Smith v. Gott

41 S.E. 175, 51 W. Va. 141, 1902 W. Va. LEXIS 73
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 41 S.E. 175 (Smith v. Gott) 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
Smith v. Gott, 41 S.E. 175, 51 W. Va. 141, 1902 W. Va. LEXIS 73 (W. Va. 1902).

Opinion

Poffenbarger, Judge:

Mahala A. Johnston was allowed this appeal from several decrees made and entered by the circuit court of Mercer County in the chancery. cause of John W. Smith against A. Gott, administrator, with the will annexed of James D. Johnston, deceased, and several other-persons of whom the appellant is one. The object of said suit was to subject the real estate of the said J ames D. J ohnston to the payment of his debts, it being alleged that there is no personal property out of which the judgment of the plaintiff for the sum of two hundred and fifty-seven dollars and ninety-five cents, with interest and cost, against said Johnston, John W. Pennington and Nicholas Pennington, dated September 4, 1893, can be collected. The bill further shows that said James D. Johnston was the owner of a tract of land containing thirty acres and an undivided one-half of another tract of land which was conveyed to him and Mahala A. Johnston, his wife, by Albert Nash and others. This alleged interest of James D. Johnston in the last named tract of land'which contains one hundred acres is the matter in controversy on this appeal.

By deed dated July 9, 1866, Robert Hall, commissioner, in the case of James R. Kent against James T. Watson’s heirs, conveyed to Mahala Woodall, who afterwards married James D. Johnston, and Frances J. Woodall, sister of Mahala who after-wards married Albert Nash, a tract of land containing two hundred acres, of which the land in controversy here was a part. Long [143]*143afterwards and after Mahala Woodall and Frances J. Woodall bad married, this two hundred acre tract of land was divided between them and separate deeds were made between the parties. The deed executed by Frances J. Nash and Albert Nash, her husband, is dated February 4, 1882. Instead of conveying Mahala A. Johnston’s one-half of this land to her said deed conveyed it to her and her husband. Hence, the claim on the part of the creditors of James D. Johnston that he had title to one-half of the land and its liability for the payment of his debts. In her answer to the bill Mahala A. Johnston sets up these facts and alleges that the making of her husband one of the grantees in the deed for her portion of the land was by in-advertance and mistake and that her husband in fact never had any interest in said tract of land nor owned any portion of it. She claims the whole of the land and denies that any of the creditors of said James D. Johnston have liens upon any of it or any right to sell any portion of it and says that their rights and equities are inferior to hers and should be subordinated to it.

The cause having been referred to a commissioner of the court for various purposes specified in the order, some of which were to ascertain and report what real estate the said James D. Johnston 'owned at the time of his death, the liens thereon, their amounts and priorities and to whom owing, the commissioner reported that the said James D. Johnston owned one-half of said one hundred acres of land and that the same was assets for the payment of his debts and that the plaintiff and others had judgment liens thereon but that the appellant was entitled to dower therein. This finding of the .commissioner was excepted to. The commissioner returned with his report the depositions of Albert Nash and Frances J. Nash, the grantors in said deed, both of whom testified that said tract of land was one-half of said two hundred acres of land and that said two hundred acres had been purchased by and belonged to Mahala A. Johnston (nee Woodall) and Frances J. Nash (nee Woodall), and that they had simply divided the land by mutual agreement and executed the deeds for that purpose and that Mrs. Johnston did not know until long afterwards that her husband had been made a grantee in her deed. The deposition of Albert Nash was excepted to in part and that of Frances J. Nash in its entirety on the ground that she was incompetent. Why she is consid-[144]*144creel incompetent does not appear. While she is a sister of the appellant she has no interest in the matter in controversy. It also appeared from the will of James D. Johnston that he devised whatever interest he had in said one hundred acres of land to her stating in the will that the same had been unintentionally conveyed to him and without consideration in the partition of said two hundred acres of land and that the object of the devise was to restore to her, to whom it belonged, the entire title to the tract or parcel of land. The plaintiff relied solely upon the deed and offered no testimony to show that James D. Johnston had paid anything for the land or that it was not conveyed to him by mistake. The court overruled the exception to the report of the commissioner, confirmed it and decreed a sale of the land, after having it partitioned and the dower of the appellant therein assigned to her.

. That the deed conveying to Mahala A. Johnston and Janies I). Johnston said one hundred acre tract of land was one of two deeds executed b}r the co-tenants of the two hundred acre tract of land for the purpose of partitioning the same between them admits of no doubt. It is completely and fully established by the record. Prior to the execution of tliat deed Franes J. Nash was the owner of an undivided one-half of all the two hundred acre tract. The deed executed by herself and her'husband purports to pass the legal title of the whole of said one hundred acres to Mahala A. Johnston and James D. Johnston, although Frances J. Nash was never the owner of but one-half of said one hundred acres. The consideration for that deed was the conveyance by Mahala A. Johnston and her husband of her undivided one-half of the other one hundred acres to Frances J. Nash. Under such circumstances it may be gravely doubted whether any title to any portion of the land passed by this deed to James I). Johnston. It certainly could have passed nothing more Ilian the mere legal title to the undivided half of said one hundred acres leaving the legal and equitable title to one-half in his wife and leaving in her hands the legal and equitable title to the other half. But, as Frances J. Nash held the legal title to but one-half of said one hundred acres and conveyed that one-half to Mahala A. Johnston and James D. Johnston, it would seem upon this theory that James D. Johnston thereby obtained the legal title to only one-fourth of said one hundred acres. However, as stated, there is grave doubt as to whether [145]*145he took any interest in the land, legal or equitable, other than his estate by the curtesy. “In case of a fair and impartial voluntary partition of land, any liens or encumbrances upon the undivided interest of one co-tenant will, as a general rule, be transferred to the portion of the premises set off to that co-tenant in severality, that portion becoming the primary security; * * * and in case of a valid voluntary partition the right of dower to which the wife of a, co-tenant is entitled is divested from the shares of the other co-tenants and confined to that set apart to her husband.” 17 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law 676. These and other principles on the law of partition strongly indicate that no title whatever passed by this deed to James D. Johnston but it is unnecessary to determine here whether it did or not. It is sufficient for the purposes of this case that the whole equitable title remained in Mahala A. Johnston.

It is well settled law in this State that a- judgment creditor can acquire no better right to the estate of the debtor than the debtor himself has when the judgment is recovered.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Rinehart v. Hall
185 S.E. 561 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1936)
Springston v. Powell
169 S.E. 459 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1933)
Wood v. Lester
101 S.E. 52 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1919)
Interstate Trust & Banking Co. v. National Stockyards Nat. Bank
76 So. 356 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1917)
Johnson v. Garner
233 F. 756 (D. Nevada, 1916)
Westinghouse Lamp Co. v. Ingram
74 S.E. 941 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1912)
Ansell v. Cox
50 S.E. 806 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1905)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
41 S.E. 175, 51 W. Va. 141, 1902 W. Va. LEXIS 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-gott-wva-1902.