Jones v. Covington

6 S.E. 212, 84 Va. 778, 1888 Va. LEXIS 141
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedApril 26, 1888
StatusPublished

This text of 6 S.E. 212 (Jones v. Covington) 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
Jones v. Covington, 6 S.E. 212, 84 Va. 778, 1888 Va. LEXIS 141 (Va. 1888).

Opinion

Lewis, P.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a decree of the circuit court of Culpeper county, entered in the consolidated causes of Archer, Trustee, v. Ashby’s Administrator, and Covington v. Ashby.

The object of the first of these suits was to establish and enforce against the estate of Alfred L. Ashby, deceased, and the sureties on his bond as trustee of one John W. Kelley, a blind man, a debt alleged to be due by him in his lifetime as such trustee, amounting to the sum of $730 84, with interest. The appellant was a surety on the bond, and was made a party to the suit. In the progress of the cause, he filed his answer alleging that there was property belonging to the estate of his deceased principal, which was primarily liable for the claim asserted in the bill, and which ought to be subjected to the exoneration of the respondent.

This contention was based upon the following grounds, namely: That on the 15th of August, 1870, the said Alfred L. Ashby entered into a written contract under seal with Thomas R. Covington and Wm. T. Ashby, in which, in consideration that the said Covington and the said Wm. -T. Ashby would pay off and discharge certain debts which constituted liens on the lands of the said Allred L. Ashby, and were the owners of certain other debts which were also liens on the land, he, the said Alfred L. Ashby agreed to “release and give” to the said Covington and Wm. T. Ashby, his entire real estate situate in Culpeper county. These debts were secured on the land by a deed of trust, and among them was one evidenced by bond for $800 executed by the said Alfred L. Ashby to Ann Camp, and which in the said written contract was recited to have been assigned to the said Thos. R. Covington. In 1871, the said Alfred L. Ashby died, and Covington qualified as his administrator, and about the same [780]*780time the said Ann Camp died testate, whereupon he qualified as her administrator c. t. a.

The answer also averred that, so far as the said written contract was based on the recital that the Ann Camp debt had been assigned to the said Covington, there was a mutual mistake, as the debt had been paid more than two years before the date of the contract, as appeared from the receipt of the said Ann Camp, dated June 21, 1868, which was exhibited before the commissioner by the said Covington in the suit of Covington v. Ashby, above mentioned. And it was insisted that, inasmuch as that debt constituted a part of the purchase price for the laud, the said Covington and William T. Ashby were, in equity and good conscience, bound to pay to the estate of the said Alfred L. Ashby, deceased, an amount equal to the debt, or, at all events, that the land should stand charged for that amount, or so much thereof as would be necessary to pay the indebtedness for which the respondent was bound as surety.

The answer also prayed that the suit be consolidated with the. suit of Covington v. Ashby; that the answer be treated as a cross-bill in the last-mentioned suit, and that the said Covington be required to answer it, etc.; which was accordingly done.

Soon after the execution of the written contract above mentioned, the land mentioned therein was divided between the said Covington and William T. Ashby, pursuant to the stipulations of the contract; and the object of the suit of Covington v. Ashby was to have the land allotted to the said William T. Ashby first sold to pay the liens mentioned in the said contract, the bill alleging that the said Covington had paid one-half of the debts, as he had contracted to do, and had in all respects fully performed the covenants contained in the said contract, so far as he had bound himself to do. In the progress of the cause, the receipt above mentioned was produced before the commissioner by Covington to show that the Camp debt had been paid, when, for the first time, the existence of the receipt [781]*781became known to the appellant, who thereupon filed his answer and cross-bill above mentioned.

In his answer to the cross-bill, Covington alleged that the said Ann Camp made her will in 1866, whereby she left all her estate to the wife of Covington, and that, when the contract of August 15, 1870, was entered into—she being then over ninety years of age—he regarded himself as the substantial owner of the Camp debt, as did also the said Alfred L. Ashby. He denied that the debt had been paid, and averred that the so-called receipt therefor was found, after the death of the said Ann Camp, in her trunk with other papers, and had never been delivered or become operative. He also denied that he had assumed the payment of the debt, and averred that the most he had contracted in respect to it was that he would save the said Alfred L. Ashby harmless on account thereof. And he denied that the appellant was entitled to the relief prayed for in his cross-bill.

There was no evidence to sustain the affirmative allegations of the answer to the cross-bill, and when the cause came on to be heard, the relief prayed for in the cross-bill was denied by the decree complained of.

The theory upon which the case of the appellant is founded is that the Camp debt, having been paid previous to the contract of the 15th of August, 1870, there was a mutual mistake by the parties to the contract, and a consequent failure of consideration to the amount of the debt, which ought to be made good to the estate of Alfred L. Ashby, deceased, by the purchasers of the land. In other words, it is contended that, for so much land, they assumed to pay the Camp debt, and ought, therefore, to be compelled to pay the amount of the debt for the benefit of the estate.

"We are of opinion that this view is not maintainable; It is not true that the purchasers of the land assumed the payment of the Camp debt. They did, in express terms, promise to pay three debts due by the said Alfred L. Ashby—namely, one to [782]*782Miss Lucy B. Jameson, one to Miss Sarah E. Rawlings, aud another to William T. Ashby, which aggregated the sum of $2,000, and which, as the evidence shows, was about the value of the land; and then the contract goes on to recite that two other debts due by Alfred L. Ashby had been assigned for the benefit of the said Covington and William T. Ashby—namely, a debt due to Mrs. Jane Jones and the other to Mrs. Ann Camp; but there is no promise to pay either of them. The fact that Mrs. Camp had made her will, leaving the whole of her estate to Mary J. Ashby, who at the date of the contract was the wife of Covington, was doubtless known to the parties to the contract, and for that reason they doubtless regarded Covington as the substantial owner of the debt, as he avers in his answer to the cross-bill, and hence it was recited in the contract, though inaccurately, that the Jones and Camp debts had been assigned for the benefit of the purchasers. It is manifest that the contract was not drawn by a professional or skilled draughtsman; and the Jones and Camp debts were no doubt referred to to show that they were no longer held by Mrs. Jones and Mrs. Camp, who, along with the creditors above mentioned, were secured in a deed of trust on the land executed by Alfred L. Ashby to P. P. Halle, in December, 1865.

At all events, there was no promise on the part of the purchasers to pay those debts, and a fair construction of the contract does not warrant the conclusion that they formed any part of the consideration for the purchase of the land.

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Bluebook (online)
6 S.E. 212, 84 Va. 778, 1888 Va. LEXIS 141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-covington-va-1888.