Laws v. Law

76 Va. 527, 1882 Va. LEXIS 57
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJuly 20, 1882
StatusPublished

This text of 76 Va. 527 (Laws v. Law) 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
Laws v. Law, 76 Va. 527, 1882 Va. LEXIS 57 (Va. 1882).

Opinion

Anderson, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Henry Law, by his last will dated December, 1863, which was admitted to probate by the county court of Franklin, ■on the first day of February, 1864, bequeathed all his property, real and personal, after payment of all his just debts, to his two daughters, the appellants, to be equally ■ divided between them. It seems he had no real estate, except the small tract of fifty acres situate in the county ■ of Franklin, on which he lived and died. After his death 9 about the year 1864, his said daughters occupied it, claiming the right to it under their father’s will—having the 'Continued and exclusive possession of it from the death of ■their father to the present time—no one even disputing their right or claiming adversely to them, until shortly before they filed their bill against the defendant in this cause, on the 16th day of January, 1876. Leroy B. Law .then for the first time set up a claim to the land, and threatened to turn them out of their home by suit, if they ■ did not surrender it to him. He claimed it under a deed from the executors of John Law, deceased, bearing date the 7th of August, 1852, which they allege he fraudulently procured to be executed to himself, instead of to his father, -who purchased and paid for the land, through his agency, by a betrayal of the confidence reposed in him by his father. The appellants, Pheriby Law and Jane Law, devisees of their father, Henry Law, then filed their bill in ■chancery against the said Leroy Law to be relieved against the operation of said deed; which is this suit.

The land was bought at the said executor’s sale in December, 1846, and a bond given for the purchase money, $311, payable in twelve months, which was executed by Leroy B. Law and Henry Law. The bill alleges that the land was purchased for the father, and that the son’s name [529]*529was put first in the bond because, by the terms of the sale, bond with security was required, and tlie son having no property, would not have been tafeen as security. It also alleges that the money to pay for the land belonged to the father, and that the son got it from him to pay for the land, and to get him a deed for the same.

The answer of the defendant is contradictory of itself, confused and prevaricating. At one time he denies that Henry Law became the purchaser, and says, “on the other hand, said land was purchased and paid for by this respondent.” It might have been knocked down on his bid at the sale, and paid for by him, and yet if he bid for his father, and the latter furnished the money to pay for it, it would have been his land. But he adds, “ with his own money,” that is, respondent’s money. If that is true, it looks like it might be his property. But in the next sentence he says, “ The purchase was made by this respondent and his father.” That implies that they were joint purchasers and joint owners. Again, “He also claims that the said Henry placed money in his hands, belonging to said Henry, to pay for the same.” Belonging to said Henry. A peculiar or unusual qualification. It implies that he had placed the money in his hands to pay for the land, but that it was not his money. It did not belong to him. The allegation of the bill can hardly be said to be denied unequivocally, which is proved positively by two witnesses. It is true they were the complainants; but they are competent witnesses by the law, and there is no exception to their competency; and, as we shall see, their testimony is well supported and corroborated by other evidence in the record, and it outweighs the denial of the answer, even if it had not been equivocal and prevaricating. But in the next sentence he says, “ The said Henry paid a large part of the purchase money of said land, but in doing so he was paying a debt he owed this respondent.” A large part of [530]*530the purchase money was then paid with Henry’s money. But he said before, that the land was paid for “ by this respondent with his own money.” The two statements seem to be contradictory. But while Henry was paying it with his money, he says he was paying a debt he owed this respondent; and therefore the conclusion is implied that though Henry paid the greater part of the purchase money, he was at the time owing him a debt, and therefore, though he paid the purchase money (and it was paid through him, respondent, for he said before that the land was “paid for by this respondent”), yet, as he was owing him a debt at the time, the money he paid for the land must be regarded as his respondent’s money. That this is so, it will more fully appear by a subsequent statement in his answer. He says, “ that on the 11th day of June, 1847, the said Henry Law being indebted to this respondent in the sum of $250, for borrowed money, executed to this respondent his bond for that amount, as appears by his bond herewith filed as a 'part of this answer, marked ‘Z’; that this bond has been fully paid off and discharged' by the said Henry Law paying the amount of the same on the debt due from respondent for said land. In this way said land was most entirely paid for by said Henry Law, but in doing so he was but paying his indebtedness to this respondent.” Then he admits that the land was most entirely paid for by Henry Law. If so, his money must have paid for it. And, as he said before that the land “was paid for by this respondent,” it could not have been paid for by Henry Law in person, and he must have placed the money in his hands to pay for it, and it falsifies his previous denial that said Henry “ placed money in his hands belonging to said Henry to pay for the same.” The fact that he did, is positively proved by the two witnesses before named, and that he sold two little negroes to raise the money, and that he raised a larger amount than was necessary for that purpose, and [531]*531that respondent took a larger amount of his father’s money than was necessary for that purpose and kept the surplus. And the answer of respondent sustains the testimony of these witnesses, for it is a virtual admission that he got the money from his father, which at least almost entirely paid for the land; which money he assumes was not his father’s, "but his own, because his father was owing him a debt at the time amounting to the larger portion of it, and exhibits the bond with his answer.

If that bond was a subsisting bona fide debt of the father, the applying the money which he got from his father to pay for his land and to get him a deed for it, to the discharge of the debt which he held against him, without the knowledge or consent of his father, which is implied by the answer, and which certainly is not averred to the contrary. And upon that ground claiming the money to be his own, and paying for the land with it as his own money, and taking a deed to himself for the land, was a betrayal of the confidence of the father and was a gross fraud upon him. And this conclusion, I think, may fairly be drawn from the answer itself. Suppose the father owed him a debt, what right had he to take the money which his father gave him to pay for his land, and retain it himself in discharge of his debt, and have the deed executed to himself instead of his father, on the payment of the money which he got from his father, claiming it to be his own because he held a debt against his father, which was equal to the larger part of the money he got from him to pay. for the land?

But did he in fact apply the money in discharge of that bond ? He never surrendered the bond to his father, but still holds it, and files it as an exhibit in this cause. The bond was not actually discharged. It was still in his possession.

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Bluebook (online)
76 Va. 527, 1882 Va. LEXIS 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/laws-v-law-va-1882.