Parsons v. Maxwell

44 S.E. 172, 53 W. Va. 39, 1903 W. Va. LEXIS 3
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 28, 1903
StatusPublished

This text of 44 S.E. 172 (Parsons v. Maxwell) 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
Parsons v. Maxwell, 44 S.E. 172, 53 W. Va. 39, 1903 W. Va. LEXIS 3 (W. Va. 1903).

Opinion

McWíIORTER, PRESIDENT :

James II. Lambert executed a forthcoming bond together with J. B. Lambert, C. C. Lambert and Ward Parsons as his sureties on a judgment in favor of D. E. Offutt. Judgment was taken on said bond in the circuit court of Tucker County and execution issued thereon from the clerk’s office for $573.26 with interest from the 14-th of May, 1890, till paid, and $13.30 costs. The land or farm of James H. Lambert in Tucker County was decreed to be sold to pay his debts which amounted to something ■oevr $3,000.00. lie sold or exchanged his Tucker County land to and with U. V. Bennett, A. J. Bennett and Frank Bennett for a place in Pendleton County and got about $3,300.00 “to boot,” with which sum his debts were paid, the said judgment due from James II. Lambert to D. E. Offutt being paid to W. B. Maxwell, attorney for said Offutt. After said James II. Lambert had left Tucker County and gone to his place in Pendleton County, on the 15th of January, 1892, the said W. B. Maxwell caused to be issued from the circuit clerk’s office of Tucker County, an execution in favor of D. E. Offutt against said James H. Lambert and his said securities on the forthcoming bond for $142.64, with interest from the 29th clay of December, 1891, and costs, which was paid by the suretjr, Ward Parsons, by the sale of his property under said execution on the 4th claj1' of February, 1892.

On the 20th day of April, 1897, AVard Parsons brought his action before a justice against W. B. Maxwell to recover back [41]*41the money which ho had paid on the said debt of Lambert, claiming, “February 4, 1892, to amount paid on Offutt -Judgment, $152.88; to int. on same $45.86 — $198.74.” The justice rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff, from which said Maxwell appealed to the circuit court of Tucker County, William M. Cayton being surety on his appeal bond, which was dated April 29, 1897. At the March term, 1898, plaintiff Ward Parsons, having died, the case was revived in the name of L. W. Parsons, his administrator. At the November term, 1899, the defendant hied his plea in writing of the statute of limitations within five years. To which plea the plaintiff tendered his special replication that he ought not to be barred or precluded from his said action because the said James Lambert the principal debtor in the cause of action on which Ward Parsons was surety had on the — day of — , 1892, paid all the debts for which the said Ward Parsons was surety for him to W. B. Maxwell, who was the attorney for D. E. Offutt, and the First National Bank of Piedmont, and that the said J. H. Lambert afterwards moved out of Tucker County into the county of Pendleton and the said Maxwell, attornej', after having received pay in full of all the said debts fraudulently and deceitfully -caused an execution to issue from the clerld s office of the circuit court of Tucker County against Ward Parsons et al., which were levied on the property of the said Ward Parsons and enough of said property was sold to satisfy said execution and the said Ward Parsons did not know ■of the fraud and deceit practiced by the said W. B. Maxwell upon him until the said James H. Lambert had presented the receipt signed by the said Maxwell, showing the payment of all ■said debts for which Ward Parsons was surety; which was about the — day—, 1893; to the filing of which the defendant objected upon the ground that the same was not sufficient in law and demurred theerto, which objection and demurrer was overruled and the replication filed, and the defendant rejoined generally to said Teplication and by leave of the court made special rejoinder and said that it was not true that the defendant was the attorney of either the said James Ii. Lambert or Ward Parsons; that On the contrary said defendant was the agent and attorney of one D.'E. Offutt and the defendant did not fraudulently and decietfully cause execution to issue; but on the contrary the execution ^yas caused to be issued at the instance of said [42]*42Offut and the money received and collected thereon hy said defendant, was collected and received for said Offutt by said defendant' as his agent and attorney, and was accounted for and paid to said Offutt by the defendant; and the defendant was not chargeable therewith; but if the said plaintiff had a right to re- - cover he should recover the same against said Offutt and not against the said defendant. To which special rejoinder plaintiff made special surrejoinder in writing; that by reason of anything in said defendant’s special rejoinder alleged plaintiff ought ‘ not to be barred from having or maintaining his said action because he said that the said defendant did fraudulently and deciet-fully cause execution to issue from the circuit clerk’s office of Tucker County in the name of D. E. Offutt against Ward Parsons et al. and by virtue of the said execution collected the said money in said suit demanded from Ward Parsons, after having collected the said money from the said James H. Lambert, thus, fraudulently and deceitfully collecting the said money twice, once from James PI. Lambert and second from Ward Parsons. The said money was in the hands of said defendant and he was liable therefor in this action and not L. E. Offutt, who only received the money due him, if that; and chis the plaintiff was ready to verify. Á jury was empanneled and after hearing the evidence introduced by plaintiff, defendant moved to exclude said evidence, which motion was overruled by the court. The defendant then demurred to the plaintiff’s evidence, in which demurrer the plaintiff joined and the jury returned a verdict for plaintiff assessing his damages at $237.81, subject to the decision of the court on the demurrer. The court overruled the demurrer to the evidence and entered judgment against the said Maxwell and. William M. Cayton, surety on his appeal bond, for the said sum of $237.87 with interest thereon at the rate of ten per cent, per annum from April 26, 1897, the time the appeal was taken until paid, and the costs. The defendant filed -his bill of exceptions to the rulings of the court which certified all the evidence and the demurrer thereto and procured from this Court a writ of error.

The first two assignments of error go principally to the amount or the verdict and judgment rendered.

The first assignment is that “The verdict of the jury was for too large an amount. The plaintiff by his account filed in this [43]*43case claimed $152.88, with interest from February 4, 1892, which at the date of said verdict would not have amounted to more than the sum of $229.82”; being an excess of $8.05.

The second assignment is that the court erved in entering-judgment for $237.87, the verdict of the jury with ten per cent, damages thereon from the 26th day of April, 1897, the date of the judgment before the justice. It seems that interest was included up to the date of the verdict in the circuit court and judgment entered for that amount with damages from the date of the judgment before the justice, at the rate of ten per cent, as provided by section 172, chapter 50, Code; so that it would appear that there was error in the judgment to the extent of the interest on the aggregate from the date of the judgment of the justice, April 26, 1897, to the 25th day of June, 1900, the date of the judgment rendered by the circuit court, and ten per cent, per annum on said interest for said period, the date of the judgment of the justice to the rendering qf the judgment by the circuit court, making in all something less than forty dollars error in the judgment, which is not sufficient in itself to give jurisdiction to the Appellate Court.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
44 S.E. 172, 53 W. Va. 39, 1903 W. Va. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parsons-v-maxwell-wva-1903.