Loar v. Wilfong

61 S.E. 333, 63 W. Va. 306, 1908 W. Va. LEXIS 96
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 14, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 61 S.E. 333 (Loar v. Wilfong) 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
Loar v. Wilfong, 61 S.E. 333, 63 W. Va. 306, 1908 W. Va. LEXIS 96 (W. Va. 1908).

Opinion

McWhobtee, Judge:

This was a suit in chancery brought by Wm. A. Loar against John Wilfong in the circuit court of Monongalia county for the purpose of enforcing specific performance of the following contract:

“To William A. Loar:
I hereby acknowledge that as part of the consideration of the deed made for 9 3-4 acres of coal on Flaggy Meadow Run, this day made by yourself and wife to me I am to ■convey to you by deed of General Warranty a tract of land lying between jmur land and with the lines of my land and the crop of the Pittsburg vein of coal, with the understanding that I am to receive Fifty Dollars for the same ■and herewith agree and bind myself to make a deed for the same within ten days.
' Given under my hand this 11th day of March, 1903.
his
Witness, W. L. Poughncr. John X Wilfong
mark
[308]*308State of West Virginia,
County o'f Monongalia, ss.:
I, P. W. Low, a Notary Public within and for the County of Monongalia, and State aforesaid, do certify that John Wilfong did execute, sign and' deliver the foregoing writing, in my presence on March 11th, 1903.
P. W. Low, Notary Public.
State of West Virginia, ss.:
Produced to me, John M. Gregg, Clerk of the County Court of Monongalia County, in my office, and was then and there admitted to record on the 18th day of April, 1903.
Attest: Johm M. Gregg, Clerk.”

Plaintiff exhibited with his bill the said contract together with a plat and survey of the land agreed therein to be conveyed, which survey described the land by metes and bounds and as containing L8 acres. The bill alleged that plaintiff and his wife had conveyed, on the same day that said agreement bears date, to the said Wilfong 9 3-4 acres of Pittsburg vein of coal, and that in addition to the consideration mentioned in the deed from plaintiff for said coal the said defendant was to convey this J.8 acres of land as a part of said consideration, said plain tiff to pay to defendant $50 thereon; and praying that the said defendant might be decreed specifically to perform his said agreement and to-make a good and sufficient deed to plaintiff for the described premises, that plaintiff was ready and willing and offered specifically to perform his agreement on his part and on the execution of a proper conveyance to the plaintiff pursuant to the terms of the agreement to pay to the defendant the. residue of the purchase money, that the defendant be compelled to produce in court the deed or copy thereof executed by plaintiff on the said 11th day of March, 1903, to the said defendant for 9 3-4 acres of coal, said deed never having been recorded, and for general relief.

Defendant filed his demurrer to the said bill which was overruled and the defendant was granted leave to file his answer within forty days, and like leave granted to plaintiff to file his replication thereto within ten days in the clerk’s office.

On the 16th day of November, 1903, the defendant Wil-fong filed his answer admitting that he was seised and pos[309]*309sessed of the tract of 7.8 acres on the 11th day of March, 1903, but was unable to say whether or not the courses and distances alleged in plaintiff’s bill as shown by the survey were correct and denied the making of said agreement or any agreement written or verbal for the sale to plaintiff of said land; and denied that he, on said 11th day of March, 1903, or any other clay, agreed to sell or. convey to plaintiff said land “ in consideration of a deed that day executed and delivered to defendant, for 9 3-4 acres of the Pittsburg vein of coal underlying lands of plaintiff situate on Flaggy Meadow Run, in Grant District, and the sum of $50.00,” as plaintiff in his bill has alleged; but averred that it was true that on the 11th of March, 1903, he agreed to and did purchase from plaintiff the Pittsburg vein of coal underlying the 9 3-4 acres of land oil Flaggy Meadow Run for the sum of $998.03, $550 to be paid in cash and defendant to execute and deliver to plaintiff notes for the residue; that he paid said $550 and executed the notes for the residue, which cash and notes plaintiff accepted on that day and executed and delivered to defendant a general warranty deed for said coal, which deed is copied in and made a part of the answer. And denied the allegation of plaintiff’s bill that at the time of the execution of said deed by plaintiff to defendant for said coal there was any agreement or understanding between them that said sum of-dollars was not a full and adequate consideration for the coal, but averred on the contrary that said sum was agreed upon by the parties as a full and sufficient consideration therefor and that no other consideration was mentioned at the time of the execution of said deed.

On the 30th day of June, 1904, by consent of the parties, the cause was submitted to the court for final hearing and determination and the court took time to consider of its decree. On the 15th day of November, 1904, on motion of the defendant, he was granted leave to file a supplemental answer and the cause was remanded to rules for that purpose, to the entering of which order the plaintiff objected and protested. And at rules in the clerk’s office on the first Monday in January, 1905, the defendant filed his supplemental answer in the cause. The plaintiff, by counsel, ob[310]*310jected and excepted to the said supplemental answer; first, because the same was tendered and filed after a decree had been entered in the cause by consent of plaintiff and defendant submitting the cause to the court for final hearing; second, because said alleged supplemental answer was not in fact a supplemental answer but an amended answer; and third, because the whole of said supplemental answer was impertinent, irrelevant and immaterial, and because the alleged facts therein stated, if true, were known to the defendant at the time of the institution of this suit and before and at the time of the filing of the original answer in this cause. And made further exceptions to special parts of said answer in the same nature as the exceptions just stated; and further objected to the filing of the supplemental answer because the filing of the same would be without authority of law, and moved that the same be stricken out.

Depositions were taken and filed in the cause by both plaintiff and defendant, the last of the depositions being-closed in June, 1904. The affidavit of Charles H. Leeds, counsel for defendant, was filed in open court on the 10th of February, 1905, in support of the supplemental answer of the defendant, which affidavit was to the effect that he, as counsel for defendant, had prepared the answer and supplemental answer filed in the cause and “that the new matter appearing in the supplemental answer was not known to him at the time of the preparing of the original answer, that a full knowledge of the facts in this case were only revealed or made known to him after the filing of the original answer;” which was all that was offered in support of the filing of said supplemental answer.

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Bluebook (online)
61 S.E. 333, 63 W. Va. 306, 1908 W. Va. LEXIS 96, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/loar-v-wilfong-wva-1908.