Ratliff v. Ratliff

47 S.E. 1007, 102 Va. 880, 1904 Va. LEXIS 49
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 23, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 47 S.E. 1007 (Ratliff v. Ratliff) 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
Ratliff v. Ratliff, 47 S.E. 1007, 102 Va. 880, 1904 Va. LEXIS 49 (Va. 1904).

Opinions

Harrison, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

In the fall of 1886 John B. Hamilton executed to Lucinda Ratliff and John R. Ratliff, one of her sons, a title bond for a tract of land near Abingdon, Virginia, in consideration of $6,500.00, of which $3,000 was paid in cash, the residue being evidenced by the joint bonds of the vendees. • On the 11th of January, 1887, for reasons satisfactory to the parties, this title bond and deferred purchase money bonds were surrendered to Hamilton, and an additional $1,000 was paid on the purchase, and a new title bond executed by Hamilton toLucindaRatliff and Floyd A. Ratliff, another son, which acknowledges the receipt of $4,000 in cash; it being provided that the residue of the pur[882]*882chase money should be paid in four equal annual instalments, evidenced by the notes of Lucinda and Floyd A. Ratliff, and providing that the vendor should execute a good and sufficient deed as soon as the land was run off, and the notes delivered. The grantee, Lucinda Ratliff, died in the fall of 1887, leaving her husband, M. S. Ratliff, and eleven children surviving her. On the 9th of February, 1891, Floyd A. Ratliff assigned to his father, M. S. Ratliff, all interest that he might have under and by virtue of the contract or title bond, the consideration for this assignment being that the assignee should pay the balance of purchase money then due on the land, amounting to $1,816. This assignment expressly provides that it shall not apply to the interest of the assignor in the land as one of the heirs of his mother, Lucinda Ratliff.

On September 4, 1896, John B. Hamilton, the vendor in the title bond, without the knowledge or authority of the heirs of Lucinda Ratliff, conveyed the land in question to M. S. Ratliff, the husband and father of the vendees named in the title bond, reserving a vendor’s lien for a small balance of purchase money, amounting to $362.46. After this deed was recorded, Hamilton, being informed that the heirs of Lucinda Ratliff would contest his right to make the deed to their father, M. S. Ratliff, filed his original bill, seeking to enforce the payment of the balance of the purchase money due to him, and convening all the parties, in order that the deed might be reformed in accordance with their respective rights. Subsequently, an amended bill was filed, bringing in additional parties, and repeating the allegations of the original bill. To these bills M. S. Ratliff filed his demurrer and answer, denying in general terms that the land was sold to Lucinda Ratliff, and insisting that all the negotiations leading up to the purchase were alone with him, and that the entire purchase money was paid by him from his own resources. Subsequently, J. M., J. R., and F. A. Ratliff, three of the adult heirs of Lucinda Ratliff, filed their answers, [883]*883asking that they be treated as cross-bills, in which they assert that the land in question was bought and paid for by their mother, Lucinda Ratliff; that the deed from Hamilton to M. S. Ratliff was without authority, and praying’ that it be- set aside, and the heirs of Lucinda Ratliff restored to their rights under the title bond. M. S. Ratliff filed his demurrer and answer to these cross-bills, reiterating the position taken in his answer to the original and amended bills; that the land was bought and paid for with his own means, and belonged to him.

The Circuit Court held that M. S. Ratliff could not defeat the rights of the heirs of Lucinda Ratliff under the title bond of January 11, 1887, and that the deed from Hamilton to M. S. Ratliff was without authority, and must be set aside. The court further held that M. S. Ratliff was entitled to the interest bought by him from F. A. Ratliff, under the assignment mentioned of February 9, 1891, the nature and extent of which was fully known to him; that under this assignment he was entitled to an undivided interest in the land in the proportion that $1,816.00, the balance of purchase money which he then agreed to pay, bore to $6,500.00, the whole purchase money agreed to be paid for said land. From this decree If. S. Ratliff has appealed.

The first assignment of error is to the action of the court in overruling the demurrer of appellant to the original and amended bills.

John B. Hamilton had, upon the inducement of the appellant, made him a deed to land which, on the face of his contract, belonged to other parties. He was threatened with suit in consequence of this act, and we are of opinion that in a suit to enforce payment of his vendor’s lien he had a right to convene all parties in interest, and to ask a court of equity to determine their respective rights in the land, and, if necessary, to set aside the deed he had made, and direct to whom the land should be conveyed. The bill, in addition to seeking a satisfac[884]*884tion of the balance of the purchase money, was in the nature of a bill of interpleader, convening adverse claimants, in order that the complainant, who occupied the position of a disinterested stake-holder, might be saved harmless. We are, therefore, of opinion that the demurrers to the original and amended bills, and also to the cross-bills, were properly overruled.

A further assignment of error is to the action of the court in not excluding the testimony of John R. and R. A. Ratliff.

John R. Ratliff was not a party to the contract or title bond which is the subject of dispute. This contract was with Lucinda Ratliff and R. A. Ratliff. Besides, M. S. Ratliff, an adverse party, having been examined for himself, John R. was thereby made competent, if otherwise incompetent. As to R. A. Ratliff, if he were incompetent, having been called as a witness by M. S. Ratliff, he was made competent for all purposes.

The fifth and sixth assignments of error seem to assert the proposition that, even though Lucinda Ratliff may have been entitled to the land in question, or a part thereof, still, as she died without having the legal title thereto, her interest was not descendible to her heirs. This position is without merit. An equitable interest in real estate descends just as a legal estate.

The remaining assignments of error call in question the respective rights of the parties in and to the land in controversy.

It appears from the record that prior to the purchase of the land in question the appellant and his family lived in Tazewell county, and that he and his wife, between them, owned in Tazewell and Buchanan counties considerable real estate, the title to the greater part of which was in his wife. Although the title to these lands was in Lucinda Ratliff, the appellant insists that, as a matter of fact, they belonged to him. His explanation of the title to these lands being in his wife, and of the title bond for the Hamilton land being in her name, is stated i» his deposition as follows: “Me and Gordon Rife had been in the [885]*885mercantile business and failed, and we compromised with our creditors, and gave a deed of trust on our property, each one on our separate properties; each one was to pay his half of the indebtedness, and, upon doing so, was to be released from the other. It was recorded in Buchanan county. The court-house was burned, and those papers were burned, and I paid my part of the indebtedness, and Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
47 S.E. 1007, 102 Va. 880, 1904 Va. LEXIS 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ratliff-v-ratliff-va-1904.