the deed from Harrison M. Gibbs to Rodes, trustee, as fraudulent, and the sale made under it as void for gross inadequacy of price; (in the bill no allusion is made to the proceedings in the Hustings Court, and the decree for the sale of the real estate of Christopher Roberts). On the 16th of December, 1840, H. Dunnington made sale of the real estate of said Christopher Roberts, in pursuance of the decree of the Hustings Court of the 4th November, 1840, appointing him commissioner, and the proceeds of sales amounted to $12,091 07, after deducting the charges, &c. ; of these proceeds Mary Ann Gibbs was entitled to one-fifth or $2,418 03. (The sales were made upon credits of six, twelve, and eighteen months, and it does not appear from the record that Christopher Roberts left any personal estate. ) On the hearing, the bill of the ^plaintiffs was dismissed, and from that decree this appeal was allowed. To determine the rights of the respective parties, and whether the decree appealed from is correct, it is necessary in the first step to ascertain the true character of the deed in trust from Harrison M. Gibbs to Rodes, for the benefit of John Gibbs. The charge of fraud made against it by the bill, is positively denied by Harrison M. and John Gibbs in their several answers to the bill of the plaintiffs; and there is no evidence whatever having a tendency to impugn the deed; the only circumstance relied on as having such tendency is, that both these defendants admit in their answers, that the bond for $1,000 is entitled to credit for $22 35, and that for $425, to a credit for $400 — which credits were not mentioned in the deed; but this circumstance is not sufficient to impress the character of fraud upon the deed, which must therefore be considered as fair and bona fide.

It becomes necessary next to inquire what rights were acquired by the deed. These rights could not have been other or greater than those of Harrison M. Gibbs, the grantor. And what were his rights? As husband, he was entitled to a life estate in the real estate of the wife, to take the rents and profits during their joint lives, and as tenant by the curtesy, if he survived her; but neither he nor his grantee could assert his rights, except by resorting to a court of equity. As the wife was entitled to an undivided fifth part of the real estate, the aid of a court of equity must have been invoked to make partition, unless indeed the husband had recovered the accruing profits in the meantime, and thus vested the legal title in himself to such profits; and when the husband or his grantee should come into equity — asking partition — upon the well established ‘ principles of that court, the wife’s equity would attach and she would be entitled to an adequate settlement out of her own property, (though real estate;

Sturges v. Champness, 5 M. & Craig, 97 ; 3 Jurist, 840; Hansen *v. Keating, 4 Hare, 41; 14 Law Journal, new series, ch. 7, 13,) paramount to the claims of the husband or any creditor or alienee of his. These, then, were the rights of Mrs. Gibbs and her husband and his grantee, before the appellants obtained their judgments or acquired any lien whatever upon the property of the husband. When the judgments were obtained, the lien thereby acquired was subordinate to the rights of John Gibbs the cestui que trust in the deed, and his rights were subject to the wife’s equitable right to a settlement. This was the relative condition of the parties on the 7th of August, 1839, when the Hustings Court of Dynchburg decreed a sale of the real estate, Mrs. Gibbs assenting upon condition that her interest should be secured to her sole and separate use during her life, and to her children after her death. To the right thus asserted by her, she was entitled to the extent of a reasonable settlement against the world, and it could not thereafter be divested, except by her own act; and although the decree for the sale does not declare her to be entitled to a settlement, that can make no difference, as it was time enough after the sale had been made, and the value of the subject ascertained, for the court to make the settlement. They could then determine with greater accuracy what would amount to a reasonable one, and this, it may fairly be presumed, that court would long since have done, had this controversy not arisen.

In this view, the appellants were entitled, after a proper settlement made for Mrs. Gibbs, and after the payment of the debts secured by the deed to John Gibbs, if any thing remained, to have that surplus, or the annual interest accruing, applied to the [552]*552payment of their demands by virtue of their liens by judgment; but the liens by judgment were lost, when the writs of ca. sa. issued, and the debtor was taken in execution. Then another lien was acquired ; but this last lien could not and did not confer on the appellants any greater rights than they had under the first; and this last lien, by ca. *sa. executed, with all the rights acquired under it, was in force on the 5th of November, 1840, when Rodes, the trustee, sold the interest of Harrison M. Gibbs in the real estate of Christopher Roberts under the deed of April the 22d, 1839 — a sale which has been attacked for gross inadeqtíafcy of price, and as made under circumstances to render it void.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Patton & Heath 277, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/james-v-gibbs-vactapp-1855.