Noyes v. Vickers

19 S.E. 429, 39 W. Va. 30, 1894 W. Va. LEXIS 29
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 19, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 19 S.E. 429 (Noyes v. Vickers) 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
Noyes v. Vickers, 19 S.E. 429, 39 W. Va. 30, 1894 W. Va. LEXIS 29 (W. Va. 1894).

Opinion

Holt, ,7 udge :

This is an appeal allowed plaintiffs and appellants from a decree of the Circuit Court of Kanawha county entered on the 15th day of April, 1893, dissolving their injunction and dismissing their bill. The. bill is the ordinary one having for its main purpose the enforcement of the statutory lien of their judgment against the real estate of defendant Vickers, the judgment-debtor.

As auxiliary to the main purpose plaintiffs sought by their bill and obtained, ex parte, an injunction restraining-defendant Betts from cutting and removing from the land the standing timber. They charge that defendant Betts is denuding the land of all its valuable timber under a deed or written contract of purchase of the timber from defendant Vickers; that the same, if it exists, has never been recorded and is therefore void as against plaintiffs’ right of lien as judgment-creditors; that defendant Vickers, as shown by return of execution nulla bona, has no personal property; that he has no other land, and as to the tract in question of two hundred and eight acres he owns but the surface, the minerals having been retained by the Connells, his grantors, who also retained in their deed of conveyance a vendor’s lien for one thousand five hundred dollars, the unpaid balance of the purchase-money; that the standing timber constitutes its chief value, and with that gone the land will not bring enough to pay the vendor’s lien and their judgment.

Defendant Betts filed his answer admitting that he is cutting and removing the timber, but claims the right to do so. Tie says that the purchase was made from the Con-nells by Vickers with the understanding and agreement between him and Vickers, that he (Betts) was to furnish the cash payment of one thousand dollars, aud in consideration thereof the standing timber was to be bought for [32]*32him; that he furnished Vickers the one thousand dollars ; he paid it to the Connells, who conveyed the land to Vick-ers by deed dated July 11, 1892, as exhibited with plaintiffs’ bill, and that by deed and contract of the same date Vickers conveyed the timber to him not in performance of any purchase subsequently made by defendant Betts of defendant Vickers, but in discharge and execution of the trust imposed upon him when he bought of the Connells; that the timber was for Betts according to their agreement; that thus Vickers was for a moment, while the legal title was in transitu through hint, the apparent owner but not the real owner of the timber, never having had any ownership of the timber, save the naked legal title- — and that but for a moment — as trustee for defendant Betts. He produces and exhibits with his answer a conveyance to him of the timber, which was executed on the 11th day of July, 1892, but not recorded until the 27th day of March, 1893. Plaintiffs’ judgment was rendered on the 21th, and docketed on the 25th day of Januai’y, 1893.

This deed of defendant Betts from defendant Vickers is, in part, as follows :

“This deed made the 11th day of July, 1892, between A. G. Vickers and R. C. Vickers, his wife, of the first part, and A. Betts, of the second part, witnesseth : That for and in consideration of the sum of one thousand dollars cash, in hand paid, the receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged, and the further sums of money to bo paid by the party of second part as hereinafter provided, the said parties of the first part do grant, bargain, and sell, with general warranty, unto the said party of the second part, all the white oak, poplar, and sycamore timber on the following parcels of real estate,"containing two hundred and two acres of land, •on Elk river, at the mouth of Blue creek; also, the island in Elk River, at the mouth of Blue creek, known as ‘Blue Creek Island,’ containing about six acres; the same lands purchased by the said A. G. Vickers, by contract of even date herewith, from the executors of D. Connell, dec’d.”

The deed then sets out the contract of purchase in detail; the mode of measuring and estimating the value of the timber; where to be delivered; the time and amounts to be [33]*33paid, etc. — andds also signed, as a contract, by Betts, who in conclusion alleges that Yickers never owned the timber on the land except as trustee in subordination to defendant’s righis ; that he has not realized one thousand dollars from the timber, nor any sum, as yet; that he is in possession, cutting, etc. as he has a right to do; that he is solvent; owns real estate ; asks to be permitted to cut and sell the timber, and to give bond to account for the proceeds thereof as the court may direct; and that the injunctions may be dissolved; and that he may have such other and general relief as he may be entitled to.

The bill was sworn to by plaintiffs, and the answer by defendant Betts, plaintiffs having replied thereto generally.

On the 15th day of April, 1893, notice of. motion being waived, defendant Betts moved to dissolve the injunction ; and the court, having heard the same on bill, answer, replication, exhibits and argument of counsel, entered the decree complained of dissolving the injunction and dismissing the bill; and plaintiffs appealed.

The appellants assign two grounds of error: (1) The injunction should not have been dissolved; (2) in any event, the bill should not have been dismissed.

The frame of this bill, its scheme and prayer for relief give it a standing in court and show cause against its dis-mission and for its retention with a distinctness, that nothing extraneous could intensify. It is not a pure bill of injunction but an ordinary bill seeking to enforce a judgment-lien, and the injunction was a mere incident auxiliary to that end; and section 13, c. 133, of the Code, does not apply to such cases. Pulliam v. Winston, 5 Leigh, 324; 1 Bart. Ch. Pr. 464. Still, the general practice is to suggest that the cause is one proper to be retained, because the bill is sometimes dismissed, the better to bring to the test of appeal the order of dissolution, although such order itself has long been appealable. See Code, sec. 1, cl. 7, c. 135.

But was the injunction properly dissolved ? Standing timber is a part of the inheritance. To cut it may be waste and is often a serious diminution of the lienor’s security for the payment of his debt; and the real estate with the timber as a part thereof v? as prima facie subject to the lien [34]*34of plaintiffs’judgment, because according to tlie allegation of the bill and by the defendant’s showing of title by the deed exhibited with his answer he was a purchaser from defendant Vickers, the judgment-debtor. And although his contract of purchase and conveyance were made some months before the docketing or even the rendition of plaintiffs’ judgment, yet such contract and deed were not recorded until some months after the docketing of the judgment. It was then too late to prevent the attaching of the lien, for up to that time it was void and of none effect as against the creditor by judgment docketed. So that the land and timber for that reason remained the property of defendant Vickers as against plaintiffs, although as between Vickers and defendant Betts it was certainly the timber of the latter before the rendition of the judgment. This is the result.of the recording act. See Code, s. 5, c. 74; Bank v. Neal, 28 W. Va. 744. Nor is there anything in conflict with this'doctrine in Snyder v. Martin, 17 W. Va. 309.

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Bluebook (online)
19 S.E. 429, 39 W. Va. 30, 1894 W. Va. LEXIS 29, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/noyes-v-vickers-wva-1894.