Preston's Drive Inn Restaurant, Inc. v. Convery

154 S.E.2d 160, 207 Va. 1013, 1967 Va. LEXIS 171
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedApril 24, 1967
DocketRecord 6399
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 154 S.E.2d 160 (Preston's Drive Inn Restaurant, Inc. v. Convery) 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
Preston's Drive Inn Restaurant, Inc. v. Convery, 154 S.E.2d 160, 207 Va. 1013, 1967 Va. LEXIS 171 (Va. 1967).

Opinion

Buchanan, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

On May 25, 1965, Carla Convery (complainant) filed a bill in equity to enforce the lien of a judgment which she had recovered against Walter Preston Martin on February 6, 1958. She sought to enforce the lien against certain real property located in Fairfax County which Martin had conveyed to Preston’s Drive Inn Restaurant, Incorporated (Preston’s) by a deed dated January 30, 1958, and recorded on February 5, 1958.

Preston’s fiied a demurrer which was overruled. After answers to the bill and a request for admissions and answer thereto were filed, Preston’s and complainant each filed a motion for summary judgment. Thereupon a stipulation of facts was agreed upon and filed by the parties.

Upon the pleadings, admissions and stipulations of fact, the court granted complainant’s motion for summary judgment, denied the defendant’s motion and decreed that complainant’s judgment against Martin was a lien on the property conveyed by him to Preston’s and was prior to the lien of a deed of trust dated February 12, 1962, recorded February 13,, 1962, executed by Preston’s to trustees to secure the payment of a note for $30,000. From this decree Preston’s was granted an appeal.

The facts were stipulated to be as follows:

On February 6, 1958, in the Circuit Court of Fairfax county, a judgment order was entered awarding complainant a judgment against defendant (Martin) in the amount of $2,000 plus interest and costs. This judgment was docketed on February 7, 1958. The case had been set for trial on January 20, 1958, “Which was Term Day of said Court.”

By deed dated January 30, 1958, and duly recorded on February 5, 1958, Martin conveyed to Preston’s the property against which complainant seeks to enforce the lien of her judgment. This deed was made pursuant to a resolution of the Board of Directors of Preston’s at a meeting held January 20, 1958, accepting Martin’s offer to convey this property to the corporation at an agreed value of $17,000, in exchange for capital stock of the corporation of that amount.

On February 12, 1962, Preston’s executed the deed of trust referred to above, conveying said property to trustees to secure pay *1015 ment of the promissory note for $30,000. Preston’s certificate of incorporation was issued January 2, 1958, and Martin was a stockholder, director, president and registered agent of the corporation at the time of these conveyances.

The parties stipulated that the sole question for decision by the trial court was whether complainant had a valid lien on the property conveyed by Martin to Preston’s and, if so, whether the lien was prior to the 1962 deed of trust.

Complainant’s position in the trial court was that although the judgment in her favor against Martin was rendered and docketed after the conveyance by Martin to Preston’s, by the terms of Code § 8-386, as then effective, the judgment related back to the first day of the term of court during which it was rendered, giving her a lien on the property before it was conveyed.

Code § 8-386 was rewritten by the 1960 General Assembly, 1960 Acts, c. 466, p. 725. However, at the time of the judgment here in question it provided, in part:

“Every judgment for money rendered in this State by any state or federal court, other than by confession in vacation, shall be a lien on all the real estate of or to which the defendant in the judgment is or becomes possessed or entitled, at or after the date of the judgment, or if it was rendered in court, at or after the commencement of the term at which it was so rendered, if the cause was in such condition that a judgment might have been rendered on the first day of the term. * *”

Appellant Preston’s contends that Code § 8-390, as effective in 1958, controls. Code § 8-390 was repealed in 1964, 1964 Acts, c. 309, p. 518. In 1958, however, it provided:

“No judgment or decree rendered in a court of this State or in the circuit court of appeals or a district court of the United States within this State shall be a lien on real estate as against a purchaser thereof for valuable consideration without notice until and except ■from the time that it is duly docketed in the proper clerk’s office of the county or city wherein such real estate may be.”

Preston’s argues that no valid lien existed against it as a purchaser for valuable consideration without notice, until the judgment was Martin, had no interest in the property in question to which the lien docketed on February 7, 1958, and at that time the judgment debtor, *1016 could attach because his conveyance to it was then completed and had been properly recorded.

Appellee argues that Preston’s was not a purchaser for valuable consideration without notice because it had notice through Martin, its officer and agent, of the action pending against Martin which resulted in the judgment. The initial question, therefore, is whether notice of an action for a money judgment pending against a grantor is itself sufficient to prevent a subsequent purchaser for value from being a purchaser without notice protected by the terms of § 8-390. If notice of an existing judgment is required, then it is not material whether Preston’s had notice through Martin of the action pending against Martin.

The precise question seems not to have been decided in our previous cases. However, cases deciding questions under statutory predecessors of § 8-390 have consistently referred to notice under the statute as notice of a judgment. See, e.g., Craig v. Sebrell, 50 Va. (9 Gratt.) 131, 135; Johnson's Ex’or v. National Exchange Bank, 74 Va. (33 Gratt.) 473, 485 (holding that proof of notice must be so strong and clear as to fix upon the purchaser the imputation of bad faith); Rhea v. Preston, 75 Va. 757, 768; Wicks v. Scull, 102 Va. 290, 292-3, 46 S. E. 297, 298; Miller v. Kemp, 157 Va. 178, 190, 160 S. E. 203, 206.

In Virginia, if the title to real property is involved in a pending action, Code § 8-142 permits the filing of a lis pendens to give notice to anyone who might deal with the property in the pending litigation. The statute is not applicable, however, to an action to recover a personal judgment against the defendant. 12 Mich. Jur., Lis Pendens, § 11, p. 271; Steinman v. Clinchfield Coal Corp., 121 Va. 611, 641, 93 S. E. 684, 693.

In the opinion by Judge Staples in Gordon, Assignee v. Rixey, Assignee, 76 Va. 694, it is said that the history of the statutes requiring the docketing of judgments “will show that they were framed for the protection of bona fide purchasers of real estate claiming, under alienation by or through the judgment debtor, real estate which, under former laws, would have been subject to the lien of the judgment, even in the hands of alienees, for value without notice. #

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Bluebook (online)
154 S.E.2d 160, 207 Va. 1013, 1967 Va. LEXIS 171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/prestons-drive-inn-restaurant-inc-v-convery-va-1967.