Kell v. Cumby

20 S.E.2d 461, 124 W. Va. 357, 1942 W. Va. LEXIS 89
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 19, 1942
Docket9311
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 20 S.E.2d 461 (Kell v. Cumby) 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
Kell v. Cumby, 20 S.E.2d 461, 124 W. Va. 357, 1942 W. Va. LEXIS 89 (W. Va. 1942).

Opinions

Kenna, Judge:

This chancery proceeding attacking a deed between others as a fraud upon the creditors of the bankrupt was instituted in the Circuit Court of Mercer County by William L. Kell, trustee in bankruptcy for Arthur Andrew Cumby, against Arthur Andrew Cumby and others, and from a decree for the plaintiff the defendants appeal. The bill of complaint, demurrer to which was overruled, contains the following allegations:

The adjudication of Cumby’s bankruptcy on the sixth day of February, 1941, and the selection of Kell, trustee; Cumby’s prior adjudication and discharge on August 11, 1934; that on June 8, 1934, Cumby arranged the preparation of a deed to his fourteen-year-old daughter, Ruth, of property upon which he, Cumby, had in 1932, built a small home in which he and his wife and five minor children had lived, the deed being filed as an exhibit, and its execution and delivery, though not alleged, not being questioned; in 1937, Arthur Andrew Cumby constructed a large addition to the house he had constructed upon the property conveyed to his infant daughter, and in so doing, bought of the Seyler Lumber Company between May eighth and November third materials at a price of $1106.10, of which amount a balance of $907.21 remains unpaid. The bill of complaint, in addition to the foregoing epitomized allegations contains the following language:

“Plaintiff charges that the conveyance to said Ruth Cumby with reservations as shown in said deed to the bankrupt was fraudulent in fact and in law and made for the purpose of hindering, delaying and defrauding the creditors of the said bankrupt.
“Plaintiff also charges that the said conveyance was voluntary; and also that the erection of the *359 improvements on said land by the bankrupt was fraudulent in fact and in law and that the same are subject to the plaintiff's claims on behalf of the creditors of the bankrupt.
“Plaintiff therefore prays a decree adjudging the said bankrupt to be the owner of the land and the improvements and subjecting them to the claims of the plaintiff on behalf of the creditors entitled thereto. Plaintiff also prays for such other relief — general or special — as may be equitable and proper.”

It will be noted that the bill contains no definite allegations of specific fraudulent conduct on the part of Cumby, the bankrupt. Neither does it allege that the infant daughter, Ruth Cumby, who, according to the allegations of the bill, on June 8, 1934, received a conveyance of the property in question, and in doing so became vested in fact with the bare legal title, the substantial interest being the property of the bankrupt, was guilty of fraud, nor does it produce any set of definite circumstances that would so result. Nevertheless, the prayer of the bill is that the bankrupt be adjudicated the owner of the land and improvements, both of which be subjected to the claim of the plaintiff on behalf of the bankrupt’s creditors.

The first assignment of error is that the bill of complaint alleges no cause for equitable relief.

The defendant’s demurrer and answer assigns six specific reasons for deeming the bill insufficient, which we think unnecessary to separately note beyond saying that we believe the matters herein discussed are covered thereby.

We cannot see how the bill of complaint in its present form can be taken as other than an effort to establish a constructive trust in favor of the bankrupt and consequently his creditors, in the land including all the improvements, a part of which Ruth Cumby acquired while an infant by reason of a conveyance from her great-grandmother, Ettoley Compton, a part of the improvements having been placed upon the property three years after the deed became effective. The only allegation in the bill *360 of complaint that could remotely involve the bankrupt in the transaction- by which his infant daughter received title or in contributing to the value of her property is that the bankrupt arranged with a Bluefield attorney for the preparation of the deed and that in 1932, he had constructed a small house upon the land conveyed, specifying neither the value of the improvements nor the value of the realty, nor their comparative value. After the effective date of the conveyance to Ruth Cumby, no constructive trust would attach to the realty save as the result of some inequitable conduct in which she knowingly participated. There is no such charge in the bill of complaint. Neither does the bill of complaint contain allegations, the consequence of which would justify a separate treatment of the land and the improvements thereto attached. The allegations of fraud contained in the bill are obviously legal conclusions which lack averments of .fact to support them.

For the foregoing reasons we are of the opinion that the trial chancellor erred in failing to sustain the demurrer of the defendant to the bill of. complaint, according the plaintiff leave to amend.

However, inasmuch as the trial chancellor, after requiring the bill of complaint to be answered, considered the cause on its merits and entered a decree not dealing with the deed under attack, but allowing the plaintiff to recover as a charge upon the land the value of materials furnished by it and used in the improvements placed upon the property in 1937, and Ruth Cumby to retain the value of the improvements placed thereon prior to that time if the property, when offered for sale brought enough to pay both and, if not, to divide the purchase price evenly, we think that it might be an ultimate economy of effort to comment upon the record’s showing.

Etolley G. Compton, the grandmother of Arthur An-. drew Cumby, and the great-grandmother of his daughter, Ruth Kinder, nee Cumby, in 1913 received a deed for a small tract of land in Mercer County situated near the Virginia line and near a small settlement in that state *361 known as Falls Mill. The record does not show when she began living upon this parcel of land, but it does show that in 1932, at the age of eighty-six years, she was living thereon, and that in that year, evidently with her consent, Cumby built a four-room dwelling thereon in which he, his wife and a number of minor children thereafter lived.

The transaction by which Mrs. Compton obtained title is not questioned, but it is asserted that the bankrupt later either directly or indirectly acquired an equitable interest in the land. Neither is the bankrupt’s construction of a dwelling in 1932 directly attacked.

In October, 1933, A. A. Cumby filed his first petition in bankruptcy. He was discharged August 11, 1934.

In the meantime, the deed dated June 8, 1934, to Ruth Cumby was prepared and executed under circumstances fully revealed by the evidence, which we think it is unnecessary to recount, except to say that the grantee was not present when the deed was executed, and it was left, together with the certificate of acknowledgment, with the grantor to be later delivered to and recorded by A. A. Cumby, acting as the grantee’s agent on November 5, 1934. The bill of complaint charges generally that this deed was a fraud in fact and made for the purpose of hindering, delaying and defrauding the creditors of the bankrupt. There is no debt proven that was then in existence.

A. A.

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Related

West Virginia Human Rights Commission v. Smoot Coal Co.
412 S.E.2d 749 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1991)
Kell v. Cumby
26 S.E.2d 233 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1943)

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Bluebook (online)
20 S.E.2d 461, 124 W. Va. 357, 1942 W. Va. LEXIS 89, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kell-v-cumby-wva-1942.