Palmetto Fire Insurance v. Fansler

129 S.E. 727, 143 Va. 884, 1925 Va. LEXIS 311
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedOctober 1, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 129 S.E. 727 (Palmetto Fire Insurance v. Fansler) 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
Palmetto Fire Insurance v. Fansler, 129 S.E. 727, 143 Va. 884, 1925 Va. LEXIS 311 (Va. 1925).

Opinion

Holt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action by notice of motion for judgment for money on two insurance policies issued by the defendant below to the plaintiff. Both of these cover a dwelling situate in Campbell county. One is of date October 30, 1922, for $1,000.00, and the other of date November 6, 1922, and is for $500.00. The property insured was burned in a short time thereafter and before Christmas. Informal notice of the loss occasioned by this fire was given, and on January 3, 1923, the company wrote counsel for Fansler that it would not pay anything therefor because he did not hold a clear title to the property insured. Thereafter this action was instituted. It matured and in due course was submitted to a jury. There was a verdict for the plaintiff which defendant moved to set aside as contrary to the law and the evidence and as being without evidence to support it. This motion was overruled and judgment entered, to all of which exception was duly taken.

There are seven other assignments of error. If this verdict was contrary to the evidence or without evidence to support it and if the record presents a case in which it becomes the duty of this court to enter final judgment, it is unnecessary to discuss other assignments. They deal with actions of the court upon the admissibility of evidence and with instructions and present no novel proposition.

Putting aside for the present consideration of a certain bill for specific performance, which will be taken up hereafter, it appears from the record that Fansler bought this property in 1912 or 1913 from Max Wood, a son of John Wood, who represented himself as being the agent of all of the heirs of John Wood. [888]*888The price agreed upon was $1,000.00. He paid thereon $811.00 and went into possession. Soon afterwards Max Wood informed him that he could not give him good title. Fansler refused to make any further payment and if any further payment was demanded of him such demand was not pressed. The situation was this: His vendor could not give him title and was not in a position to demand from him the balance he had promised to pay. Fansler on his part let things continue in statu quo, and remained upon the property till after the fire when he moved to West Virginia. He did, however, in 1915 file a bill for specific performance noted hereafter in some detail.

Did Max Wood have authority to make this contract of sale and what interest in this property did the John Wood heirs have?

Max Wood did have authority to make a contract of sale for the John Wood heirs’ interest, whatever that interest was, but he has delivered no deed to Fansler and so Fansler is without legal title. He claims, however, to have an equitable one sufficient to sustain the policies in issue. It may be said here that if he had a good title in equity, that is all that is necessary.

Dealing with this evidence as upon a demurrer and making every concession that a strict compliance with the rules therefor demands, the jury might have found from it the following facts:

There is on record of date August 18, 1885, a deed for this property from the “Wright heirs” to Max Wood, together with a deed from Max Wood to the John Wood heirs. The deed to Max Wood was not signed by all of the “Wright heirs” and adopting that statement most favorable to the • plaintiff, it appears that one of the children of Sarah Hodges, deceased, who was herself a Wright, refused to sign [889]*889it at all, although there is some evidence in a general way tending to show that all of the “Wright heirs” had been paid by Max Wood. Assuming this to be true, this Hodges child, who refused to sign this deed, had herself been paid her share of the purchase money due from Max Wood.

It thus appears that there is an outstanding interest in her. She has been paid the amount due her on account of the contract of sale, but has executed no deed and refuses to execute one.

Has Max Wood, or those claiming under him, any power to bring in this interest?

There is nothing to show what the terms of said contract of sale were and they do not appear to have been in writing. At the most we have a case in which specific performance could be asked only on the ground that this heir has been paid in full. This is not sufficient. Jackson’s Assignees v. Cutright, 5 Munf. (19 Va.), 308; Brown v. Pollard, 89 Va. 701, 17 S. E. 6, 36 Cyc. 650. It follows that there is no way by which this interest can be brought in, and that this Hodges child is a joint owner with the plaintiff, nor has equity any power to give relief against Max Wood for he in turn would have to fall back upon this Hodges heir. These were the reasons which forced Max Wood to confess that he was unable to give good title and which made Pansier unwilling to make further payment or to accept any deed which Max Wood or the children of John Wood were able to tender to him. The contract called for a deed of general warranty.

In 1915 a suit for specific performance was brought by Pansier against all of the Wood and all of the Wright heirs, and the bill has been copied into the record. When this bill was filed does not appear, indeed there is nothing to show that it was ever filed [890]*890at all. Manifestly its statements are not evidence against the defendant here. Of course it was proper to show that such a suit was brought, but the averments in the bill are not evidence to prove for Fansler the claims there made. So far as this action is concerned they are but statements made out of court and may be used as admissions against interest and for no other purpose. They do in fact throw some light upon a situation none too clearly appearing in the record.

These statements are there made:

In 1848 John Wyllie and wife conveyed this property to John Wood, trustee, in trust for Wright and wife and their children, and upon the death of the Wright parents this trustee was to convey this property in fee to the children surviving and their descendants. Among the Wright children was Eliza V., now dead, leaving two children surviving, Chap Day and Sam Day. Another Wright child was Sarah Hodges, also dead, who left surviving her five children, Lottie, Sam, Jessie, Sallie and Jennie. The bill further charges that after the death of the Wright father and mother Max Wood executed to John Wood a deed conveying this same property in trust for the benefit of John Wood’s wife and children, wherein he recited that he had purchased it from the Wright children, but that there was in fact no deed from the Wright children of record, and that they denied ever having executed any such deed. The bill then goes on to state that there was, however, an agreement under which the Wright children were to convey this property to John Wood for $200.00 and that all of the Wright heirs, except Chap and Sam Day and the five Hodges children, had been paid their portion of $200.00, the purchase price, and that some of them had signed a deed, but that it was never delivered, and had been destroyed by fire. It [891]*891also states that the plaintiff had been unable to secure from Max Wood any deed, and asks that in the event a deed could not be secured the payment already made be declared a lien upon the property purchased. It is entirely clear that no relief could be given under this bill by way of specific performance. Chap and Sam Day and the Hodges children had been paid nothing, had signed no deed and had made no writing binding themselves.

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Bluebook (online)
129 S.E. 727, 143 Va. 884, 1925 Va. LEXIS 311, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/palmetto-fire-insurance-v-fansler-va-1925.