Jones v. Gillespie

9 S.E. 235, 32 W. Va. 343, 1889 W. Va. LEXIS 80
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 4, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 9 S.E. 235 (Jones v. Gillespie) 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
Jones v. Gillespie, 9 S.E. 235, 32 W. Va. 343, 1889 W. Va. LEXIS 80 (W. Va. 1889).

Opinion

SNYDER, PRESIDENT :

This is an appeal from two decrees pronounced by the Circuit Court of Wood county in the consolidated suits of Jones & Haines v. R. H. Gillespie, trustee and others, and A. P. Riggs Co. v. John A. Armstrong and others, on July 25, 1885, and March 12, 1887, respectively. Jones & Haines having become deeply indebted in the year 1881 conveyed all their property real and.personal to R. H. Gillespie, trustee, for the benefit of their creditors; and in these consolidated suits the liens on the lands thus conveyed to Gillespie were ascertained and fixed. Among these lands was a tract of eighty seven acres in Pleasants county known as “Tract No. 7.” According to the priorities of the liens it was [344]*344found, that the defendants, The Monitor Tow-Boat & Lumber Company and John A. Armstrong, had the first liens on the said tract No. 7 for an amount largely in excess of its value, so that the said defendants were entitled to the whole of the proceeds of said tract. By a decree entered August 7, 1883, the sale of all said lands was directed ; but upon the petition of D. H. Jones the sale of said tract No. 7 was by the same decree suspended, until the matters arising upon said petition might be determined. In this petition I). II. Jones set up a claim to tract No. 7 and asserted, that he was the owner of the said land and entitled to a conveyance thereof. Jones & Ilaines answered this petition denying its averments, and evidence was taken by both parties in respect thereto, but it was not until the aforesaid decree of July 25, 1885, that the court took any action upon said petition. By that decree the court determined, that D. PI. Jones was entitled to said land and directed, that it should. be conveyed to him. In the meanwhile however, on November 30, 1883, a decree was entered containing the following clause:

“On motion of the defendants Armstrong and the Monitor Tow-Boat and Lumber Co., and by consent of the petitioner, D.. PI. Jones, it is ordered that unless said Jones do, within sixty days from this date, give bond, * * * * the said petition shall be dismissed; so much of the decree of Aug. 7, 1883, as suspends the sale of said tract of eighty seven acres shall have no further effect; and the special commissioners heretofore appointed shall proceed to sell said tract as directed by other provisions of said decree of August 7, 1883.”

The said commissioners after having waited more than sixty days proceeded on March 11, 1884, to sell said tract No. 7, and John A. Armstrong became the purchaser at the price of $500.00; and on August 12, 1884, the court entered a decree confirming said sale and directed the proceeds to be paid on. the debts previously ascertained. But before said sale, to wit, on March 8, 1884, without the knowdedge of the commissioners or notice to the parties interested, the court entered an order extending the time, within which the said D. PL Jones might give the bond required by the decree of [345]*345November 30, 1883, forty five days from that date. The bond was subsequently given on March 29, 1884, which was eighteen days after the- sale of the land. After the said sale to John A. Armstrong had been confirmed, he executed a deed showing, that he had purchased said tract No. 7 for the Monitor Tow-Boat & Lumber Company, which company on July 17, 1885, before said decree of July 25, 1885, had been made, executed a general assignment of all its property including the said, tract of land No. 7 to Thomas O’Brien for the benefit of its creditors.

On July 27, 1885, D. H. Jones exhibited in the said court his bill in the nature of a bill of review, in which he sets forth the decrees and orders hereinbefore mentioned and avers, that John A. Armstrong is in possession of said tract of eighty seven acres of land, and prays, that the sale of said land may be set aside, and the said decree of August 12, 1884, confirming said sale be reviewed and reversed, and the purchase-money paid by said Armstrong refunded to him etc.

The defendants John A. Armstrong, The Monitor Tow-Boat & Lumber Company and Thomas O’Brien answered this bill claiming, that the respondent, O’Brien, was a purchaser of said land without notice or knowledge of the claim of D. H. Jones thereto, and that B,. EL Gillespie, trustee, under whom respondents claim, was also a bona fide purchaser without notice; and that therefore they are unaffected by any equity of said D. H. Jones, if he has any, in said land; and they also deny the sufficiency of said bill of review and pray, that the same may be dismissed.

On March 12,1887, the court entered the second decree, from which this appeal is taken, by which the court reversed and set aside the said decree of August 12, 1884, confirming said sale, set aside the sale, and directed the said . O’Brien, assignee as aforesaid, to refund to John A. Armstrong the money paid by him on the purchase of said land and surrender to him his unpaid notes given therefor. The appellants here are John A. Armstrong, The Monitor Tow-Boat & Lumber Company and Thomas O’Brien, assignee of said company; and'the material errors they assign, are as follows : First, in respect to the said decree of July 25, 1885, [346]*346they claim, that the trust set up in the petition of D. H. Jones was not such, as could have been enforced, even if established, and that it was not established by the evidence ; and second, if enforceable against Jones & Haines, it could not be enforced against R. II. Gillespie, trustee, because he was a purchaser for value without notice ; and third., that the said decree of March 12, 1887, improperly sustained said bill of review, for the reason that said bill made no sufficient or proper ease for granting the relief prayed.

1. D. H. Jones in his said petition states, that in August, 1876, he purchased from T. W. Ewart the said eighty seven acres of land at the price of $400.00, of which $100.00 was to be paid cash and the residue in annual payments of $100,00 each with interest; and that Ewart executed and delivered to him a title-bond to make him a deed on the payment of the'purchase-money; that he made the cash-payment and executed his three several notes for the deferred payments; that, when the first note became due, he made an arrangement with Jones & Haines to pay the same to Ewart for him, and he would repay them by delivering to them staves, timber etc.; and that in order to make said Jones & Haines perfectly safe in paying for said land he assigned and delivered said title-bond to them as collateral security; that said Jones & Haines after permitting suit to be brought on said first note paid the same and the costs thereon and charged the amount to him on their books; that subsequently, on July 20, 1877, he and they had a settlement of their accounts, and after satisfying the amount paid by them on said note he owed them a balance of $4.63; that afterwards he continued to deliver lumber and other materials to Jones & Haines, and up to March 15, 1881, he had furnished them more than enough to pay for said land and all the accounts, they had against him; and that notwithstanding this fact the said Jones & Haines on March 15,1881, when they paid off the last note for said land, produced to said Ewart said title-bond with the assignment thereon and without authority and in fraud of petitioner’s rights obtained from said Ewart a deed of that date for said land; that said R. II.

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Bluebook (online)
9 S.E. 235, 32 W. Va. 343, 1889 W. Va. LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-gillespie-wva-1889.