Schilling v. Short

15 W. Va. 780, 1879 W. Va. LEXIS 59
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 13, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 15 W. Va. 780 (Schilling v. Short) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schilling v. Short, 15 W. Va. 780, 1879 W. Va. LEXIS 59 (W. Va. 1879).

Opinion

HaymoND, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the Court:

J. G. Schilling, administrator of the estate of Henry H. Chapman, deceased, filed his bill in equity at the February rules, 1874, of the circuit court of the county of Noane, against Hiram Short of said county, in which he alleges in substance that on the 27th day of October, 1864, the said Henry H. Chapman, then in life, sold and and conveyed to said Hiram Short a tract of three hundred acres of land, more or less, in said county, lying on the head of Laurel fork of Henry’s fork of the Little Kanawha river, for the sum of $900.00 to be paid as follows : $200.00 in two years from date ; $200.00 in three years ; $200.00 in four years ; and the remaining $300.00 in five years, with annual interest, and retained a lien on' said land on the face of the said deed for the said purchase-money and interest. An official copy of said deed is filed as an exhibit marked number one. The bill also alleges that said Short on the day and year last aforesaid executed his four several single bills to said Chapman, three of which were for $200.00 each, and the fourth for $300.00, due and payable in two, three, four and five years from said date, with annual interest, and delivered the same to the said Chapman for said purchase-money, and received the said deed of conveyance, and took possession of the said land, and hfis ever since and still holds possession of the same ; that the third and fourth of said single bills for the sum of $200.00 and $300.00 respectively, with annual interest thereon from said date, are and remain wholly unpaid, except the sum of $7,60 paid August 28, 1867, endorsed on the third one of said single bills. The said third and fourth single bills are filed with the bill as exhibits, marked numbers two and three. The plaintiff also alleges that in the year 1869 the said [782]*782Chapman died, and that he, plaintiff, was duly appointed and qualified his administrator, and that the sums of money mentioned in said third and fourth single bills, although long since due and payable, were not paid to said Chapman in his lifetime, nor to the plaintiff since his death, and that the said Short has hitherto failed and refused to pay the same, and still refuses and fails so to do. And the plaintiff also prays that the vendor’s lien for said unpaid purchase-money may be enforced against the said three hundred acres of land; and prays for general relief.

The said deed, exhibit number one, filed with the bill is dated the 27th day of October, 1864, and conveys the said three hundred acres of land, with general warranty, by metes and bounds, and recites that the conveyance is for the consideration named in the bill payable with interest annually, as stated in the bill, and expressly reserves on its face a lien on said land for the payment of the said purchase-money with all the interest that may accrue thereon. This deed was admitted to record in the recorder’s office of Itoane county, on the 6th of February, 1865. The said three and four single bills given for the two last instalments of the purchase-mopey, filed with the bill, marked numbers two and three as exhibits, also appear in the record, and the purport and substance of them is correctly described in the bill. On the 7th day of September, 1874, it appears that the said Short appeared and filed his answer to said bill, in which he admits that he bought the land, obtained the deed, and gave the bonds mentioned in the bill, and says that the bonds were at one time assigned by said H. D. Chapman to his brother, Hira,m Chapman, by endorsing his name thereon, and while said Hiram held said bonds, he paid said Hiram thereon, as assignee thereof, part of the money due thereon, and afterwards said Hiram returned said bonds to said H. D. Chapman, who erased his assignment therefrom, but did not credit the amount paid said Hiram while he held said bonds; that he (respondent) paid H. [783]*783D. Chapman $400.00, the two first bonds given for said land, and also paid him, before he assigned said bonds to Hiram, some money and property on the bonds mentioned in the bill; also C. C. Smith paid said H. D. Chapman for him $120.00 June 18, 1867; that he (respondent) entered on said land when wholly unimproved, and cleared out about seventy-five acres, planted an orchard and built houses and barns thereon ; that he sold fifteen acres of said land to C. C. Smith, and one hundred .acres thereof to his son, Josephus Short, who entered thereon and cleared twenty-five acres, planted an orchard and built houses, &c.; that he sold one hundred acres of said tract to James Butcher, who cleared out a iarm thereon; and he (respondent) and those claiming under him have held said land since the year 1864, but under the following circumstances: Said tract of land is part of a large iract of land containing some seven thousand acres purchased by said H. D. Chapman of one Quarrier. of Kanawha county, and said Chapman had failed to pay the purchase-money to Quarrier, of which fact he (respondeni) had no notice hefore he bought said three hundred acres and obtained said general warranty deed filed with the plaintiff’s bill; that a suit in chancery was brought in the circuit court of Roane county by said Quarrier against' said H. D. Chapman, to collect the said purchase-money so due him from said H. D. Chapman, amounting to over $2,000.00; and the said land was sold to raise the same, and by agreement entered into between H. D. Chapman and J. G. Schilling, the plaintiff, and him (respondent) and A. H. Short, another vendee of said H. D. Chapman of part of said seven thousand acres of land, the lands of him (respondent) and A. H. Short, were sold to raise money to pay the original purchase-money due from Chapman to Quar-rier, and said Schilling, administrator, the complainant agreed that he (respondent) and A. H. Short should have credit on their fur chase-money to Ohapman’s estate to the extent oJ their payments made on said original purchase-[784]*784money; and damages for the trouble occasioned in the premises ; and he says that he had to buy said land at the sale made by H. C. McWhorter, commissioner in the case of Quarrier’s representative v. Chapman, and was compelled to make great sacrifices, and did pay Quarrier’s estate for said three hundred acres of land, in order to save the same from being sold and being wholly lost to him; that when this three hundred acres of land came to be sold by commissioner McWhorter for the Quarrier debt, said Chapman was involved in a very large indebt-^ edness against his property, -and he, Chapman, was of doubtful solvency; that he, Chapman, had made him a general warranty deed, and it was to his interest to have said land bought in by respondent to save his ; that the land had increased in value by the valuable improvements put on it by him, respondent, and so he says that ho has wholly paid off and discharged the whole of the pur-ohase-money secured by the bonds filed with the bill; that if he had not come forward and paid Chapman’s said purchase-money debt to Quarrier, the land would have been lost to him together with the improvements thereon, and Chapman’s estate would have been liable to him for damages to the extent of said land and improvements &c. This answer appears'to have been sworn to in open court.

It appears that on the 7th day of September, 1874, the plaintiff, by leave of the court, filed his special replication in writing to the answer of said Hiram Short, in which he says in substance that he does not know that defendant paid said Hiram Chapman, an alleged assignee of Henry D.

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Bluebook (online)
15 W. Va. 780, 1879 W. Va. LEXIS 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schilling-v-short-wva-1879.