John S. Naylor Co. v. Post

20 S.E.2d 458, 124 W. Va. 365, 1942 W. Va. LEXIS 90
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 19, 1942
Docket9302
StatusPublished

This text of 20 S.E.2d 458 (John S. Naylor Co. v. Post) 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
John S. Naylor Co. v. Post, 20 S.E.2d 458, 124 W. Va. 365, 1942 W. Va. LEXIS 90 (W. Va. 1942).

Opinion

Fox, President:

On the 27th day of September, 1939, John S. Naylor Company recovered judgment against Nathan Post, in the Circuit Court of Harrison County, for $1,844.93 and $15.75 costs, on which an execution was issued and thereafter returned unsatisfied, no property being found on which the same could be levied. Thereafter this suit was instituted to subject a house and lot, the property of Nathan Post, situated on Walnut Street in the City of Clarks- *366 burg, to the payment of this judgment. Prior to the institution of this suit, namely on October 2, 1939, Alice L. Post, the wife of Nathan Post, entered into an agreement with John S. Naylor Company, which recites the payment of $250.00 on the judgment aforesaid, and an agreement that the holder of the judgment would accept payment of the residue in installments of $50.00 a month, until the judgment, with its interest should be paid in full. In consideration thereof, Alice Post agreed “that in the event of Nathan Post’s death prior to the entire payment of said judgment she hereby expressly releases all her right to dower in any and all of his said real estate so far as the same would interfere with or lessen the payment of said judgment to the said John S. Naylor Company, a corporation, and this release of dower is hereby executed in order to induce the said John S. Naylor to accept said monthly payments on said judgment until it is fully satisfied, but if said Post or his wife or daughter fails to make said monthly payments promptly then nothing herein shall prevent said plaintiff and owner of said judgment from proceeding to have same satisfied as fully as if this agreement had not been entered into.” The bill in this suit was filed at July Rules, 1940, and sets up the plaintiff’s judgment and return of execution thereon.- It also avers the existence of a deed of trust, executed by Nathan Post and Alice L. Post, to Walter V. Ross, Trustee, securing to the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation, a debt, which, at the time of the filing of said bill, aggregated the sum of $3,580.65; and also a trust lien debt created by deed of trust executed by Post and his wife to Birk S. Stathers, Trustee, securing Edward P. McCall in the sum of $380.00. A judgment in favor of Melvin G. Sperry, executor of Charles L. Patton, deceased, for the sum of $200.00 and $4.75 costs recovered on the 8th day of January, 1940, was also averred. The bill also avers the agreement between Alice L. Post and the plaintiff dated October 2, 1939, and that under said agreement the said Alice L. Post was not entitled to dower in the real estate of Nathan Post to the prejudice of the plaintiff.

*367 Alice Post filed her answer to this bill denying that she was bound by her agreement of October 2, 1939, contending that enforcement of said agreement was made contingent upon the death of Nathan Post prior to the satisfaction of plaintiff’s judgment, and averring that the said Post was then alive; and further, that the said agreement was void, unenforceable, and invalid under the laws of this State. The bill avers that the trust liens and judgments set up therein were all of the 'valid and subsisting liens binding the property of Nathan Post. In view of this allegation the cause was not referred to a commissioner for the ascertainment of liens, and the cause proceeded to final decree on the bill, answers, and exhibits. It should be stated that the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation appeared in the cause and filed an answer in which it requested that the property of Nathan Post, on which it held a lien, should be sold subject to said lien, and that only the equity of redemption therein should be sold.

On this status of the case a decree was entered on November 2, 1940, by which there was decreed to the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation the sum of $3,620.60; to Edward P. McCall $406.04; to the plaintiff, John S.- Naylor Company, $1,554.16; and to Melvin G. Sperry, executor of Charles L. Patton $212.40, and the said sums were decreed liens against Post’s real estate in the order named. It was then decreed that the real estate of Nathan Post, described in the bill, be sold, subject to the decree in favor of the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation, and free and acquit of any inchoate right of dower of Alice L. Post, wife of said Nathan Post, so far as the said debt and deed of trust of the 'defendant, Edward P. McCall was concerned, and that in the event said equity of redemption should be sold, for more than a sum sufficient to satisfy the McCall lien, then the court would thereafter make proper provisions for the payment to Alice L. Post of any amount to which she might be entitled in satisfaction of her inchoate dower. Harvey F. Smith was appointed a special commissioner to make sale of said equity of redemption. It will be observed that the court, inferentially, held that *368 Alice L. Post was not barred of her dower under the agreement of October 2,1939.

Acting under this decree, the special commissioner sold the equity of redemption in the Nathan Post property for $1,200.00, and this sale was confirmed on March 22, 1941. At that time the $1,200.00 purchase price for said equity of redemption had been paid in full, was in the hands of the special commissioner, and he was directed to pay the costs of the suit and to pay to Edward P. McCall the sum of $419.57, and hold the surplus remaining in his hands until the further order of the court.

On May 24, 1941, the decree of final distribution was entered. By this decree the cash value of the inchoate dower interest of Alice L. Post was fixed at $363.25, said sum being based and computed on the sum of $4,937.54, that sum being made up of the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation debt, which at the time of the confirmation of the sale was $3,737.54, and the sum of $1,200.00 received by the special commissioner in the sale of the equity of redemption in the property covered by the said Loan Corporation’s lien. No question is raised as to the correctness of the computation of the amount decreed to be paid Alice L. Post, based upon the said sum of $4,937.54, but it is contended, first, that by reason of the agreement of October 2, 1939, Alice L. Post was not entitled to any decree for her inchoate right of dower; and, second, that if she was entitled to such dower, it should have been computed on the surplus remaining from the sale of the equity of redemption after the payment of costs of suit and the Edward P. McCall decree.

It will be observed that two questions are presented: First, was Alice L. Post in view of her written agreement of Qctober 2, 1939, entitled to any decree for dower; and, second, if, notwithstanding such agreement, she was, in the circumstances, entitled to dower, should it have been computed upon the basis of the sum for which the equity of redemption was sold, less costs of suit and the McCall debt, or upon the aggregate of the amount received from *369 the sale of the equity of redemption and the amount of the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation lien and decree?

As to the first question we are of opinion that the court was not in error in holding, by inference, that the contract of October 2, 1939, did not bar Alice L. Post from claiming dower. The writing itself clearly shows that her release of dower was based upon a contingency, to-wit, the death of Nathan Post prior to the full payment of plaintiff’s judgment.

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Bluebook (online)
20 S.E.2d 458, 124 W. Va. 365, 1942 W. Va. LEXIS 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-s-naylor-co-v-post-wva-1942.