Richeson v. Wood

163 S.E. 339, 158 Va. 269, 82 A.L.R. 1189, 1932 Va. LEXIS 253
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 24, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 163 S.E. 339 (Richeson v. Wood) 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
Richeson v. Wood, 163 S.E. 339, 158 Va. 269, 82 A.L.R. 1189, 1932 Va. LEXIS 253 (Va. 1932).

Opinion

Epes, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action originally instituted in the Civil Justice Court of the city of Richmond by Ben Wood against H. T. Richeson, Frank S. Richeson and Robert C. Bayliss, partners doing business as H. T. Richeson and Company. Judgment was there rendered against the defendants, who then appealed to the Law and Equity Court of the city of Richmond. The action was brought to recover $460.00, which Wood alleges he paid to the defendants under a contract which was a usurious consideration for a loan of $7,000.00 made to him by them. Upon the trial in the Law and Equity Court, judgment was rendered against the original defendants and the surety on their appeal bond for $460.00, to which judgment the defendants have been granted a writ of error.

The questions raised by the petition require no notice of [274]*274the pleadings, and there is no material conflict in the evidence, which so far as is material is given below.

The defendants were real estate agents and loan brokers. Wood was the owner of a lot of land at the southeast corner of Thirty-fourth and Leigh streets in the city of Richmond, upon which he had almost completed the erection of a gasoline filling station. Not having the funds to complete the filling station, Wood consulted the defendants about selling a part of the property. They advised him not to sell, and to erect on the property some store buildings in addition to the filling station; and undertook to procure a loan of $10,000.00 for him.

About March 1, 1926, the defendants procured for Wood a loan of $10,000.00 from Frederick E. Nolting and Company, which was secured by a first mortgage on this property; and for this service charged him a brokerage fee.

The contract obligated Wood to complete the filling station and erect three store buildings on the lot. The $10,000.00 proved to be insufficient for this purpose, and the defendants from time to time advanced money to Wood to enable him to complete these buildings, and for other purposes. The sums so lent to Wood by the defendants were from funds belonging to the defendants or funds belonging to their clients with which they were dealing as their own. By November 1, 1926, Wood had become indebted to the defendants for such loans for more than $7,000.00.

On or about that date, Wood executed and delivered to the defendants his note dated November 1, 1926, drawn for $7,000.00, payable three years after date, and also certain notes for the interest thereon at six per cent, per annum. The notes for both principal and interest were drawn payable to bearer at First and Merchants National Bank, Richmond, Virginia, and secured by a second lien deed of trust on said property, in which deed H. T. Richeson [275]*275was named as trustee. Under date of November 8, 1926, the defendants credited Wood’s account with them “by your three year loan dated November 1, 1926,- $7,000.00.”

Frank S. Richeson, a witness for himself and the other defendants, testified with reference to the making of the $7,000.00 loan as follows: “The last loan that Mr. Wood secured through our office on this property was the mortgage for $7,000.00, * * * for which we charged a brokerage of five per cent for three years. The money in this instance was borrowed from the First and Merchants National Bank of Richmond, and the notes of Mr. Wood were attached to our notes as collateral security. The funds loaned Mr. Wood were not my money. * * * The brokerage of five per cent charged on this loan was paid December 21, 1926, at which time the account with Mr. Wood was finally closed, and we charged him no further brokerage.

“When Mr. Wood applied for the $7,000.00 loan * * * I said something to him about giving us the exclusive sale rights of the property, and Mr. Wood readily consented to do so, and the contract of November 1, 1926, which has been introduced in evidence, was executed.”

On cross-examination he testified: “When the second deed of trust for $7,000.00 was made on the property, Ben Wood’s notes were used as collateral to our own note on which we borrowed this money from the First and Merchants National Bank, and reimbursed our accounts with it.”

The contract referred to by Richeson (which had been introduced by the plaintiff) is the contract in pursuance of which Wood paid the defendants the $460.00 for which he sues. It is dated November 1, 1926, is signed, sealed and acknowledged by Ben Wood, and is signed and sealed by each of the defendants. The material part of it reads:

“Whereas, the said H. T. Richeson and Company has procured for the said Ben Wood two loans of $10,000.00 [276]*276and $7,000.00, respectively, on property located at the southeast corner of Thirty-fourth and Leigh streets, and in consideration of this service and a further consideration of $1.00 to him in hand paid, receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged, the said Ben Wood hereby agrees that the said H. T. Richeson and Company is to be the exclusive sale agents for this property for the term of ten years from November 1,1926, and in the event of a sale of this property, or any part thereof, they are to receive the usual prevailing real estate commissions at the time of such sale, whether the property be sold by the said H. T. Richeson and Company, the said Ben Wood, or through any other agency.”

Wood introduced no evidence as to the circumstances leading up to the making of this contract, nor did he testify as to what was the consideration for which he executed it. But Robert C. Bayliss, one of the defendants, testifies on this point as follows: “It was explained to Ben Wood that the amount of trouble and bother we had been to in assisting him in these matters justified us in asking him for this contract, and Wood stated that on account of the way we had assisted him, he felt that we were perfectly justified in asking it, and he then signed the contract.”

The parts of the testimony of Frank S. Richeson, hereafter quoted, which were excluded or struck out by the court, also relate to these points.

In June, 1929, Wood made a contract to sell to Lynbrook Realty Corporation a part of the property above mentioned. The real consideration for the sale was the conveyance by it to Wood of certain other real estate. This sale (or exchange) was procured for Wood by a real estate agent who had no connection with the defendants; and the defendants rendered no service in connection therewith.

Wood employed Norman L. Flippen, an attorney at law, to represent him in closing this deal with Lynbrook Realty Corporation; and Flippen called on the defendants with [277]*277reference to paying off the $7,000.00 second hen deed of trust, and securing a release thereof. He saw H. T. Rieheson who informed him “that he would be glad to allow Ben Wood to pay his notes, which had not matured, without paying a premium, * * * that he had had enough trouble with Ben Wood, and all he wanted was their money.” The defendants, however, claimed to be entitled to commissions on the sale to Lynbrook Realty Corporation by virtue of the agency contract of November 1, 1926. Flippen, a witnesss for Wood, testifies that in considering this claim: “Mr. H. T.

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Bluebook (online)
163 S.E. 339, 158 Va. 269, 82 A.L.R. 1189, 1932 Va. LEXIS 253, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richeson-v-wood-va-1932.