Kanawha Hardwood Co. v. Evans

64 S.E. 917, 65 W. Va. 622, 1909 W. Va. LEXIS 93
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 4, 1909
StatusPublished

This text of 64 S.E. 917 (Kanawha Hardwood Co. v. Evans) 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
Kanawha Hardwood Co. v. Evans, 64 S.E. 917, 65 W. Va. 622, 1909 W. Va. LEXIS 93 (W. Va. 1909).

Opinion

Poffenbarger Judge:

J. II. Perrine, engaged in the manufacture of lumber and owning a saw-mill and tramway, in Clay county, entered into a contract of co-partnership with Noah Evans, the owner of timber on two tracts of land, containing'in the aggregate about 100 acres, on the 23rd day of January, 1900. Evans’ timber and Perrine’s mill and tramway were to be used without charge in the common enterprise and they were to bestow their care and labor upon it and contribute equally to expenses, and share equally in profits and losses. Prior to the date of this contract, Perrine had been financed in his timber operations by the Ka-nawha Hardwood Co., a co-partnership to whom he had furnished, on account of the advancements, considerable quantities of lumber. Their relations had been established by a contract, dated August 11, 1899, purporting a sale by Perrine to said company of the lumber he then expected to cut, estimated at 100,000 feet, at certain prices therefor, delivered on board cars. At the date of execution of the contract, $500.00 was advanced on the lumber. On February 21, 1900, the company had advanced and paid Perrine $3,391.23 and credited him with $2,064.07, leaving a balance due of $1,329.16, according to the testimony of J. Q. Barker, manager of the company. On that date, which was about a month after the formation of the partnership between Perrine and Evans, Barker went to Perrine’s place of business to look after the company’s interests and, finding Per-rine embarrassed by lack of funds, made a new contract, dated February 22, 1900, by which his company agreed to make further advancements, and purchased the mill, tramway and all of Per-rine’s "right, title and interest in and to the lumber” then on [624]*624sticks; bis “interest in and to” the timber already purchased; his rights of way; and his “right and title” to mill and lumber yards wherever located on Queen Shoals Creek; but there was a provision for re-conveyance in case Perrine should pay back the money advanced to him. Future advances were provided for not to exceed $9.00 per thousand feet for purchasing timber, cutting, hauling, sawing and loading on cars. Of course, shipments were to continue and the lumber, as received, was to be credited on the indebtedness. Evans was not expressly made a party to this contract, though interested as aforesaid. Barker says the company advanced $1,200.00 to Perrine on the next day, paid a freight bill of $32.17’ on the 24th and his note at a certain bank for $258.20 on the 26th. While matters were in this situation, C. C. Young, a creditor of Perrine, sued’ him in assumpsit for the sum of $354.15, and had an attachment levied on the lumber and timber about the mill and on the yards, by D. EL Stephenson, a deputy sheriff, and it was subsequently sold under an order of the court, pending the suit, for the sum of $529.01, the Kanawha Hardwood Company becoming the purchaser, retaining the money and giving the sheriff its obligation, with the intention of resisting Young’s claim to the fund on the ground of title to the property in the purchaser. Part of the property sold under the attachment belonged to Perrine and the residue to Perrine and Evans, the former bringing $150.67 and tire latter $378.34. Later, the attachment was quashed. In July, 1900, Evans brought his suit in equity, setting up the co-partnership between himself and Perrine, and the proceedings in the action at law, resulting in the conversion of the social property into a fund in the hands of the sheriff, and praying a settlement and dissolution and a1 decree for the fund, less an amount sufficient to pay the firm debts. Such proceedings were had as resulted in a decree in his favor for $378.71, out of said fund, less the sheriff’s commission thereon, $19.93. This decree was pronounced at the September term of the court, 1901. Before the expiration of that term,,but after the entry of the decree, the Kanawha Hardwood Co., not having been made a party to the cause, came into court and tendered its petition, praying to be made a defendant and to have its petition taken and treated as a cross-bill against Evans, Perrine, Stephenson and Young. The court took time to consider it, but adjourned without [625]*625having acted upon it, and, at the ensuing December term, permitted it to be filed, over objections of Evans, remanding the cause to rules for process. At the May term, 1902, all the parties, except Perrine, appeared, waiving the issuance and service of process, and answers were filed by Evans and Stephenson, that of the latter showing he had paid Evans the fund in his hands arising from the sale of the partnership property, under the decree formerly made, and praying a decree against the Kanawha Hardwood Co. for $529.01, the purchase money of the property ■sold. On these pleadings and the evidence taken, the decree, complained of, allowing the Kanawha Hardwood Co. to retain said sum of $529.01 and requiring Evans to repay tó Stephenson the money received from him, was pronounced, and Evans and Stephenson have appealed from it.

■ The so-called cross-bill was really an original bill, having for its object correction of a decree in a cause to which the Kanawha Hardwood Co. had not been a party, but to which it should have been made a defendant, as the object of Evans’ bill had! been to acquire the fund in the hands of said company. That decree was not binding on it, but it related to, and affected, the fund in its hands. Hence the new bill was germane to the old one, and may be termed an original bill in the nature of a bill of review. The decree, made on the first bill, between Evans and Stephenson, became final as to them on the adjournment, of the term, and could not be set aside, but subsequent proceedings on the new bill disclosed a miscarriage of justice, due to Evans’ failure to make necessary parties to his bill. Assuming that he was not entitled to that fund, the decree in his favor, so wrongfully procured by him, passed into his hands a fund under the control of the court and constructively in its possession. We think the court, seeing the erroneous and wrongful disposition of the fund, and having all the parties before it, could, under its power of restitution, decree repayment of it by Evans, though Stephenson did not ask it in his answer to the cross-bill. The decree was a mere order of restoration, based upon error, disclosed by the record, as the. circuit court thought, rather than a pleading inter parteé and prayer for relief. August v. Gilmer, 53 W. Va. 65; Brown v. Cunningham, 23 W. Va. 109; Eubank v. Ralls, 4 Leigh 308. We think this principle an[626]*626swers fully the objection of want of pleadings between Stephenson and Evans, as a basis for the decree between them.

The form of the contract of sale, purporting to pass only Per-rine’s right, title and interest in and to the lumber constitutes the basis of further complaint. Of course it carried nothing beyond the extent of its terms. Joules v. Neale et als, 2 Pat. & H. 339. However, if the cross-bill plaintiff can be regarded as a creditor of the firm, in respect to the indebtedness due it, the decree is right, since the fund, constituting the social assets, is confessedly a partnership fund, as to which creditors have preference over members of the firm. The crucial question, therefore, is whether the advancements are to be regarded as having been made to Perrine or. to the firm. Evans says he knows nothing of them, nor of the use of any of them in the manufacture of the partnership lumber.

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Related

Brown v. Cunningham
23 W. Va. 109 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1883)
August v. Gilmer
44 S.E. 143 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1903)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
64 S.E. 917, 65 W. Va. 622, 1909 W. Va. LEXIS 93, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kanawha-hardwood-co-v-evans-wva-1909.