Ragsdale v. Hagy

9 Gratt. 409
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJuly 15, 1852
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 9 Gratt. 409 (Ragsdale v. Hagy) 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
Ragsdale v. Hagy, 9 Gratt. 409 (Va. 1852).

Opinion

ALLEN, J.

The final decree allowed to the appellee Hagy certain offsets against the Iwo bonds executed by him to Snead, for the purchase money of the 100 acres of land. The bonds were dated according to the allegations *of the bill, on the 26th and 27th of August 1839; and were assigned, one of them to Greenway & Co. and the other to L. Smith on the 29th of the same month. Suits seem to have been brought by the assignees, immediately after the notes became payable. No defence was made to the action at law, and the office judgments being confirmed, the appellee during the same term of the court, obtained this injunction. It is contended on behalf of Snead’s assignees, that the offsets were legal, and should have been set up at law; that the appellee has shown no good reason for failing to rely upon them at law, and they should not therefore be allowed in equity. The principal offset was the note to Orr in which the appellee Hagy was a surety for Snead. It was past due when Hagy executed his bonds to Snead, but the debt had not then been arranged with Orr. Finding afterwards that he would be compelled to pay the debt, he settled with Orr, and lifted the note on the 10th of January 1840. When his notes were assigned by Snead, Hagy had no claim to a legal offset against the notes. The setoff was merely equitable, and there might be some doubt whether by his own act in adjusting this debt, he could convert that, which at the date of the assignment was an equitable, into a legal offset, of which he could have availed himself at the trial at law. However that may be, it seems to me the case was proper for a court of equity on other grounds.

Hagy had made a contract with Snead for the purchase of a portion of a tract of land held in common by Ragsdale and Snead, and received from them a title bond dated the 3d of August. On the same day Hagy paid to Snead in cash, and transferred paper to him amounting together to 423 dollars 88 cents, and took from Snead his note in which it was stated that the amount thereof was to be discharged in land at 8 dollars per acre. The parties did not know at the time *the quantity of land which the boundaries described in the title bond would contain; and the substance of the arrangement was, that after deducting the price of the land sold when the quantity was ascertained, the residue of the sum of 423 dollars 88 cents was' to be discharged in land at the same price.

Before the quantity described in the title bond was ascertained, Hagy and Snead entered into another contract, whereby the former purchased of Snead the tract of one hundred acres, at 8 dollars per acre, and executed his two bonds for the sum of 776 dollars of the purchase money: how the residue of the purchase money was adjusted, does not appear from the record. Before these bonds became due, difficulties arose as to the title of both tracts sold to Hagy. The land was part of a tract of two hundred and ninety acres, which had theretofore been purchased of Jacob Clark, one of the heirs of Benjamin Clark, by Benjamin Fulcher. In July 1839, Fulcher sold the land to Snead and Ragsdale for 3000 dollars, of which 1000 dollars was paid on the day the contract was completed, and the residue was to be paid in two installments, for which bonds were given; and a deed for the land was executed by Fulcher to Snead and Ragsdale, and placed in the hands of a third person, to be held as an escrow, and delivered upon the payment of the purchase money. Soon after the contract of purchase, there was some understanding or agreement, as appears by the answers of Snead and Ragsdale, by which Snead was to take the land and pay the purchase money; and it was no doubt after this understanding and whilst Snead exercised the control over the whole tract, that he undertook to sell off a portion to Hagy, and to put him in possession of the part so sold to him, although no partition had been made between Snead and Ragsdale. In his answer, Ragsdale avers that before their purchase from Fulcher, Snead had become largely indebted *to him, and that he did not begin to suspect Snead’s solvency, until some short time after the purchase. But that so soon as his fears about the circumstances of Snead were excited, he informed both Snead and Hagy that he would unite in no conveyance or sale of the land until he was made safe as well in reference to the purchase mone3',J as in relation to the individual debt of Snead; and that matters so stood until the 11th of November 1839, when they entered into the contract of that date filed with his answer; which recites that Ragsdale had purchased from Snead a tract of 150 acres of land, and Snead undertook to procure a good title to be made to .Ragsdale, on the payment of 10 dollars per acre. The amount of Snead’s interest in this contract, Rags-dale alleges was to be credited on Snead’s private debt.

In consequence of these arrangements, it is insisted for Ragsdale, that he is entitled to the whole of 150 acres, and furthermore that he is also entitled to a moiety of the 100 acres sold by Snead to Hagy, under their joint purchase, as he had not united in the sale.

Besides the claim of Ragsdale to a moiety at least of the 100 acres, the tract in consideration of which the two bonds were executed, it appeared that a portion of the purchase money was still due to Fulcher, the vendor of Snead and Ragsdale; but the amount so in arrear was uncertain, and has only been ascertained upon the settlement of transactions between these parties, of an involved and complicated nature.

In addition to this, it was alleged that there was a considerable portion of the purchase money still unpaid by Fulcher to his vendor Jacob Clark. That the claim had been transferred to John M. Preston, who had instituted and was then prosecuting a [191]*191suit in the County court of Washington county, to subject the land to the payment of this debt.

Such was the position of Hagy when sued upon the *bonds he had executed for the price of the 100 acres. The legal title was outstanding and his vendor could make him no title. No partition had been made between Snead and Ragsdale, and the latter under the joint purchase, claimed a moiety of the land as his. There was an admitted balance of the purchase money due to the immediate vendor of Snead and Ragsdale. A claim was asserted and a suit was depending to subject the land to the payment of a debt alleged to be due to a more remote vendor; and Snead, it is averred in the bill, and appears to be admitted throughout the recort^, was at that time insolvent. Hagy was compelled to resort to a court of equity to clear up the difficulties about the title; and that being his position, was it incumbent on him to set up his offsets in the action at law? The right to enjoin the payment of the purchase money where there is an incumbrance on the land purchased, is well settled. In Virginia, an injunction will be sustained after a conveyance, although there has been no actual eviction, but upon proof of a better title to the land in a third person. Ralston v. Miller, 3 Rand. 44.

There could be no doubt, therefore, if the bonds had remained in Snead’s hands, that a court of equity would have enjoined the payment until the difficulties about the title had been removed. It was uncertain, when the suits were instituted and the judgments confirmed, whether Hagy would get anything by his purchase. The alleged incumbrances for the purchase money covered the whole tract; and if the pretensions of Ragsdale were well founded, there would be little left for Hagy under his purchase from Snead. Though Snead might hold his bonds, which at law constituted a debt, it was still necessary to go into equity to ascertain whether in fact any debt existed.

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Related

Archer v. Ward
9 Gratt. 622 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1853)
Lee v. Tapscott
2 Va. 276 (Court of Appeals of Virginia, 1796)

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Bluebook (online)
9 Gratt. 409, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ragsdale-v-hagy-va-1852.