Moore v. Hamilton

155 S.E.2d 877, 151 W. Va. 784, 1967 W. Va. LEXIS 123
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 11, 1967
Docket12624
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 155 S.E.2d 877 (Moore v. Hamilton) 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
Moore v. Hamilton, 155 S.E.2d 877, 151 W. Va. 784, 1967 W. Va. LEXIS 123 (W. Va. 1967).

Opinion

HaymoND, Judge:

In this civil action instituted in the Circuit Court of Hardy County in October 1965, the plaintiff, Charles J. Moore, seeks a judgment permitting him to redeem certain property owned by him by payment to the defendant, John M. Hamilton, Trustee, the amount of money necessary to pay all the creditors of the plaintiff within a period of time to be fixed by the circuit court, requiring the trustee upon such payment to convey such property to the plaintiff, enjoining the trustee from executing a deed to the defendant, Thomas Mutchler, Jr. for such property which was sold to him *785 by the trustee under a certain deed of trust, and setting aside such sale. The case heard by the circuit court in lieu of a jury upon the complaint and exhibits filed with it, including copies of the notice of trustee’s sale and of the deed of trust dated March 30, 1964, the seperate answers of the defendants Hamilton, Trustee, and Thomas Mutchler, Jr., the purchaser of the property at the trustee’s sale, and the testimony of numerous witnesses in behalf of the respective parties concerning the manner in which the sale in question was conducted. Numerous other persons occupying the status of creditors of or surety for the plaintiff were, by proper order, made defendants in the action.

By its judgment rendered July 19, 1966, the circuit court found that the plaintiff had been denied by the trustee the right to determine the parcels of real estate to be sold to pay all his lien indebtedness and the cost of sale, declared the sale of the property made by the trustee to the purchaser on October 23, 1965, to be null and void and set aside such sale, and granted the plaintiff the right within thirty days from the date the judgment became final to pay such debts, the costs of sale, and the costs of suit, including a commission to the trustee of $2,000.00, being five per cent on the sum of $40,000.00, the approximate amount required to pay such indebtedness, and directed the trustee to refund to the purchaser the residue of the cash payment made to the trustee and the purchase money notes delivered to the trustee by the purchaser. The judgment also provided that the purchaser who had made certain repairs to the property and had paid certain fire insurance premiums should be given credit for the cost of such repairs and the amount of the premiums and should be permitted to keep the interest earned on the cash payment, which had been deposited in a savings account in a bank in Harrisonburg, Virginia, and the sum of $700.00 representing rents collected by the purchaser. By its subsequent judgment rendered August 8, 1966, the circuit court overruled the separate motions of the defendants for a new trial *786 of the action and suspended all further proceedings in the action to enable the defendants to seek an appeal from this Court. From the foregoing judgment an appeal was granted by this Court to the defendant Thomas Mutchler, Jr. upon his separate application for an appeal.

On March 30, 1964, the plaintiff, a single man, executed a deed of trust to the defendant John M. Hamilton, Trustee, by which the plaintiff conveyed to the trustee, subject to certain exceptions and reservations, three large tracts of land, aggregating approximately 745 acres, on a portion of which were constructed five substantial, furnished cabins, situate in Hardy County, West Virginia, to secure an indebtedness in the amount of $20,000.00 owed by the plaintiff to the South Branch Valley National Bank of Moorefield. The first large tract, composed of three parcels of 221.45 acres, 1 acre and 30 acres, more or less, is referred to as the Wratch-ford or G-ochenour tract; the second large tract, containing 203-1/2 acres, composed of two smaller tracts, is referred to as the Wood tract; and the third large tract, containing 291-1/8 acres, composed of three smaller tracts, is referred to as the Foltz tract. These tracts of land were also subject to a prior deed of trust executed by the plaintiff to secure certain indebtedness in the amount of $12,171.19 owed by the plaintiff to the Farmers and Merchants Bank of Keyser as of October 30,1965.

The plaintiff, having defaulted in the payment of the debt of $20,000.00 owing to the South Branch Valley National Bank of Moorefield, the trustee, at the instance of that bank, advertised the real estate covered by the deed of trust in favor of that bank for sale at public auction at the front door of the courthouse of Hardy County on October 23, 1965, at which time the sale of the property was conducted by an auctioneer under the direction of the trustee who, together with the plaintiff and several other persons some of whom were bidders, was present at the sale. The real estate was first, offered separately and subsequently as a *787 whole. The highest separate bids were $4,000.00 for Cabin No. 1; $4,000.00 for Cabin No. 2; $5,000.00 for Cabin No. 3; $5,100.00 for Cabin No. 4: and ‡4,000.00 for Cabins Nos. 5 and 6 which constitnted a joint nnit; $8,900.00 for the "Wood tract; $16,500.00 for the Foltz tract; and $9,000.00 for the Wratchford or G-ochenour tract, and the aggregate of snch separate bids was $56,500.00. The real estate was then offered as a whole and, when $57,000.00 had been bid, there was a lull in the bidding and after some of the bidders had conferred together inside the conrthonse and returned to the sale Mntchler made the highest bid, which was $62,000.-00, and the property was sold to him by the trustee for that amount. The purchaser made a cash payment to the trustee of one-third of the purchase price of $20,666.66 and gave two notes in the principal amount of $20,666.67 each, dne in one and two years, bearing six per cent interest, for the balance of the purchase price. From the cash payment the trustee paid advertising costs of $149.92, taxes of $624.84, auctioneer’s fee of $75.00, and to himself a commission of five per cent on $62,000.00 or $3100.00. The remainder of the cash payment of $16,716.90 was deposited by the trustee in a bank in Harrisonburg, Virginia, in a four and one-half per cent interest bearing savings account and is now on deposit in that bank. The purchaser has taken possession of the property, has made and paid for some repairs, has paid fire insurance premiums, and has collected rents from the property.

Eleven persons, including the plaintiff, testified in behalf of the plaintiff and five persons, including the trustee and the purchaser, testified in behalf of the defendants concerning the manner in which the sale was conducted and on that subject the evidence is conflicting. There was- evidence that the auctioneer was under the influence of intoxicating liquor and conducted the sale in a confused manner; that the auctioneer was not intoxicated and that the sale was conducted in a fair and regular manner; that the plaintiff registered numerous protests concerning the manner in *788

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Bluebook (online)
155 S.E.2d 877, 151 W. Va. 784, 1967 W. Va. LEXIS 123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-hamilton-wva-1967.