Snyder v. Botkin

16 S.E. 591, 37 W. Va. 355, 1892 W. Va. LEXIS 35
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 17, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 16 S.E. 591 (Snyder v. Botkin) 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
Snyder v. Botkin, 16 S.E. 591, 37 W. Va. 355, 1892 W. Va. LEXIS 35 (W. Va. 1892).

Opinions

English, .Judge :

This was a suit in equity brought in the Circuit Court of Kanawha county, and the bill was filed on the first Monday in April, 1889, by Adam C. Snyder, Sarah A. Sentz, Edward Penn, Sarah A. Sentz, administratrix of John W. Sentz, deceased, and Thomas L. Broun, Edwai’d B. Knight trustee for Sarah A. Sentz, against James B. Cabell, William 0. Cabell, Mary Cabell,.the State Tribune Company, and Sarah Botkin, in which they allege that on the 13th day of November, 1886, two certain decrees were rendered by the Supreme Court of Appeals of this State in favor of Adam C. Snyder, Edward Penn, John W. Sentz, Sarah A. Sentz, Thomas L. Broun, and Edward B. Knight, appellants, and against ’William C. Cabell and James B. Cabell, appellees, 29 W. Ya. 48 (1 S. E. Rep. 241) and for the following sums of money, to wit, four hundred and six dollars and twenty five cents and one hundred and thirty nine dollars and sixty five cents as per exhibits therewith filed, marked “A” and “B —that the two said decrees were recorded in the clerk's office of the County Court of Kana-wha county, on the 17th day of December, 1886, in the Judgment Lien Docket Book No. 6, pp. 270, 272, certified abstracts from said decrees, and the recordation thereof as aforesaid were also exhibited, and made part of said bill;— that the said decrees were rendered at the fall special term of the Supreme Court of Appeals held in Charleston, Kan-awha county, in the year 1886, and that the first day of said special term of said court commenced on the 12th day of October, in the year 1886 — -all of which would fully appear by .the certificate of O. S. Long, clerk of said Supreme Court, exhibited therewith, and made part of said bill ;•— that on the 17th day of November, 1882, the said James B. Cabell acquired by deed from Virginia 0. Drydeu a certain valuable lot, one hundred and seventeen feet front by three hundred and thirty five feet deep, on Washington street, in the city of Charleston, which deed is of record in the clerk’s office of the County Court of Kanawha county in Deed Book 38, p. 443, a copy of which is also exhibited ; — that the said James B. Cabell conveyed the upper half of said lot to his brother William C. Cabell by deed dated July [358]*35820th, 1883, which deed is also of record in said clerk’s office in Deed Book 39, p. 307 ; that on the 25th day of November, 1885, the said dames B. Cabell convoyed to his mother (then a very old woman) Mary Cabell, the estate, during her natural life, in the lower half of the said lot purchased as aforesaid by him from Virginia C. Dryden, the said lower half of the said Washington street lot being that portion thereof which adjoins a certain property formerly held and owned by the said Adam C. Snyder, which deed to the said Mary Cabell is also of record in said clerk’s office in Deed Book 4-3, which was also exhibited; — that on the 8th day of October, 1886, the said dames B. Cabell and his mother, Mary Cabell, conveyed the lower half of said Washington street lot to the State Tribune Company, which deed was recorded in said clerk’s office of the County Court of Kanawha county on the 13th day of October, 1886, in Book 45, [>. 153, a copy of which deed was also exhibited ; — that on the 23d day of December, 1886, said State Tribune Company conveyed the said lower half of said Washington street lot to said Sarah Botkin, which deed is recorded in-Book 45, p. 407, in said county clerk’s office, and was recorded therein on the 24th day of December, 1886, a copy of which deed is also exhibited as part of said bill.

Plaintiffs further -allege that the two decrees aforesaid, rendered during the fall special term, 1886, of the Supreme Court of Appeals, had by operation of law the same force and effect as if they had been rendered on the first day of the said special term of the Supreme Court of Appeals, which first day was the 12th day of October, 1886; — that the deed aforesaid from James B. Cabell and his mother, Mary Cabell, to the State Tribune Company, was not recorded until October 13, 1886 ; that the recordation of the said deed to the State Tribune Company was one day subsequent to'the first day of said fall special term, 1886, of the Supreme Court of Appeals of West Virginia, held in Charleston, Kanawha county, as aforesaid; — that the two decrees, for four hundred and six dollars and twenty five cents and one hundred and thirty nine dollars and sixty five cents, were each unpaid at the date and execution of [359]*359the deed aforesaid from James B. Cabell and mother to said State Tribune Company, and that said decrees are still unpaid ; — that executions issued thereon severally, and the-return on said execution was “ No property found ” to satisfy same, as would appear by copies of said executions therewith filed; — that at the date and execution of said deed by James B. Cabell and his mother to the State Tribune Company the said James B. Cabell held a valid fee-simple title to the lower half of the said Washington street lot, subject to the life estate of his mother, Mary Cabell, therein — that is to say, the said Mary Cabell was then vested with an estate during her natural life iu the lower half of said Washington street lot, and said James B. Cabell was vested with the remainder in fee-simple to said lower half of said lot; — that the said deed from James B. Cabell andhis mother to said State Tribune Company was void, and of no effect as to the recorded liens of said two decrees on James B. Cabell’s said interest and estate in said lower lot; — that the said decrees, by operation of law, related back to the first day of said special term, of the Supreme Court of Appeals and on said day, which was October 12, 1886, the said decrees continued and remained in full force and virtue on, from, and after the said 12th of October, 1886, and constituted valid and subsisting liens on James B. Cabell’s aforesaid interest and estate in the lower half of said Washington street lot at the date of the recordation of said deed to the State Tribune Company, to wit, October 13, 1886, and that said liens were still in force on James B. Cabell’s said interest and estate in said lower lot, and that they have been in full force thereon since October 12, 1886, and had never been paid off, discharged, or satisfied in whole or in part; — that the said interest and estate of the said James B. Cabell in the lower half of the said Washington street lot was, and still is, subject to the payment of the recorded liens aforesaid of plaintiffs, notwithstanding the conveyance aforesaid, from the said James B. Cabell and mother to the State Tribune Company and from said company to the said- Sarah Botkin.

The plaintiffs pray that said deeds from James B. Cabell and mother to said company and from said company to [360]*360Sarah Botkin for the lower half of said lot may be declared null and void so far as the said deeds do in any wise affect or were intended to impair the validity of the liens obtained, by the rendition of the two decrees aforesaid, against the estate and interest of the said dames B. Cabell in the lower half of said lot; and that said lower half of said lot may he sold to satisfy the decrees aforesaid,uind the costs of this snit.

The plaintiff's filed as exhibits with their bill abstracts from the mandate of the Supreme Court which were recorded in .Kanawha Circuit Court clerk’s office, which were recorded in the judgment lieu docket in the office of the clerk of the County Court, but filed no authenticated copy of the decree of said Supreme Court from which said ab-tracts were taken.

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Bluebook (online)
16 S.E. 591, 37 W. Va. 355, 1892 W. Va. LEXIS 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/snyder-v-botkin-wva-1892.