McMasters v. Edgar

22 W. Va. 673, 1883 W. Va. LEXIS 90
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 24, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 22 W. Va. 673 (McMasters v. Edgar) 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
McMasters v. Edgar, 22 W. Va. 673, 1883 W. Va. LEXIS 90 (W. Va. 1883).

Opinion

SNYDER, JuDSE:

Suit in equity brought, October 28,1879,% T. J. McMasters against Cyrus Edgar and Nancy .his. wife and others to subject a tract of one hundred and ninety-one acres of land to the payment of plaintiffs judgment. The bill alleges that in April, 1877, the defendant Cyrus Edgar and others executed- to Aj L. Shriver their joint note for one hundred and twenty-four dollars and two-cents- payable one year after date, which note after its uiaturity wás assigned for value by said Shriver to the plaintiff; that at the August term, 1879, the plaintiff recovered in the county court of Wirt county a judgment for one hundred and twenty-six dollars -and fifty cents, the amount of said note, and also costs against the said Cyrus Edgar; that on May 7, 1878, the said Cyrus pur[675]*675chased one hundred and ninety-one. acres oi land, in Wirt county -from Peter L. and George Martin at the price of eight hundred and sixty-six dollars and eighty-seven cents in cash, and caused the said Martins to convey said land by deed of that date to his wife, the said Nancy, with, intent to hinder,, delay and defraud his creditors and'especially the plaintiff;. that the said Nancy had no money' or'other estate to .buy land, and that said land was wholly paid fot by said Cyrus.

The defendants, Cyrus and Nancy Edgar,’by their answers, in general terms positively deny that said land was paid for by said Cyrus or that the deed to said Nancy W'as made to defraud, the'plaintiff or any creditor of said Cyrus. - ’They aver that the land was purchased and paid for by said Nancy from her own means inherited from her father’s estate; and that it is her separate estate. They further aver that said Nancy had sold said land to B.TT. Edgar for eightTnindred dollars, which he paid, and that she by deed dated December 12^1879, in which her husband united, conveyed-said land to said B. H. Edgar.

. On June 8, 1880, B. IT. Edgar filed his petition in the cause and' on his motion lie was made a party defendant. In his petition which he filed also as his'answer;1 tide áaid B., H. Edgar alleges that he purchased and paid the full value for said land without notice of the pendency-of this suit or that there was any purpose or.intent on the part of either the said Nancy or her husband to defraud any' one; that "he is an innocent and bom fide purchaser for value without'notice and as 'such he. is entitled to hold'said land free from incum-brance; that at the time he made said purchase he was a resident of the State of Ohio, but afterwards removed to Wirt county and is now in possession .of said land, arid that he always thought" it belonged to his mother, the ‘said Nancy, and was inherited by'her. from her father.

General replications were filed to said'answers, dispositions were taken including those of the defendants, Cyrus'and B. H. Edgar, and on March 30, 1881, the court by its decree declared said deed from Peter and George Martin to defendant Nancy Edgar fraudulent as to the plaintiff’s judgment, and that the lien of said judgment had .priority over the con[676]*676veyance made by said Nancy to defendant B. li. Edgar, and decreed that unless said judgment with interest and the costs of this suit were paid in thirty days, then said laud should be sold to pay said judgment and costs. From this decree the defendant B. H. Edgar appealed to this Court.

The appellant claims that the circuit court should not have decreed a sale of the land until the cause had been referred to a commissioner to ascertain whether or not there were other liens than that of the plaintiff’s judgment. • If this were an error it is not one of which the appellant could complain. This is not a bill to enforce the lien of a judgment against the land of the judgment debtor, but to charge the land in the hands of a fraudulent purchaser for the payment of the debt of his vendor. There being no allegation or evidence in the cause that there was any lien other than that of the plaintiff on, or charges against said land it would not have been proper for the court on its own motion to send the cause to a commissioner, and consequently it was not error not to do so — Anderson v. Nagle, 12 W. Va. 99; Neely v. Jones, 16 Id. 626; Weinberg v. Rempe, 15 Id. 831.

It is also claimed that the court erred in decreeing a sale of the land without having annulled the deed to appellant. To have done so would have been error. The said deed was valid between the parties. The court by decreeing that it was subject to the lien of the plaintiff’s judgment virtually held that it was invalid as to the plaintiff’s debt. This was proper. It the debt should be paid before sale, the title of the appellant would remain and he would be entitled to the land as against the grantors. The court did not, therefore, err in refusing to annul said deed — Murdoch v. Welles, 9 W. Va. 552.

The most material assignment of error relied on by the appellant is, that the decree is not sustained by the evidence. The solution of this question requires an examination of the testimony. I do not think there is any room to doubt the invalidity of the deed from Cyrus Edgar to his wife, Nancy Edgar. It is the settled law of this State, that in a purchase of property by a wife, during coverture, the burden is upon her .to prove distinctly that she paid the purchase-money with funds not derived from her husband. Evidence that [677]*677she purchased the property or that it was conveyed to her amounts to nothing, unless it is accompanied by clear and full proof that she paid for it with her own separate estate; and in the absence of such proof the presumption is that her husband furnished the means of payment and the property will be subject to his debts. Rose v. Brown, 11 W. Va. 122; Lockhard v. Beckley, 10 Id. 87; Hunter v. Hunter, Id. 321.

In reference to said conveyance .from Cyrus Edgar to his wife the proof not only fails to establish that the wife paid for the land from her separate estate, but it proves distinctly that she had no separate, estate.- The said conveyance was, therefore, clearly void as against the plaintiff. Does the proof show that the appellant, B. H. Edgar, was a bona fide purchaser of the land from his mother, the grantee in said conveyance, for a valuable consideration without notice that said conveyance was voluntary and fraudulent as to the plaintiff and other creditors of said Cyrus Edgar? The proof shows that he is the son of said Cyrus and Nancy Edgar; that he purchased the land after this suit was instituted; that prior to the fall of 1878, the father, mother and son all resided in Monroe county, State of Ohio; that the father sold his land in Ohio and. immediately after this land was purchased in Wirt county and the deed made to the mother and they moved upon it; that some time after the son visited his father and mother in Wirt county and proposed to buy this land but did not do so. Afterwards his mother sent him word that she would sell the land and he came to Wirt county and on December 12, 1879, he purchased the land at eight hundred dollars, all of which he paid down as he testifies, and she then made him the deed for it and he moved upon it and leased a part of it to his father and mother. When asked on cross-examination whether he had not prior to his purchase heard that this suit was pending to subject said land to the payment of the plaintiff's debt, said B. H.

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Bluebook (online)
22 W. Va. 673, 1883 W. Va. LEXIS 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcmasters-v-edgar-wva-1883.