Patton v. Hoge

22 Gratt. 443
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJuly 15, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 22 Gratt. 443 (Patton v. Hoge) 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
Patton v. Hoge, 22 Gratt. 443 (Va. 1872).

Opinion

Moncure, P.

delivered the opinion of the court.

There are three assignments of error in this case, which I will notice in their order; and

First, “that it was error to render any decree in the case at a special term of the court without the consent of parties.”

The Code, ch. 158, § S3, among other things,'.provides that “ at any special term, any civil cause may be tried which could lawfully have been, but was not, tried at the last preceding term that was, or should have been, held; and any motion cognizable by such court may be heard and determined, whether it-was pending at the preceding term or not,” &c. “And any cause or matter of controversy in chancery then ready for |hearing may be heard and determined, with the consent of the parties [446]*446to such cause or controversy, although it could not lawfully have been heard at the next preceding term that was, or should have been, held.”

The decree complained of in this case was rendered at a special term of the Circuit court of Bland county, on the 17th day of December 1869. The cause was not then heard “with the consent of the parties” thereto. But it “could lawfully have been, but was not, tried at the last preceding term that was, or should have been, held.” By an act passed February 23, 1867, Acts of Assembly 1866-7, p. 668, chap. 234, § 2, it was declared that the Circuit court of Bland county should be held on the Wednesday after the third Monday in May and October. This act, it seems, so far as it fixed the time for holding the said court, continued in force until and after the said decree of the 17th day of December 1869, was rendered. Therefore, a regular term of the said court was, or should have been, held on the Wednesday after the third Monday in October 1869, which was the last term that was, or should have been, held preceding the said special term at which the said decree was rendered. It appears that this cause could lawfully have been, but was not, tried at the said term of the said court that was, or should have been, held on the third Wednesday after the third Monday in October 1869, as aforesaid. The subpoena was issued on the 16th day of February 1869, returnable on the first Monday in March next thereafter. The bill was filed at April rules next thereafter. There were but two defendants in the case, James E. Young and Russell Patton, the former of whom was a non-resident of the State. It appears that the process was duly executed on the home defendant, and that the non-resident defendant was duly proceeded against by publication. The home defendant appeared at a special term of the said court on the 26th day of July 1869, and filed his answer, to which the plaintiff replied generally, and the cause was then continued. [447]*447There is no copy of the order of publication in the record, which is very meagre. But the said decree of the 17th of December 1869, recites that there had been due proceedings against the non-resident defendant by publication according to law. The presumption is, that the proceedings in the case were regular, and that the publication was completed in full time for the case to have been tried at the last preceding term that was, or should have been, held as aforesaid. Consequently, it was not error to render a decree in the case at the said special term of the court on the 17th of December 1869.

The next assignment of error is more substantial, and is the one mainly l’elied on in the case, viz:

Second, “It was error to render a decree for the sale of two-thirds of said tan-yard property, instead of the one-third conveyed by Zimmerman, upon which the lien was reserved by the deed.”

Whether this was error or not, depends upon the true construction of the deed of the 9th day of October 1865, exhibited with the bill, whereby George H. Williams and wife and William Zimmerman and wife conveyed their interest in the said tan-yard property to the said James E. Young.

It is now, as it always has been, perfectly competent for a vendor expressly to reserve on the face of the conveyance a lien on the property conveyed, or any part thereof, for the purchase money remaining unpaid, or any part thereof. Formerly he had an implied lien on the property for the purchase money remaining unpaid, though he conveyed the property to the purchaser without reserving a lien thereon in the conveyance, and without taking a mortgage or deed of trust on the property, unless the implication was repelled by circumstances showing an intention on the part of the vendor not to retain such a lien. The taking of a mortgage or deed of trust, or other security, for the purchase money was held sufficient to repel the implication. This implied [448]*448lien was called the “vendors’ equity” or the “vendors’' lien,” and was good, not only against the vendee himself, hut also against purchasers from him with notice, and volunteers claiming under him. There were many inconveniences and uncertainties attending this implied lien, which induced the legislature to abolish it, in the Code of 1849 ; it being declared in the first section of chapter 119 of that Code, that “if any person hereafter convey any real estate, and the purchase money, or any part thereof, remain unpaid at the time of the conveyance, he shall not thereby have a lien for such unpaid purchase money, unless such lien is expressly reserved on the face of the conveyance.”

TMb provision, it is thus seen, leaves unaffected a lien “ expressly reserved on the face of the conveyance,” which lien continues to have the same force and effect it always had. The reason of this is obvious. None of the evils growing out of the vendor’s implied lien resulted from a lien expressly reserved on the face of the-conveyance. Being set forth in the very first link of the vendee’s chain of title, purchasers from him had. just as much notice of it as they would have had of eu lien upon the land by deed of trust or mortgage.

The question then is, What is the true construction of the deed? Did the grantors thereby retain a lien on> the whole of the property conveyed, or only one-half of it, as a security for the payment of the purchase money-remaining unpaid? They had, undoubtedly, a perfect right to retain a lien on the whole or the half of said property, according to their pleasure, even though that part of the purchase money remaining unpaid may have-been due and payable only to one of the vendors. Then-which of these two things did they intend to do? The-deed itself must answer that question, and we think it does plainly answer it. There cannot be a doubt about it, if we look only to the words by which the lien is retained, and that certainly is the most material part of-[449]*449the deed to be looked to in making the present enquiry. Those words are: “And the said William Zimmerman. and Sallie B. his wife, do hereby retain a lien on the property hereby conveyed, as secuiity for the payment of the above receipted notes received in payment of their interest; the said George H. Williams has been paid up in full for his interest.” The lien is thus retained on the property conveyed by the deed—that is, the whole property, and not half the property thereby conveyed, or the interest which belonged to Zimmerman in that property. If that had been the intention, it would, as it easily could, have been plainly so expressed.

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Related

Craig v. Gauley Coal Land Co.
80 S.E. 945 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1914)
Patterson v. Grottoes Co.
25 S.E. 602 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1896)
Coles v. Withers
74 Va. 186 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1880)
West v. Belches
5 Va. 187 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1816)

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Bluebook (online)
22 Gratt. 443, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patton-v-hoge-va-1872.