Petty v. Warren

110 S.E. 826, 90 W. Va. 397, 1922 W. Va. LEXIS 240
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 28, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 110 S.E. 826 (Petty v. Warren) 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
Petty v. Warren, 110 S.E. 826, 90 W. Va. 397, 1922 W. Va. LEXIS 240 (W. Va. 1922).

Opinion

Ritz, Judge.

Plaintiff by this appeal seeks reversal of a decree of the’ Circuit Court of Logan county sustaining a demurrer to and dismissing his bill.

It is alleged in the bill that on the 16th of June, 1917, the plaintiff together with three associates purchased all of the stock of the E. R. Johnson Coal Mining Company for the sum of $165,000, of which $20,000 was paid-in cash, and the balance to be paid in certain instalments mentioned in the contract; that under said contract the plaintiff was the owner of one-fourth of the stock of said company, and that on the 27th of July, 1917, by written contract, he assigned and transferred his one-fourth interest' to the defendant [399]*399C. B. Warren. He alleges that Warren in making this arrangement was acting for himself and the defendant Victor Curry ; that the agreement between him and Warren was that Warren should assume and pay all of the obligations of the plaintiff under the terms of his contract of purchase, and in addition thereto should pay him the sum of $10,000, $5000 of which was paid in cash, and the balance to be paid in two equal instalments of $2500 each in six and twelve months from date; and in addition pay a certain note of the plaintiff’s due at the First National Bank of Logan, West Virginia, for the sum of $5000, which represented the $5000 which the plaintiff had procured to pay his one-fourth of the cash payment, but that in drawing the contract there was inadvertently omitted therefrom the requirement that Warren was to pay off this $5000 note at the bank; that Warren subsequently transferred one-half of the interest thus acquired by him from the plaintiff to the defendant Victor Curry by a contract in writing, by the terms of which the said defendant Victor Curry assumed one-half of the obligations which the said defendant Warren had Undertaken in his contract with the plaintiff, and in which it was particularly mentioned that the said Victor Curry was to pay one-half of the $5000 note due at the bank as aforesaid; that shortly thereafter the defendant Warren sold his other half interest in the one-fourth of the stock purchased from the plaintiff to the defendants J. L. Curry and George Steele, they assuming in the contract in writing by which the interest was transferred to them to pay the other onedaalf of the obligations that Warren was under by virtue of his contract with this plaintiff, and specifically mentioning the obligation to .pay the $5000 note above referred to. The bill further alleges that since the said transfer by the said Warren to Victor Curry of one-half of the one-fourth interest, and to J. L. Curry and George Steele of the other one-half thereof, they have paid the said $5000 note, and have also paid the first instalment of $2500 due in six months from the date of the contract, but that the second instalment of $2500 still remains unpaid, and that the defendant Warren is insolvent. The plaintiff prays [400]*400that he may have a decree reforming the contract between him and the defendant Warren so as to make it specifically provide for the payment of the $5000 note held by the bank, and also a decree against Victor Curry for one-half of the $2500 remaining unpaid, and against the defendants J. L. Curry and George Steele for the other one-half thereof. To this bill the defendants demurred, and the court sustained their demurrer. The plaintiff declined to make any amendment to the bill, and the same was dismissed.

The plaintiff insists that he is entitled to maintain this suit for the purpose of reforming the contract made between him and Warren, and also for the purpose of recovering the $2500 remaining unpaid to him by virtue of the terms of that contract, and that he is entitled to have decree against the other defendants for this sum by reason of their agreeing to pay it in the contract by which they purchased the interest from Warren, while the defendants contend that he is not entitled to have reformation of the contract for the reason that the bill alleges that it has already been executed in accordance with his contention, and to reform it would be doing a useless thing, and that he is not entitled to go into a court of equity for a decree for the balance due from the defendants for the reason that his remedy at law is adequate.

While it is true that reformation of written contracts is a well-recognized ground of equity jurisdiction, still it is also true that there must be some practical question involved before a court of equity will take jurisdiction. In this case the plaintiff alleges that the written contract between him and Warren did not contain a provision requiring Warren to pay off the $5000 note due by him at the First National Bank of Logan as it was agreed that he should do, and plaintiff also avers that notwithstanding this was omitted from the contract between him and Warren, it was inserted in the contracts which Warren made with the parties to whom he sold the interest procured by him from the plaintiff, and that these parties have paid off and discharged the $5000 note. It is difficult to perceive upon these allegations what advantage it could be to the plaintiff to have a reformation of the contract. It has been fully executed in accordance [401]*401with his contention. There is no allegation that the note is outstanding anywhere, or that the defendants who paid it off are asserting it, or intending to assert it against him. It may be that if the bill had alleged that this note had been taken up by them, and that they are holding it as. a debt against him, or that they are likely to transfer it to someone else who might attempt to enforce it against him, a court of equity would compel its cancellation and surrender to him, but there are no such allegations in the bill.

Can the jurisdiction in equity be sustained to collect the instalment of $2500 remaining unpaid to the plaintiff upon his contract with the defendant Warren? In the contracts which Warren made it is provided, according to the allegations of the bill, that the purchasers shall pay each one-half of this $2500 instalment, and it is averred that they have not done so. It is insisted by the defendants that the plaintiff, if he has any right to recover this sum at all, could do it in an action at law; while the plaintiff insists that because there is no privity of contract between him and the defendants who are now primarily obliged to pay this money, he may not maintain an action at law to recover the same. It is true §2, eh. 71 of the Code provides, among other things, that if a covenant or promise be made for the sole benefit of a person with whom it is not made, such person may maintain an action thereon in his own name, and if this promise to pay the $2500 is for the sole benefit of the plaintiff then undoubtedly he could maintain an action at law thereon, and there would be no occasion to resort to a court of equity. The case of Nutter v. Sydenstricker, 11 W. Va. 535, is relied upon by the defendants as authority for the contention that an action at law might be maintained under the circumstances averred in this case. We do not think that case is authority for the proposition which it is cited to support. It is true that was an action at law, but the jurisdiction was sustained largely upon the fact that Nutter was surety for Sydenstricker in a forthcoming bond, and that having been compelled to pay off the amount secured by the forthcoming bond he had a right to maintain his action against Sydenstricker to recover the amount so paid [402]*402by him. The case we have here is very much like the case of Johnson v. McClung, 26 W. Va. 659.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
110 S.E. 826, 90 W. Va. 397, 1922 W. Va. LEXIS 240, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/petty-v-warren-wva-1922.