Linn v. Patton

10 W. Va. 187, 1877 W. Va. LEXIS 75
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 28, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 10 W. Va. 187 (Linn v. Patton) 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
Linn v. Patton, 10 W. Va. 187, 1877 W. Va. LEXIS 75 (W. Va. 1877).

Opinion

GREEN, PRESIDENT :

On the 20th day of April, 1867, the widow and devisees of William Tompkins, deceased, by deed of that date, partitioned among themselves the real estate of which he died seized. By this deed four tracts of land in West Virginia, one of them being in Payette county, were conveyed to R. Ellen Patton, then R. Ellen Tompkins, one of said devisees. In the same deed, and after such conveyance to her, she, the said R. Ellen, conveyed the same lands to N. Fitzhugh upon certain trust, and it was recited that this division of the real estate of William Tompkins was made among his devisees excluding Charles C. Tompkins, who had sold and conveyed his entire interest for $25,.000, to the other devisees, and that in part payment of the said sum the purchasers had executed their note to him for $11,335.13, and that each of said parties, including said R. Ellen, was bound for one seventh of this sum respectively, and it was agreed that this one-seventh of said sum should remain and be a lien [189]*189upon each of tbe respective shares or portions including that of the said R. Ellen, thereby conveyed, until said debt was fully paid off and discharged. The trusts upon which the said R. Ellen'Patton, then R. Ellen Tompkins, conveyedjthe said four tracts of land to N. Fitz-hugh were that she should receive the rents, issues and profits during her natural life; that in the event of her marriage, the trust should continue during the marriage ; that if she should die, leaving issue, the trust should continue for the benefit of such issue, until they had arrived at the age of twenty-one years, and then pass to such issue, discharged from the trust.

Provision was also made for the sale of the property, and the reinvestment of the proceeds in other property upon the same trusts, by application to some court of record in Kanawha county.

R. Ellen Tompkins, after the execution of this deed, intermarried with the defendant Oliver A. Patton, who was thereafter substituted as a trustee in said deed in room of Fitzhugh, by order of Kanawha circuit court.

On the 7th January, 1869, the said Oliver A. Patton, as such trustee, and as the husband of the said R. Ellen, and said R. Ellen, executed to palintiff Linn a mortgage on certain personal property and upon the tract of land above referred to in Fayette, to secure to said Linn the payment of $1,075, evidenced by note then just due, given for moneys paid as securities of the parties of the first part by said Linn, and also to indemnify him-in the further sum of $1,050, for any liability he might incur by becoming bound as security of the parties of the first part for the performance of the orders and decrees of the Louisville chancery court in the suit of B. B. Mason, against them then pending. This mortgage was duly acknowledged by Oliver A. Patton, trustee, and also, individually, and it was acknowledged by R. Ellen Patton. But the clerk who took her acknowledgment of this deed entirely omited to state in the certificate that she did not wish to retract it. It was put on the record book, [190]*190in Louisville, where the personal property then was, and shortly thereafter in Kanawha county, West Virginia, where the grantors removed with said personal property.

In August, 1869, the plaintiff, Linn, filed his bill in Kanawha circuit court against Mrs. Patton, her trustee and others, for the purpose of foreclosing this mortgage. The bill alleged that the note for $1,075 was still unpaid, and that the plaintiff had also been compelled under decree of the Louisville court to pay the further ’sum of $1,050, for which he became the surety of Mrs. Patton in the Mason suit in that court. The bill prayed for the sale of the real and personal property set out in the mortgage for the satisfaction of these claims.

The cause was matured as to all the original defendants at the fall term, 1869. On the 9th March, 1870, by order of the court, Amanda L. Patton, infant child of the appellants, was made a party defendant to the suit, and Samuel A. Miller appointed her guardian ad litem. On the 12th April, 1870, her answer was filed, general replication thereto entered, and the cause then coming on to be heard upon the bill and exhibits taken for confessed and set for hearing at rules as to all the defendants, except the infant, and upon her answer and replication thereto, was referred by the court to Master Commissioner Burlew to report upon the amount and nature of the plaintiff's claim, its consideration, and for whose benefit created. Burlew having resigned his commissionership without executing this order of reference, on the 29th June, 1870, by order of the court, any one of the court's commissioners was authorized to execute the same.

On the 8th November, 1870, by order of the court, Nellie Tompkins Patton, another infant child of the appellants, born since the institution of the suit, was made a party defendant to the suit, and Samuel A. Miller was appointed her guardian ad litem,. The children of Mr. and Mrs. Patton were made parties to the suit on account of whatever contingent interest they might have in the real estate mortgaged.

[191]*191On the 24th March, 1871, the commissioner returned to court his report made under the order of reference above mentioned, finding due to the plaintiff from the defendants, Patton and wife, on July 5, 1870, the sum of $2,227, and that the indebtedness was created for the benefit of Mrs. Patton and her trust estate. The same day the cause came on to be heard upon the papers and proceedings theretofore had and read, the answers of the two infant defendants and replications thereto, and upon the commissioner’s report, to which no exceptions had been taken. The decree of March 24, 1871, was thereupon entered. By this decree the commissioner’s report was approved and confirmed; and after reciting that the court was of opinion that the plaintiff was entitled to recover against Patton and wife the sum of $2,227, reported by the commissioner, with interest and costs, and that Mrs. Patton was entitled to a life estate in the land set out in the mortgage, and that this as well as the personal property conveyed by the mortgage were liable for plaintiff’s said debt, the court proceeded, by consent of all the parties, signified by their signing the decree, to adjudge, order and decree a sale of Mrs. Patton’s life estate in the land, and of the personal property, on the usual terms. L. A. Martin and H. C. McWhorter were appointed special commissioners to execute the decree. The consent of the appellants to this decree was signified by its being signed by O. A. Patton, as trustee for Mrs. E, Ellen Patton.

While this suit was still pending, and before the execution of the above decree of sale, viz: In July, 1871, Mrs. Patton filed a bill in the circuit court of Kanawha county against her trustee and husband, Oliver A. Patton, and her two children, Amanda L. and Nellie T., alleging that an error and mistake was made in drafting the deed of partition of April 20, 1867, between herself and the other devisees of William Tompkins, deceased, so far as related to the trusts therein created by her; that her true and sole purpose and intention, at the time she executed the [192]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 W. Va. 187, 1877 W. Va. LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/linn-v-patton-wva-1877.