Nutt v. Summers

78 Va. 164, 1883 Va. LEXIS 24
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedDecember 13, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 78 Va. 164 (Nutt v. Summers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nutt v. Summers, 78 Va. 164, 1883 Va. LEXIS 24 (Va. 1883).

Opinion

Richardson, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This case comes up upon an appeal from a decree of the circuit court of Loudoun county, rendered in May, 1881, and is the sequel to the case of Summers v. Darne, heretofore decided by this court and reported in 31 Gratt. 791.

The case is this: A debt is created in 1852, payable, as the law then was, in gold. Not having been paid when due, in 1866, when the currency was below par and fluctuating, a settlement occurs between the creditor and the two debtors, whereby one of the debtors is released and further time is given the other; and the amount then due being ascertained, and a cash payment being made, two new bonds, each for one-half of the balance, and payable in two and three years, respectively, with interest payable semiannually, are given; and recognizing the debt as still a gold debt, it is stipulated in the bonds that there shall be paid to the creditor a sum in currency which will, when [166]*166the bonds fall due, buy gold coin to the amount specified in the bonds. To secure these bonds a deed of trust is executed by the debtor, just as there had been a deed of trust executed to secure the debt when first created in 1856.

In the case of Summers v. Darne, supra, this court held that the transaction in 1866 was not a novation of the debt of 1856, nor a release of the deed of trust then executed, but a continuation thereof, so that the original lien lost none of its priority as such for the amount which the creditor might justly claim.

The question then arises: Is the creditor entitled to a lien for the gold premium as well as for the residue of his debt as against judgment creditors of the same debtor, whose lien attached to the trust subject between the dates of the two deeds of trust ?

As against his debtor, there can be doubt that he would be so entitled, by virtue, at least, of the stipulation in the contract. But have the intermediate lienors of that debtor rights any more extended than those possessed by the debtor ? The answer to this question must substantially decide this case. And the answer to this question will be more readily solved by a brief recital of the facts and circumstances of the case as disclosed.by the record.

In January, 1856,1m. D. Nutt, the appellant here, sold and conveyed to R. H. and J. W. Darne a tract of land in Loudoun county containing 213 acres, for $400 cash and $1,900 in four equal instalments, with interest payable semi-annually. The purchasers conveyed the land to Randolph and McLean, trustees, to secure the deferred instalments, which were payable in gold.

In 1861 R. H. Summers obtained four judgments against J. W. Darne, one of the purchasers from Nutt. The Darnes failed to make the deferred payments. Richard Darne applied for relief; but James Darne thought he could make the payments if he could obtain an extension of time. In [167]*167September,’ 1866, Richard was released, and James undertook to pay the whole debt, and paid $242 cash on the debt, which then amounted to $2,242, and executed his two bonds for $1,000 each, payable in two and three years, respectively, to Nutt, in gold or its equivalent in currency, with interest payable semi-annually; and it was stipulated in the bonds that if it should not be convenient for said James Darne to pay in gold coin, he should pay in lieu thereof such amount in currency as would purchase the stipulated sum in gold, at the closing rate of gold at the board in New York, on the last business day before the 1st day of September, 1868.

Richard Darne and the trustees, Randolph and McLean, united with Nutt in conveying the land to James Darne, who thereupon conveyed the same to Maguire, in trust to secure said two $1,000 bonds. Default being made, on the 23d day of May, 1870, the trustee, Maguire, sold the land after due advertisement, and Nutt became the purchaser; and he supposing no question could arise as to his rights, and that he would be unable to realize any deficit from James Darne, reckoned up his debt, including principal, interest and gold premiums, and bid the land in at a sum ($2,800) about equal to its discharge, and the trustee conveyed the land to him.

About one month thereafter, in June, 1870, Summers instituted his suit against James Darne, Nutt and others to subject this land to his judgment liens, insisting that the transaction of 1866 was such a novation of Nutt’s claim as made his (Summer’s) liens paramount. A controversy ensued, which came before this court on an appeal in said case of Summers v. Darne, and it was held that the transaction of 1866 did not constitute a novation of the debt, and that it was still a debt due for the purchase money of the land and had priority over said judgments. On this point, delivering the opinion of the court, Staples, J., said: “ By the new arrangement Richard H. Darne was released, and James [168]*168W. Darne executed Ms two bonds to Nutt, secured by the trust deed bearing date the 1st September, 1866, each for $1,000 in gold coin, one payable in two and the other in three years, bearing semi-annual interest, and another note for $242, with interest from date. The parties, it seems, considered the original debt as payable in gold, and in 1866, when the new arrangement was made, the federal currency was not only greatly depreciated, but subject to constant fluctuations. They therefore stipulated that as the debt was originally a specie debt, it should retain that character throughout. The only substantial change made was the release of one of the parties, and in the agreement to give still further indulgence. It is easy to see, however, that it is the same debt due for the purchase of the land, never paid or extinguished. And it has been so treated throughout.”

The judge, delivering the opinion of this court, also referred to the fact that it had been argued that the trust deed of 1866 secured to Nutt advantages to which he was not justly entitled under the trust deed of 1856; that by the new arrangement, the interest had been compounded, and a gold premium provided for, the effect whereof was to give Nutt $2,780 in currency against a principal of $1,900 in currency, and that this excess was interposed after the liens of Summers had attached.

It is true the court did not deem it necessary to determine whether or not that point was well taken, for the question did not then properly arise, the case then being before the court on an appeal from a decree granting a rehearing. The question then for decision was whether the rehearing was proper. When the case went back to the lower court, it would ascertain the amount justly due William D. Nutt, the cause being remanded for further proceedings.

On the 30th day of December, 1880, the commissioner, [169]*169appointed theretofore for the purpose, reported among the liens on James W. Darne’s land, the debt secured to Wm. D. Nutt at $2,000, and the interest plus the gold premiums, at the dates the bonds were payable, which amounted to $780. He credited the debt by the amount bid at the trustee’s sale, and found a balance due Nutt of $184.95. To this report exceptions were filed, only one of which, No. 2, need be referred to here; which exception is this:

“ Because the commissioner reports the two amounts of gold premiums, viz: $445, and $335, as parts of the debt having priority over the judgment liens of B. H. Summers, under the deed of trust of 1856.”

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Bluebook (online)
78 Va. 164, 1883 Va. LEXIS 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nutt-v-summers-va-1883.