Marshall v. Hall

42 S.E. 641, 51 W. Va. 569, 1902 W. Va. LEXIS 127
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 29, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 42 S.E. 641 (Marshall v. Hall) 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
Marshall v. Hall, 42 S.E. 641, 51 W. Va. 569, 1902 W. Va. LEXIS 127 (W. Va. 1902).

Opinion

MoWi-iorter, Judge:

John II. Hall purchased from the estate of Mrs. Ellen Waters a tract of two-hundred and thirty-five acres of land in JefEerson County, under the provisions of the will of said Ellen Waters, at the price fixed by the will, twelve thousand dollars, which will provided a legacy of three thousand dollars to said John H. Hall to be by him held in trust, to pay the interest accruing thereon to John L. Briscoe, the brother of the testator, during his life, and after the death of her said brother the said sum of three thousand dollars was to be paid to Julia Armstead, Bettie Miller and Julia Gallaher each the sum of five hundred dollars, and the residue of said sum to testator’s sisters Juliet B. Miller, Elizabeth C. Hall, and Amelia E. Gallaher, equally to be divided between them share and share alike. To raise the money to pay for the farm the executor of the will borrowed for said Hall from Judge Marshall the sum of seven thousand dollars, to secure which Hall executed a deed of trust on the land; the executor allowed the said Hall to retain the three thousand dollars bequeathed to him as a trust fund by said will, to be held by him in trust for John L. Briscoe and others, and took Hall’s receipt therefor. Ó'n the failure of Hall to pay off this trust deed George Johnson and Charles W. Ross, executors of Ann P. Marshall, and Charles W. Ross, as trustee,- brought their suit •in chancery in tire circuit court of JefEerson County, and filed their bill at April Rules, 1893, convening the creditors of said Hall for the purpose of subjecting said land to the pajnnent of his debts, in which suit said John L. Briscoe, and others, the beneficiaries of the three thousand dollar trust fund were not made parties. These parties on the 14th day of December, 1894, tendered their petition in said cause, setting up their claim for the three thousand dollars and praying that this resulting trust might be fully recognized and established by decree, and that all resulting and consequential relief might be granted, etc., to the filing of said petition the parties plaintiffs and defendants to said suit objected, which objection was sustained and the petition not allowed to be filed. Petitioners appealed from the de-[571]*571creo rejecting their petition, and by decree of this Court the said decree was reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings to be had therein in accordance with the rules of equity. 43 W. Va. 641. On the 17th of February, 1897, Eugene Baker, sheriff committee, administrator of Juliet B. Miller and the other said petitioners, filed their petition, and amended petition making all the parties to said suit plaintiffs and defendants; parties defendants to said petition setting up their said claim for three thousand dollars and interest alleging that their resulting or implied trust is a lien upon the whole of the two-hundred and thirty-six acres and superior in dignity, first to all deeds of trust against said farm, secondly, to all judgments against said John H. Hall,, and thirdly, to every other lien or charge against said property of whatever character or description, except so far as otherwise held by the Supreme Court of Appeals of this State in this case; that the deed of trust of plaintiff, Charles W. Ross, trustee, etc., was recorded April 1, 1881, and that said Ross, as such trustee, relinquished his lien on the eighty acres of the Briscoe tract in favor of one Thomas II. Bates, by deed exhibited with the bill and dated January 1, 1884, and averring that as to said eighty acres the said Ross must be taken to have received the benefit thereof as against the petitioners and as against them, the plaintiffs’ debt audited against the remainder of the Briscoe tract, one hundred and fifty-six acres should be charged with the price of said eighty acres, and petitioners so pray, and averring further that the deed of trust to George Ba3dor in favor of W. L. Wilson as set out in the bill was recorded May 33, 1881, while the legal title to the Briscoe tract was outstanding in Ross, trustee, and, therefore, it conveys nothing but the equity of redemption and was subordinate therefore do the equity of petitioners upon the principle that qui ¡mor est in tempore potior est in jure, and praying that it may be so adjudged, and averring that the same is true in -regard to the other deeds of trust set out in the bill, and also over the lien of S. S. Dalgarn by virtue of the deed of trust to Frank Beckwith, dated October 10, 1893, for two hundred and forty-three dollars and seventy-seven cents for the same reason and for the further reason that this last conveyance was made pen-dente lite averring that the decree of sale of February 33, 1894, was and is virtually null and void as to the petitioners as also is the decree confirming the sale, and pray that the said decrees [572]*572be so held, and they charge that even if the sale should not be disturbed that said purchaser made his second payment of the 10th of August, 1895, after petitioners had tendered their petition to the court to be filed, which was done December 14, 1894, at which date all the parties appeared in answer to said petition and moved to reject it; hence said Dalgarn is a purchaser with notice of petitioners’ claim and pray that it may be so adjudged and that the one hundred and fifty-six acres-may be subjected1 in the hands of the purchaser, Dalgarn, to the payment of 'their debt, averring that plaintiff had notice of petitioners’ equity when he brought this suit, and subsequently that it appeared on the face of the record that they were necessary parties to the suit and they, therefore aver that all the decrees entered in the cause are liable to be set aside and treated as null and void as to petitioners and pray that it may be so held and that their resulting trust be fully recognized and established by decree and relief be granted accordingly; that the cause be recommitted to a commissioner to ascertain and report how much of the purchase money remains undistributed and how much thereof is entitled, under the decision of the Supreme Court of Appeals in this cause, to be applied to the payment of the lien of petitioners, and for process, etc., and for general relief.

Frank Beckwith, trustee, filed his answer to said petition setting up the trust deed he represents and showing its recordation, denying all notice of any claim or equity on behalf of petitioners until the filing of their petition and charging laches on part of petitioners in asserting their claims and calling for strict proof of their claim. W. L. Wilson, Edward Tearney and George Baylor, trustees, filed their answer denying that the three thousand dollars is a lien upon the two hundred and thirty-six acres as a resulting trust or otherwise, or that they ever had notice of the facts set out in the petition until the filing thereof; that the farm devised by Mrs. Waters to John Ií. Hall originally coii-tained two hundred and thirty-six acres, but averring that in June, 1884, the said Hall sold off eighty acres of said tract to Thomas H. Bates, and petitioners’ lien, if their theory of .the law be true, would equally attach to said eighty acres in the hands of Thomas H. Bates; that the claim audited in the cause in favor of Ann P. Marshall’s executors has been fully paid and satisfied under the decrees in this cause, two thousand eight hundred and ninety-seven dollars and ninety-three cents under [573]*573decree of July, 1894, and fbe residue two thousand and three dollars and ninety-six cents under the decree of August, 1895, and same has.been paid out and distributed under the will of the said Ann P.

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Bluebook (online)
42 S.E. 641, 51 W. Va. 569, 1902 W. Va. LEXIS 127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marshall-v-hall-wva-1902.