Payne v. Webb

23 W. Va. 558, 1884 W. Va. LEXIS 16
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 22, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 23 W. Va. 558 (Payne v. Webb) 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
Payne v. Webb, 23 W. Va. 558, 1884 W. Va. LEXIS 16 (W. Va. 1884).

Opinion

SnydeR, Judge:

Oliver A. Patton, husband and trustee of R. Ellen Patton and R. Ellen Patton, by deed dated May -29, 1868, conveyed with covenants of general warranty to William 11. Webb-a tract one of hundred and twenty acres of land, lying on the south side of the Kanawha river in Putnam county, for. and in consideration of four thousand two hundred and one dollars and seventy-five cents, of which the said Webb paid cash one thousand seven hundred dollars and for the residue gave his five negotiable notes of five hundred dollars and thirty-five cents each, of even date with the deed, payable to the order of Oliver A. Patton trustee at the Merchants Bank, Charleston, with interest from date; and to secure the payment of same a vendor’s lien was retained in the deed. Before their maturity three of said notes were endorsed and delivered by said Patton to the said Merchants Bank. On June 30, 1876, a decree was entered by the circuit court of Kanawha county in a certain chancery suit pending therein, in which Marie L. Jeffries and others were plaintiffs and the said Merchants Bank and others were defendants, appointing James M. Payne and S. S. Green receivers of said bank with authority to take possession, control and charge of the assets thereof and to collect said assets by suit or otherwise, using their own names as receivers in the prosecution of any suit-for that purpose. Among the assets which thus came into the possession of said receivers as the property of the bank, were the said three notes given by Patton to the bank. In order to enforce the payment of said notes the said Payne and Green, as receivers, in September, 1878, filed their bill in the [560]*560circuit court of Kanawha county against said Webb, Patton, trustee, K. Ellen Patton, Thomas M. Sheltoj^^H John 0. Morris, trustee, alleging therein their appoint^BB as receivers, &c.; that the three notes aforesaid had into'thoir possession as such receivers; that one of said no^H was in suit on the law side of said court and the defendant^ Webb claims to have paid the greater part thereof to the bank; that the other two notes were due and wholly unpaid and operated as a vendors lien on the one hundred and twenty acres of laud aforesaid, and that all the said notes of Webb, except the three mentioned, had been fully paid and discharged; that in May, 1874, Webb conveyed said land to John 0. Morris, trustee, to secure the payment of two hundred and fifty-seven dollars and fifty cents to Thomas M. Shelton, payable twelve months thereafter; and that the said three notes and the Shelton debt are the only subsisting liens on said land. They pray that the land may be sold and the said debts paid out of the proceeds and for general relief.

The bill having been taken for confessed as to all the defendants, the court, on December 9, 1879, entered a decree for the sale of said land to pay the amount of the two unpaid notes due the plaintiffs as receivers and the amount of the trust-debt secured to Thomas M. Shelton and the costs of suit.'

The commissioner appointed for the purpose made the and reported it to the court. The trust-creditor, The M. Shelton, became the purchaser at the price of two tJ sand three hundred and ten dollars. The report of sale excepted to by Webb, but it is not necessary to state the exceptions.

On April 20, 1881, the defendant Webb tendered his bill of review, to the filing of which the plaintiffs objected, but the court overruled the objection and the same was filed; and thereupon the plaintiffs filed their answer thereto. The bill of review and answer relate principally to the conduct of the sale which was subsequently set aside and they need not therefore be further noticed. There was also a special replication to the answer which would not be considered under any circumstances, as such replications violate the most elementary principles of equity pleading and have been [561]*561repeatedly condemned by this Court. Jackson v. Hull, 21 W. Va. 601; Enock v. Oil Co., 22 Id.

In June, 1881, T. B. Swaml was, by petition, made a party defendant to the cause and filed his answer in which he alleges, that the said one hundred and twenty acres of land in the bill mentioned was a part of the lands allotted to the defendant B. Ellen Pátton, them Tompkins, before her marriage, in a deed dated April 20,, 1867, partitioning the lands of her father, William Tompkins, deceased, among his children; that prior to said partition the other children purchased of Cl C. Tompkins, their brother, his interest in the estate of his father and among other things therefor, gave to him their and Mrs. B. M. Tompkins’ note for eleven thousand three hundred and fifty-five dollars and seventeen cents at four years, dated July 30, 1866. By the terms of said partition-deed each child charged his and her entire lands with his equal part of said eleven thousand three hundred and fifty-five dollars and seventeen cents; that he, Swann, had paid to John Hall, to whom said C. C. Tompkins had assigned said note,, most all of it, and all of said B. Ellen Patton’s part of said debt so charged on her land; that the part of Mrs. Patton so charged had been ascertained by decree in the suit of Lynn v. Patton and others, and the balance due from her and unpaid was fixed by said decree at one thousand three hundred and fifty-eight dollars and sixty-one cents with interest thereon from June 13, 1874; and that besides he, Swann, had paid a large amount of taxes on the land of Mrs. Patton which were still due to him; and that said one thousand three hundred and fifty-eight dollars and sixty-one cents and taxes were the first lien on the land involved in this suit. He, therefore, asked that the proceeds arising from the sale might be applied to the payment of his said debt, taxes and costs— Lynn v. Patton, 10 W. Va. 196.

' At the January term, 1882, the defendant Webb tendered his petition asking that the cause might be re-heard, the decree of December 9, 1879, set aside and all the proceedings had thereunder vacated for the following reasons: (1). The trust-debt of Thos. M. Shelton was partly made up of usurious interest and that he had made payments on it to [562]*562the amount, of fifty dollars and fifty cents, for which no credit is allowed him hy said decree; (2), at the time said decree was pronounced and for several months prior and subsequent thereto, he was from ill-health unfit to attend to business and was at times delirious; (8), that said decree did not ascertain the liens and their priorities on said land, and since its rendition T. B. Swann had been made a party and is claiming a first lien for a large sum; and that the action at law against petitioner mentioned in the plaintiffs’ bill had been decided in favor ot the plaintiffs.

The cause was again heard on January 11, 1882, and the court entered a decree setting aside the sale ot the land made under said decree of December 9, 1879, and after reciting that the action at law against Webl) had been decided in favor of Webb, except as to the costs which were ordered to be paid to the plaintiff’s, the said decree in all other respects except as to the mode of advertising the land, was re-affirmed, the defendant Webb’s bill of review dismissed and his petition for a re-hearing rejected, and the commissioners were directed to re-sell the laud pursuant to the provisions of said former decree. From this decree and that of December 9, 1879, the defendant Webb has appealed to this Court.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
23 W. Va. 558, 1884 W. Va. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/payne-v-webb-wva-1884.