Roberts v. Hagan

93 S.E. 619, 121 Va. 573, 1917 Va. LEXIS 59
CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 20, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 93 S.E. 619 (Roberts v. Hagan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roberts v. Hagan, 93 S.E. 619, 121 Va. 573, 1917 Va. LEXIS 59 (Va. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Kelly, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

On September 18, 1909, Patrick Hagan conveyed to T. G. Wells a tract of land and retained a vendor’s lien thereon [575]*575to secure $1,500 of the purchase money. The conveyance was made “with covenants of general warranty.”

On March 15, 1911, T. G. Wells conveyed the same land to W. H. Roberts, who, as a part of the consideration therefor, assumed the payment of the money secured by the vendor’s lien retained in the former deed.

Subsequently, Patrick Hagan executed a general deed of trust to C. F. Hagan conveying to him what appears from the deed to have been a very large and valuable real and personal estate, with specific directions as to its management and distribution. Under the terms of this deed of trust, C. F. Hagan, as trustee, became the owner of the debt and lien above mentioned, with the right to enforce the same, and this suit was brought by him for that purpose. Wells did not appear. Roberts answered, alleging the insolvency of Wells, and defended upon the ground of alleged defects in the title to the land. The circuit court decreed a sale to enforce the lien, and Roberts appeals.

In Virginia, the rule is that to entitle a purchaser of real estate to relief in equity against the collection of the purchase money on the ground of a defective title, where, as here, the sale has been consummated by the execution and acceptance of a general warranty deed (without. other covenants), the title must be questioned by a suit either prosecuted or threatened, or it must be clearly shown that the title is defective. Ralston v. Miller, 3 Rand. (24 Va.) 44, 48, 15 Am. Dec. 704; Koger v. Kane, 5 Leigh (32 Va.) 607, 609; Morgan v. Glendy, 92 Va. 86, 89, 22 S. E. 854; Pack v. Whitaker, 110- Va. 122, 125, 65 S. E. 496.

Patrick Hagan’s claim to the land was derived from the heirs of Martha Holdway. It is conceded that she had a good title thereto, but the appellant contends that her interest therein does not satisfactorily appear to have ever been fully acquired by Hagan.

[576]*576The first objection, urged against the Hagan title is that Mrs. Holdway appears to have made a will of which neither the original nor any copy has been produced, and that for all appellant knows she may have devised the land to persons other than her heirs at law under whom Hagan claims. The only facts appearing in the record regarding this alleged will are as follows: After Mrs. Holdway’s death, Patrick Hagan brought a suit in equity (known in the record and hereinafter referred to as the partition suit) against certain of her heirs, alleging that he had acquired the interests of the other heirs to the land, and praying for a partition or sale, in accordance with what the court might deem “best for all parties concerned.” The bill in that suit stated, among other things, that Mrs. Holdway had devised the land to her husband for life, and that at his death “the same descended to the heirs at law of said Martha E. Holdway, who were her six brothers and sisters.” The answer and cross-bill in the present suit filed by the defendant, Roberts (appellant here), sets out this partition suit at length, and, with special reference to the point now under consideration, avers that “no will of Martha E. Holdway has ever been admitted to probate, and that she has not been dead seven years, and for aught respondent knows the disposition of said land by her in said will may have been entirely different from that stated in the bill.” The complainant (appellee here) answers the cross-bill upon this point as follows: “The will of Martha Holdway does not vest title to or any interest in the said land in any other person than the aforesaid heirs. A copy of the will is filed herewith marked ‘Exhibit E,’ and it is prayed to be read as a part hereof.” The exhibit was not filed and no further light is thrown upon the subject of this will, except that there appears in the record, without objection, a certificate of the clerk of the Circuit Court of [577]*577Wise county, made in October, 1916, over three years after the present suit was brought, to the effect “that there is not any will of Martha Holdway of record” in his office.

The uncertainty about the existence of the will, and about its provisions if it does exist, does not constitute such clear defect in the title as to afford the appellant any ground for relief against the payment of the purchase money. From all the indications to be derived from the references to the will in the record, and from the history of the title since the death of Mrs. Holdway, it would seem safe to assume that the provisions of her will, if she made one, were as alleged in the partition suit. Mrs. Holdway had been dead for more than ten years when this suit was brought — more than fourteen years when the decree complained of was rendered. This appears from the fact that some of her heirs conveyed to Hagan in 1902, which of course was after her death. During all the intervening period there has been no suggestion of any claim under a will adverse to those from whom Hagan claims title. The appellant, in his answer, states with emphasis that he did not know of any of the alleged defects in the title until July, 1912. This was more than a year after the date of his deed, and more than a year after the purchase money he had assumed to pay was due. If he had paid this money at maturity, he would have been, as an innocent purchaser, fully protected by section 2547-a of the Code, requiring that wills of real estate, as against such purchasers, must be recorded within seven years after the testator's death. Whether or not he would be so protected now, after having notice of the possibility of such a will, before paying the money, we need not stop to inquire, because under all the circumstances we do not think he has shown that the facts with regard to this alleged will constitute a clear defect in the title.

We pass now to the most serious ground upon which the title is questioned.

[578]*578Among the heirs of Mrs. Holdway were, Una Culbertson, a sister, entitled to an undivided sixth interest in the land, and the infant children of Martha Morefield, a deceased niece, entitled to an undivided fifty-fourth interest therein. Both of these interests were sold in the partition suit above mentioned, and were bought in by Patrick Hagan. The appellant contends that both sales were void, and we think this contention is correct. It is not necessary to go at any length into the proceedings under which the sales' were made. They were ordered by separate decrees, but were carried into effect by the same deed from Bond, commissioner, to Hagan. At the time of the purchase by Hagan of the interests of Una Culbertson and- the Morefield heirs, he had acquired the interests of all the remaining heirs of Martha Holdway, and as a matter of fact no partition was ever actually made in the partition suit. The interest of Una Culbertson was sold pursuant to the prayer of a petition filed in the partition suit by her brother, J. K. Culbertson, who claimed to be her committee. The evidence of his appointment as such was unsatisfactory and the evidence of her insanity wholly insufficient. This latter fact, in itself, constituted a fatal defect in the proceedings by the alleged committee; and, moreover, those proceedings were wholly wanting in some of the jurisdictional requirements of the statute (Code, ch. 117) relating to the sale of lands of persons under disability. The sale, therefore, was void and subject to collateral attack.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
93 S.E. 619, 121 Va. 573, 1917 Va. LEXIS 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roberts-v-hagan-vactapp-1917.