Morehead v. Horner

4 S.E. 448, 30 W. Va. 548, 1887 W. Va. LEXIS 95
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 26, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 4 S.E. 448 (Morehead v. Horner) 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
Morehead v. Horner, 4 S.E. 448, 30 W. Va. 548, 1887 W. Va. LEXIS 95 (W. Va. 1887).

Opinion

Snyder, Judge :

Suit in equity, commenced December 30, 1882, in the Oir-quit Court of Wood county, by J. L. Morehead against R.. E. Horner and others, to subject certain real estate to the payment of a debt alleged by the plaintiff to be a lien thereon. The cause was subsequently transferred to the Circuit Court of Harrison county, which latter court, by its decree, entered September 28, 1886, dismissed the .bill, and the administrator of the plaintiff (the plaintiff having died before the final decree) has appealed from said decree to this Court.

This is a branch of the case of Johnson v. Young, 20 W. Va. 614. The opinion qf the Court in that case shows fully [549]*549the most of the facts appearing in the record in the case now before ns. The facts, so far as it is necessary to refer to them in order to decide the questions presented in this appeal, are as follows: J. L. Morehead and J ames Y. Horner made a written contract, dated January 3, 1860, by which Horner-sold do Morehead 138 acres of land in Wood county, at the price of $70.00 per acre, and agreed to convey said land by deed, with general warranty of title, upon the payment of $6,000.00 of the purchase-money; and in part payment for said land Morehead agreed to convey, with general warranty of title, to Horner, at the price of $2,000.00, a house and lot in the city of Parkersburg, known as the one half of the lot No. 43 in said city. The said 138 acres of land had been purchased by said James Y. Horner from his son, J. W. Horner, who had for some time been the owner. During the time said J. W. Horner was the owner of said land several j udg-ments had been recovered and duly docketed in Wood county against the firm of Horner & Johnson, composed of the said J. W. Horner and J. B. Johnson, in favor of various persons, and these judgments remained due and unpaid. Before said James Y. Horner acquired the legal title to said lot 43 in Parkersburg, he and his wife, by deed dated April 25,1865, conveyed his equitable title in said lot to his son, the said J. W. Horner, as trustee, and in trust for Mary Horner, the wife of said J. W. Horner, in consideration of mutual love and affection and one dollar in hand paid, free from the debts of her husband, “ subject only to the condition that if there are any judgments that are against said trustee which will be a lien on the land that the parties of the first part sold to J. L. Morehead, that then there is a special lieu retained to said Morehead on this house and lot, to indemnify him against said judgment liens or any liability that may be against said land.” This deed was not recorded until October, 1865. The said James Y. Horner and More-head on September 7,1865, entered into another written contract, in which, after reciting that it has been ascertained, since the aforesaid contract of January 7, 1860, was made, that there are judgments against J. W. Horner and Horner & Johnson against which the said Morehead desires some indemnity, and that said Morehead is bound by his [550]*550contract to convey by deed to said James T. Horner the said house and lot No. 43 in Parkersburg, it provides that “ the said Morehead may retain a lien upon the face of said deed to indemnify him against any loss or damage by reason of the judgments aforesaid against said J. W. Horner and Horner & Johnson.” In pursuance of this contract, on September 8,1865, Morehead and wife conveyed to J ames Y. Horner the said house and lot No. 43, in which, after reciting the existence of the aforesaid judgments against J. W. Horner and Horner & Johnson, the deed declares “that a lien be and the same is hereby saved and reserved upon said property hereby conveyed to indemnify him, the said Morehead, against the said judgments and against any loss or damages that may be occasioned to him, the said More-head, his heirs or assigns, by reason of any prior liens upon the land so purchased by him from the said James Y. Hor-ner founded upon said judgments or any of them, against the said J. W. Horner or said Horner & Johnson, and to compensate the said Morehead, so far as the property thereby conveyed shall avail for the purpose, for any loss which he may at any time be subject to by reason of said judgments, or any of them, the lien hereby reserved to said Morehead to subsist and continue upon the property hereby conveyed until all liability of the said 138 acres of land purchased by said Morehead from said J ames Y. Horner as aforesaid, to the liens of said judgments-or any of them,.shall have wholly ceased and been determined.” During the year 1866, after these contracts and conveyances had been executed, the owners of the judgments above referred to were threatening to enforce their judgments against the said 138 acres of land ; and thereupon Morehead purchased the said judgments, paying therefor about $1,300.00, which was about one third less than their face value, had the same assigned to him by the owners, and subsequently caused executions to be issued .thereon against the defendants therein. Before anything was realized on said executions, J. B. Johnson, the partner of J. W. Horner, obtained an injunction to stay their collection and have the same declared released or satisfied as to him. In that cause it was shown that in September, 1851, the partnership of Horper & Johnson had been dissolved, [551]*551and by an agreement then entered into between them Hor-ner took the stock of goods, etc., then on hand and agreed to pay all the debts and liabilities of the firm. It was finally determined in that cause that by said agreement of dissolution J. W. Homer became the principal, and said Johnson merely his surety, for the payment of said judgments, and that Morehead, standing in the shoes of J. W. Horner, and being also the owner of said judgments, had in a court of equity no right to collect said judgments or any part of them from said Johnson. The facts disclosed in said suit, as well as the scope and extent of the final decision thereof, are fully shown in the opinion of this Court in Johnson v. Young, 20 W. Va. 614. By a further contract made September 6,1866, between, said James Y. Horner and More-head, the latter released the former from “ all liabilities that may rest upon him, Horner, by reason of the judgments docketed against J. W. Horner in Wood county, except a lien retained on a certain house and lot on Market street, conveyed by James Y. Horner to J. W. Horner, trustee, which said lien was and is retained for the benefit and protection of said Morehead.” Upon these facts the appellees contended that because the aforesaid executory contract of January 3, 1860, bound Morehead to make to James Y. Horner a deed for the house and lot in Parkersburg, with conveyance of general warranty, upon the payment of the purchase-money, that therefore, when said Horner conveyed this house and lot to J. W. Horner, trustee for his wife, by the deed of April 25,1865, the latter became a full purchaser of the property, and neither he nor. Mrs. Horner, — and especially the latter, — could be aifected by the subsequent contract between James Y. Horner and Morehead made September 7,1865, in which it was agreed that Morehead should retain a lien upon said property to indemnify him against the judgments operating as liens upon the 138 acres of land. This would not be true, even if no. express lien had been retained in the deed of April 25,1865, from James Y. Horner for the benefit of Mrs. Horner. At the time James Y. Horner madé this latter deed he had simply an equitable title to the house and lot; he had only an executory contract for the legal title which remained in the vendor, [552]*552Morehead.

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Bluebook (online)
4 S.E. 448, 30 W. Va. 548, 1887 W. Va. LEXIS 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morehead-v-horner-wva-1887.