Pickens v. Wood

50 S.E. 818, 57 W. Va. 480, 1905 W. Va. LEXIS 55
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 28, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 50 S.E. 818 (Pickens v. Wood) 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
Pickens v. Wood, 50 S.E. 818, 57 W. Va. 480, 1905 W. Va. LEXIS 55 (W. Va. 1905).

Opinion

Cox, Judge:

This is a contest between the heirs of Jemima Wood the second wife of Joshua Wood, and J. N. B. Crim, his credit- or, who seeks to subject to the payment of debts against [481]*481Joshua "Wood two tracts of land in Barbour county, containing respectively one hundred and seventy-six acres purchased by Joshua Wood of L. D. Morrall, special commissioner, under decree in the cause of Chrislip v. Chrislip, at the price of $2,300.00, in the year 1856; but for which no deed was ever made to Wood. So far as the record discloses no deed was ever authorized in that cause although the sale was confirmed. Joshua Wood paid on the purchase money about the time the sale was confirmed the sum of $565.30, the amount coming to a widow under the decree in that cause, and probably paid the costs of suit and sale. Some time after the sale Morrall, commissioner, brought suit against Wood for the residue of the purchase money, which suit remained pending until 1875 when it was dismissed agreed. The balance of the purchase money was paid by Joshua Wood in the year 1873 bypajdng the same to the Chrislip heirs who were entitled to it instead of paying to Morrall, commissioner. Jemima Wood died in 1878 and Joshua Wood afterwards re-married. The heirs at law of Jemima Wood allege that the land was originally purchased at the price of $2,300.00 and that the balance paid in 1873 was about the same amount. On the 21st day of September, 1885, Joshua Wood conveyed all this land to Melville Peck, trustee, to secure to the National Bank of Kingwood % debt of $1,000.00. On the 13th day of October, 1885, Joshua Wood conveyed the one hundred acre tract to James M. Wood, his son by his wife, Jemima, in trust for the sole use and benefit of his third wife, Emaline, retaining a lien to secure the payment-of certain debts, namely: A debt of $1,-000.00 to the National Bank of Kingwood; two debts to J. N. B. Crim, one of about $159.00 and the other of about $150.00; a debt to Heatherly of about $50.00, and to Kobinson the taxes of the current year. Also on the 13th of October, 1885, Joshua Wood conveyed by deed the seventy-six acre tract to his seven children by his ' second wife, reciting therein that the land had been paid for with the money and property of his second wife, and that when purchased was intended by agreement to be conveyed to her. At December rules 1885, the original bill in this cause was filed by James Pickens against Joshua Wood et al. to enforce the lien of a judgment against Wood in favor of Pickens and to set aside the two deeds made by Wood on the 13th of October, 1885, as fraud[482]*482ulent. The bill makes a number of lien creditors parties and sets up the existence of such liens. Crim was a party defendant to this suit. The cause was afterwards referred to a commissioner and depositions taken. Joshua Wood answered the bill. The pleadings raising the principal issue here are the following:

An amended answer in the nature of a cross bill hied by Crim at December rules 1901, setting up that all the liens against Joshua Wood had been paid except certain ones amounting to considerable sums of money to which Crim was entitled and asking to set aside the two deeds of October 13, 1885, as fraudulent, and to enforce his liens against said land; the answer of the children and heirs at law of Jemima Wood denying the validity of Crim’s liens and setting up a trust in all of said land in favor of their mother, and in their favor as her heirs on the ground that the original purchase money was paid by their mother and not by their father, and that during her life their father held the equitable title to the land in trust for her, and that after her death and up , to the time the land was convej^ed their father held it in trust for them as her heirs, subject to his curtesy, and replication to said answer. On the 31st of May, 1904, this cause was finally heard with «the cause of Crim and Robinson against Talbott et al. and a decree pronounced in favor of the heirs of Jemima Wood, the second wife of Joshua Wood, establishing the right of the heirs to said land and ordering a conveyance to them and to James M. Wood, their alienee, according to their interests therein. The decree further adjudicated that the liens claimed by Crim were not charges upon the said land, and other matters not necessary to detail here. From this final decree Crim appeals.

The record of the cause of Pickens v. Wood was the only one brought up and printed in this Court until after the submission thereof, when the Court under the rule adopted in the case of Fisher v. McNulty, 30 W. Va. 186, awarded a oertio-ra/ri to bring up the record of the cause of Crim & Robinson v. Talbott et al., and that record is now before us.

The only direct evidence offered to sustain the contention of the heirs at law of Jemima Wood as to the existence of the trast in.her favor is the evidence of Joshua Wood, the debtor, taken on the 17th day of March 1888. He testifies that he [483]*483bought this land for himself and further that “Not long after the sale of the land I became involved by being surety and was broken up and suit was brought against me by L. D. Morrall commissioner, for the purchase money due on said land, I fought the suit for a long time, and finally my wife got money from her father, John Reger’s estate, and I bought the Chrislip heirs out of their interest in said land with my wife’s money, part of said money was from proceeds of lands inherited by her father which I sold and the other money was what she got from her father’s estate. My wife, Jemima, like many other women, came very much dissatisfied by me getting into security so badly, and refused for her money to be used, unless she could control it, and I agreed with her that the deed for said land should be made to her and her children, and I so directed Lair D. Morall, Commissioner, to make said deed to her and her children. The deed never was made. I made different applications for the deed but the deed never was made. Finally she died but she claimed said land up to her death.”

Analyzing this parol agreement testified to by Joshua Wood we find that it purports to be something more than that the wife shall have a part of the land by furnishing a part of the purchase money. So far as this alleged agreement can be taken to be an agreement for the purchase of Joshua Wood’s whole interest in the land in consideration of furnishing part of the purchase money, it is an agreement, of purchase and not enforceable without writing. This is true notwithstanding the subject matter of the purchase is an equitable estate. Browne on Statute of Frauds, section 229; Hughes v. Moore, 7 Cranch (U. S.) 176; Wood on Statute of Frauds, section 227. This defeats the claim of the heirs of Jemima Wood to an equitable estate in the whole land. If the agreement testified to by Joshua Wood was otherwise free from objection and was established by sufficient evidence it could be considered as an agreement raising a trust in favor of the wife to an interest in the land proportionate to the part of the whole purchase money furnished by her. Viewing it in this light such an agreement need not be in writing, or proved by writing. Currence v. Ward, 43 W. Va. 367; Murry v. Sell, 23 W. Va. 475; Heiskell v. Powell, 23 W. Va. 717; Seiler v. Mohn, 37 W. Va. 507. However, where [484]*484parol evidence is admissible to establish a trust such evidence must be clear, full and unquestionable to produce such result. Troll v. Carter, 15 W. Va.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
50 S.E. 818, 57 W. Va. 480, 1905 W. Va. LEXIS 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pickens-v-wood-wva-1905.