Payne v. Payne

19 S.E.2d 690, 179 Va. 562, 1942 Va. LEXIS 248
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedApril 13, 1942
DocketRecord No. 2503
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 19 S.E.2d 690 (Payne v. Payne) 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
Payne v. Payne, 19 S.E.2d 690, 179 Va. 562, 1942 Va. LEXIS 248 (Va. 1942).

Opinion

Spratley, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

[565]*565John J. Payne died intestate in May, 1939, the owner of a farm of 160 acres in Augusta county, Virginia, and certain personal property consisting of livestock, farming implements and farming equipment. The farm was assessed for taxation at $5,200. It was subject to a Federal Land Bank mortgage in the sum of $8,207, made by a predecessor in title and assumed by the intestate, and also subject to a deed of trust securing a Federal Land Bank loan in the sum of $1,200.

John J. Payne left surviving him his widow, Viola J. Payne, and eleven children. Seven of the children were adults and the other four were infant girls, aged respectively, 19, 17, 14, and 11 years. The infant children lived with their mother on the farm. The adult children were married and had all left their parents’ home except one son who helped his mother with the farm.

Mrs. Payne qualified as administratrix of the estate. She found it impossible to operate the farm profitably and provide for the liens against it. With two of her sons she offered to sell the land to J. V. Howell, of Amherst county, who knew the land well; but was unable to interest him as a purchaser. She then placed the farm in the hands of real estate agents for sale. These agents tried unavailingly to sell it to one of her adult sons. Finally, however, they interested Arthur E. Houff, Tazewell O. Tench, and Abnef F. Weaver, the appellees, as purchasers.

A contract was entered into January 30, 1941, executed by the widow, three of the infant children, and all of the adult heirs-at-law and their respective consorts, except the appellant, Woodrow F. Payne and his wife, under which Houff, Tench and Weaver agreed, upon the delivery of a good and sufficient deed for the entire land, to pay therefor the sum of $12,000. The purchase price covered their assumption of the payment of the mortgage and deed of trust above mentioned, totaling $9,407, and the payment in cash of the residue of $2,593.

The contract contained the following provision:

“It is agreed that in order to pass good title to the said [566]*566farm, by reason of the fact that four of the Sellers are minors, the adult Sellers will institute and conduct, forthwith, in the Circuit Court of Augusta County, a chancery suit against the minors, in order that the sale hereby made may be confirmed by the Court, and a good title transferred to the Buyers.”

On February 19, 1941, the widow and the six adult heirs-at-law and their consorts, who had executed the contract, instituted their suit against Woodrow F. Payne and his wife and against the four infant heirs.

The bill alleged the facts of ownership above mentioned; that the farm was not susceptible of partition in kind; that no one or more of the owners would accept an allotment of the farm and pay the others their respective shares; and that a sale and division of the proceeds thereof among the co-owners would promote the best interest of all parties concerned. It averred that the administratrix had in hand sufficient funds or personal property to pay all unsecured indebtedness on the estate. It set out the conditional sale and filed the contract as an exhibit. It prayed the court to decree that the farm was not susceptible of partition in kind; that a sale was necessary for partition of the proceeds; and that the contract with Houff, Tench and Weaver be approved by the court and the sale, upon its terms and conditions, be confirmed as a judicial sale.

Each of the infants answered by her guardian ad litem. The guardian ad litem in proper person also answered for each of the infants. The three infants, above fourteen years of age, answered under their oaths. All asked that the farm be sold.

Woodrow F. Payne, the appellant, owning an undivided one-eleventh interest, subject to the widow’s dower, answered, admitting the truth of all of the allegations of the bill with a single exception. He denied that the consideration for the purchase of the property was adequate or satisfactory and alleged that a more advantageous offer had been received. He filed as an exhibit with his answer a paper writing by J. V. Howell, dated February 25, 1941, addressed “To [567]*567Whomsoever it may concern:,” offering to purchase the farm at $12,500, the offeror to assume the mortgage and deed of trust indebtedness as a part of that sum and pay the residue in cash upon ratification of sale and delivery of a good and sufficient deed.

Houff, Tench and Weaver, by leave of court, filed their petition in the cause and were admitted as parties. The petition set forth the agreement of purchase, and prayed that the farm be sold to them in accordance with its terms.

A portion of the evidence was taken by depositions, and the remainder was heard by the court ore tenus. Five witnesses testified that they were farmers, owning farms near the Payne farm; that they were acquainted with that farm; that it could not be partitioned in kind; that $12,000 was a fair and adequate price for it; and that it was to the best interest of all the parties, including the widow and the infant children, that the farm be sold for that price. As opposed to this, the appellant offered only the testimony of Howell, who, when asked what, in his opinion, was a fair price, replied “I made the offer of $12,500.”

The trial court, noting in its decree that Woodrow F. Payne objected to the sale “on the sole ground that the price agreed on was not an adequate or satisfactory sum,” held that a sale of the farm was necessary in order to effect a partition; that such sale would promote the best interest of the owners; and that $12,000 was a fair and adequate price. The trial court, therefore, ratified, approved, and confirmed the conditional contract with Houff, Tench and Weaver and made the contract binding as a judicial sale “on all of the co-owners of the said farm and their consorts, parties to this suit.” It then appointed a special commissioner to collect the purchase money and execute and deliver a deed to the purchasers who were to unite in the deed and thereby evidence their assumption of the Federal Land Bank liens against the land. The cause was then referred to a master commissioner to take and ascertain accounts, not necessary to be here stated.

Although appellants’ only contention before the trial court was an inadequacy of price, they list seven assignments of [568]*568error in their petition for appeal. These assignments resolve themselves into two contentions, one, that these proceedings constituted a suit for the sale of infants’ lands in which the statutory requirements were not complied with; and, second, that the sale confirmed by the court was not a judicial sale, and thus appellants cannot be compelled to join in a sale at a price not satisfactory to them and less than that which the court has been informed the property would have brought.

It is not necessary to invoke the rule that matters not presented in the pleadings or involved in the issues in the trial court will not be considered in this court where they are for the first time presented. Newman v. Light, 152 Va. 760, 148 S. E. 818; Stevens v. Mirakian, 177 Va. 123, 12 S. E. (2d) 780. All of appellants’ contentions are refuted and denied both by the law and the evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
19 S.E.2d 690, 179 Va. 562, 1942 Va. LEXIS 248, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/payne-v-payne-va-1942.