Kent, Paine & Co. v. Chapman

18 W. Va. 485, 1881 W. Va. LEXIS 54
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 5, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 18 W. Va. 485 (Kent, Paine & Co. v. Chapman) 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
Kent, Paine & Co. v. Chapman, 18 W. Va. 485, 1881 W. Va. LEXIS 54 (W. Va. 1881).

Opinion

Green, Judge,

announced the opinion of the Court:

The first point in controversy in this appeal is the amount due on the plaintiffs’ judgment, which they have a right to enforce in this suit. The commissioner made his report of this amount, first by calculating it on the basis of the original judgment of the plaintiffs, afterwards he made a report on the basis of the judgment or award of execution on the forthcoming bond given by the parties. This latter was clearly right; and it was adopted by the court. On this basis the amount due the plaintiffs is $1,234.20 with interest thereon from December 12, 1859, until paid and $4.13 costs. Is this subject to any abatement or credit? Was it liable to be reduced by abating the interest during the war? This abatement the circuit court allowed by the last clause in the decree of May 5, 1874; but in making this abatement the court erred. The plaintiffs resided in Richmond, Virginia; the defendants in Mercer county. If these territories had been engaged in the war against each other, this interest ought to have-been abated (McVeigh v. The Bank of the Old Dominion; Brown v. Hiatts, 15 Wallace 177); but these territories were not engaged on opposite sides in the war. It is true Mercer county was from the formation of this State within the boundaries of this State, and this State was engaged in the war on the opposite side to the government of Virginia at Richmond ; but the jurisdiction of this State was never during the war extended over Mercer county, it re[501]*501mained under the jurisdiction of the government of Virginia at Richmond. Of this fact this Court can take judicial notice. Simmons v. Trumbo, 9 W. Va. 358. Interest should therefore be allowed on the debt during the war, as was held to be right and actually done, where the parties resided in Greenbrier county, in the ease of Jarrett’s ' adm’r v. Ludington, 9 W. Va. 333.

It was contended, that the plaintiffs’ judgment should be reduced to $521.19 with interest and costs, because there was improperly included in it by mistake or fraud a debt of $596.29, which was not- a debt of the firm of Baileys & Chapman, against whom the judgment was rendered, but an individual debt of A. R. Chapman; and he filed an answer in the nature of a cross-bill asking this correction of the judgment. But the circuit court was of opinion as appears by the decree of May 5, 1874, that Baileys & Chapman had slept too long upon their rights, even if there was a mistake or error in the rendition of the judgment at law, to ascertain at this late date by the memory of witnesses the true facts.” It therefore refused to entertain this complaint and dismissed so much of the answer of A. A. Chapman, as was in the nature of a cross-bill, and denied the relief prayed for. The court not only did not err in this, but might well have added, that the evidence showed, that there was no mistake or fraud in the rendition of the judgment for the amount, for which it was rendered.

A credit was also claimed for an amount of money collected by the attorneys of the plaintiffs on certain claims of the defendants, which had been left with the clerk by one of the defendants with directions, to have writs issued on them for collection by suit, and .witRdireclious, that they were for the use of the plaintiffs, and that the names of the plaintiffs’ attorneys should be marked to the suits. The evidence shows, that this was done without any previous agreement of these attorneys to receive these claims on the plaintiff’s demand either as collateral security or in satisfaction pro tanto of their demand; and the money, when collected, was by the direction of one the defendants applied to the payment of other demands against Baileys & Chapman. Attorneys at law employed to collect a debt may receive payment thereof in money, but [502]*502they have no authority to accept notes or bonds either in satisfaction or as collateral for the debt without express authority from their client. See Wiley v. Mahood et al., 10 W. Va. 206. It is clear, that the court below did not err in refusing to allow this credit on the plaintiffs’ judgment; for in this case there was not only no such authority, but they were not so received by the attorneys, though originally intended to be so applied by one of the defendants, and they were actually afterwards with the approbation of defendants applied to other demands against them.'

No other abatement or credit was claimed on the plaintiffs’ judgment.

The next point in controversy is : Whose lands ought to be primarily responsible to satisfy the plaintiffs’ judgment? It is insisted by appellants’ counsel, that it was the duty of the court in this cause to have had the partnership accounts of Baileys & Chapman settled, and if it should appear, that one of them, say Chapman, was on this settlement indebted to the others in an amount exceeding the judgment, that the court should have rendered a decree making the lands of Chapman first responsible-for the payment of the plaintiffs’ judgment, and for the balance due from him the court should have rendered a decree in favor of the other defendants against Chapman. The case of Vance v. Evans, 11 W. Va. 342, is relied on to .sustain this position. It was there decided, that a decree between co-defendants can only be based upon pleadings and proofs between the complainant and defendants; but where a case is made .ouf between defendants by evidence arising by pleadings and proofs between complainant and defendants, a court of equity should render a decree between the co-defendants. The character, of the cases, which come within this rule, is well illustrated by the case of Templeton v. Fauntelroy, 3 Rand. 434, also relied on by appellants’ counsel. It was there decided : “When a foreign attachment is sued out against an absent debtor and a resident garnishee in a case equitable in its nature, it is competent to the court of chancery to decree between the debtor and the garnishee, what may be due from the latter to the former after satisfying the claims of the plaintiff. But the evidence in such cases must arise from the pleadings and proofs between plaintiff and defendants.”

[503]*503What is meant by this qualification is shown by Judge Carr’s opinion on page 442. If the garnishee had admitted, that he owed the non-resident more than enough to pay the plaintiff’s demand, when it was established, the court would at once have decreed, that it be paid, and this is all it ought to have done, and if the non-resident defendant had asked the court to go further and settle the accounts between him and the garnishee in that cause, the court would have refused to grant such request, because in such a case there could properly be no decree rendered between co-defendants, because the claim of the non-resident to this balance could not in the case put depend on evidence, which arose from the pleadings and proofs between the plaintiffs and defendants. No evidence at all was necessary to sustain the right of the plaintiffs after his claim was established to the decree against the garnishee therefor, as the garnishee admitted his liability thereto, and this was all that was necessary to entitle the plaintiff to the relief he asked.

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Related

State v. King
63 S.E. 468 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1908)
Johnson v. Gibbons
27 Va. 632 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1876)
Paine v. Tutwiler
27 Va. 440 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1876)
Ward v. Churn
18 Va. 801 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1868)
Smith's Adm'r v. Charlton's Adm'r
7 Gratt. 425 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1851)
Lee v. Tapscott
2 Va. 276 (Court of Appeals of Virginia, 1796)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 W. Va. 485, 1881 W. Va. LEXIS 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kent-paine-co-v-chapman-wva-1881.