Parkes v. Gunter & Byrd

190 S.E. 159, 168 Va. 94
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 11, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 190 S.E. 159 (Parkes v. Gunter & Byrd) 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
Parkes v. Gunter & Byrd, 190 S.E. 159, 168 Va. 94 (Va. 1937).

Opinion

Eggleston, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

On June 1, 1920, Joseph H. Mason and wife conveyed to J. Harry Rew, trustee, certain property known as the “Mason Farm” in Accomac county, Virginia, in trust to secure an indebtedness in the principal sum of $19,000 with interest, evidenced by four bonds of the same date and payable on demand. Three of the said bonds were for the sum of $5,000 each, one was for the sum of $4,000, and all were secured ratably, without priority one over the other.

Although the bonds were made payable to Accomack Banking Company, Inc., of which J. Merritt Chandler, one of the appellees, was the cashier, the bank, in fact, did not own any of them.

In December, 1921, the Accomack Banking Company, Inc., assigned to R. L. Parkes two of the $5,000 bonds, which, upon his death, in 1923, became the property of *96 his wife, Annie E. Fox Parkes, the appellant. The said Chandler and Rew had guaranteed in writing the payment of both the principal and interest of these two bonds.

It is not disputed that these bonds owned by Mrs. Parkes constitute a valid lien on the property, and that both Chandler and Rew are personally bound for the payment of them by reason of the aforesaid guaranty. Nor is there any dispute that the $4,000 bond has been paid and cancelled and is no longer a lien on the property.

The remaining $5,000 bond by mesne assignments became the property of Lemuel R. Mason, and was held and owned by him until December, 1925, when it came into the possession of J. Merritt Chandler under circumstances which will be hereinafter related. Subsequently, on May 13, 1930, this $5,000 bond, along with the $4,000 bond, was released by J. Harry Rew, as attorney for the holder thereof, by an appropriate entry on the margin of the deed book in the clerk’s office.

The question here involved is whether this latter $5,000 bond has been lawfully cancelled and released, or whether it is still a valid and existing lien on the property and entitled to stand on the same footing as the two bonds held by Mrs. Parkes.

J. Harry Rew died in July, 1933, and shortly thereafter Mrs. Parkes, suing on behalf of herself and other of his creditors, instituted this suit for the settlement of his estate.

In her bill Mrs. Parkes alleged that she owned the two $5,000 bonds, that they were secured by the said deed of trust, that the remaining bonds thereby secured had been cancelled and released as shown by the marginal entry on the deed book, and that the bonds so held by her had been guaranteed in writing by the said J. Merritt Chandler and J. Harry Rew.

The prayer of the bill was that the deed of trust on the Mason farm be foreclosed and the proceeds of sale applied to the payment of the bonds held by her, that the estate of the decedent, J. Harry Rew, be settled, and that his real estate, a part of which was owned jointly by the decedent *97 and Chandler, be subjected to the payment of the debt due her by reason of the said guaranty. Chandler and his wife, Nora E. Chandler, were made parties defendant to the bill.

After the administrators of the decedent had filed an answer to the bill, depositions were taken before a commissioner in chancery, to whom the matter had been referred. While neither Chandler nor his wife had at that time filed an answer to the bill they were represented by counsel who participated in these hearings.

On April 25, 1935, J. Merritt Chandler and Nora E. Chandler filed their separate answers to the bill, in which it was alleged, for the first time, that in 'December, 1925, Chandler had purchased the $5,000 bond from Lemuel R. Mason, and, on the same day, had made a gift of it to his wife, Nora E. Chandler; that the release of this bond by J. Harry Rew, on May 13, 1930, was without the authority of either Chandler or his wife, and hence was ineffective, and that the bond was a valid and existing lien on the property.

Thereupon the matter was referred to the commissioner in chancery for the purpose of taking evidence on the issue thus raised by the Chandlers’ answers.

After several hearings the commissioner filed a report holding that the bond claimed to be owned by Nora E. Chandler had been paid and released and was no longer a lien on the property.

This report of the commissioner the court overturned and decreed that the bond of $5,000, alleged to be owned by Mrs. Chandler, had not been lawfully released and can-celled, and was, therefore, a valid and existing lien against the property, on a parity with the bonds held by Mrs. Parkes.

From this decree adjudicating the principles of the cause the present appeal has been taken by Mrs. Parkes. Code, section 6336.

Code, section 6179, as written by the revisors of 1919, provides that the report of a commissioner in chancery “shall not have the weight given to the verdict of a jury *98 on conflicting evidence, but the court shall confirm or reject such report in whole or in part, according to the view which it entertains of the law and the evidence.”

In view of this provision it becomes necessary for us to review briefly the evidence and ascertain whether it supports the holding of the commissioner in chancery or that of the trial court.

Chandler’s story is this: At the insistence of Lemuel R. Mason the property was advertised for sale under the deed of trust on September 26, 1925. On the morning of the sale Rew came to him (Chandler) and asked the latter to bid on the property for him (Rew), stating that as he (Rew) was the trustee under the deed, he (Rew) was precluded from purchasing the property in his own name. Chandler consented to this arrangement, attended the sale, and bid the property in at $14,900. After the sale Chandler agreed, at Rew’s request, to consummate the purchase of the property on a partnership basis with him. It then seemed likely that they might effect a resale of the farm in a short time at a profit and pay off the bonds.

Lemuel R. Mason was insisting that the sale be consummated and that his bond be paid. Chandler put him off from time to time until finally on December 13 or 14, 1925, he paid Mason the sum of $4,973 and got possession of the bond. Chandler required Mason to execute a writing on a separate piece of paper whereby the bond was assigned to him, Chandler. Chandler claims that on the same day, and just beneath the above assignment, he (Chandler) executed an assignment of the bond to his wife, Nora E. Chandler, and immediately delivered the bond to her. Neither of such assignments was introduced in evidence, but Chandler’s claim is that Rew destroyed them at the time the bond was released as hereinafter stated.

Chandler further said that he made this payment to Mason at Rew’s suggestion and upon the assurance that the latter would reimburse him for one-half thereof. This promise Rew failed to keep.

Although the sale of the property was not consummated, *99

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Bluebook (online)
190 S.E. 159, 168 Va. 94, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parkes-v-gunter-byrd-va-1937.