Spies v. Butts

53 S.E. 897, 59 W. Va. 385, 1906 W. Va. LEXIS 122
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 10, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 53 S.E. 897 (Spies v. Butts) 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
Spies v. Butts, 53 S.E. 897, 59 W. Va. 385, 1906 W. Va. LEXIS 122 (W. Va. 1906).

Opinion

McWhorter, President:

On the 28th day of January, 1904, Henry Spies of the county of Randolph entered into a contract with Ida M. Butts, James McCormick and Harry T. Wilson to sell to the said parties of the second part all the real estate and personal property owned by him in the counties of Randolph, Upshur and Webster as follows:

“(a) All of the several tracts of land, coal and standing timber lying and being in the said counties of Randolph, Up-shur and Webster in the said State on the waters of the Little Kanawha, Buckhannon and Holly Rivers and their tributaries which are"shown upon the schedule and blue print map hereto attached and made a part of this contract, together with all other tracts of land, town lots, coal or standing timber owned by the said party of the first part in the several counties aforesaid or any of them, whether shown upon said schedule and map or not, the whole aggregating 10,699.25 acres qf land, 16,059.02 acres of standing timber, and 14,-867.34 acres of coal.
“(b) All of the personal property owned by the party of the first part in the counties aforesaid or either of them, consisting of manufactured lumber, fallen timber or logs, tools, machinery, store goods, and other personalty, whether of the character so designated or not, save and except the following: 4,000 feet of figured maple lumber; 2,800 feet of bird’s eye poplar; 1,500 feet of quartered oak; two second-hand boilers; one riding horse; one cow; one typewriter; books, book-accounts, monies, stocks, securities and dioses in action and household goods.
■ “(c) All of the capital stock of the Pickens and Hackers Yalley Railroad Company.
“It being the intent and purpose of this contract to sell unto the parties of the second part all of .th¿ estate of the party of the first part both real, personal and mixed in the counties aforesaid or either or any of them, save and except only those items of personal property hereinbefore excepted and reserved'. It is further understood that the acreage of [387]*387said realty is estimated by surface and not horizontal measurement, and that the acreage of land, coal and timber are not exclusive each of the other, but that the same tract may and in many instances does constitute a part of the aggregate total given under one or more of such descriptions.”

The parties of the second part agreed to pay the sum of $400.000 as follows: $62,500 in cash upon the signing of the agreement and $37,500 in six months thereafter for which the parties made their notes of the date of said agreement, which notes were to be further secured by the deposit with the said Spies as collateral security the one-tenth of the total capital stock to be issued by the parties of the second part upon the formation of a corporation to which they proposed to convey the property and which corporation was to be immediately organized by them; the residue of the purchase price, $300,-000, was “to be secured or evidenced by the notes of said proposed corporation to be endorsed by the parties of the second part and to be due and payable,” the sum of $2,500 on or before the 1st day of May, 1904, the second a like sum on the 1st day of June, 1904, “and the residue to be divided into 59 notes for the sum of $5,000 each and due and payable on or before the first day of each month thereafter, all to bear interest at the rate of five per centrum per annum from and after the 1st of November, 1904;” and as further security it was provided that in his deed to be thereafter made for the property, Spies should retain his vendor’s- lien on all the said real estate, and a deed of trust was to be executed by the said Pickens and Hackers Yalley Railroad Company upon all its real estate, rights of way, rolling stock, equipment, rights and franchises to secure the payment of the same, the execution of which deed of trust was to be contemporaneous with the transfer to the parties of the second part of the capital stock of the said corporation; the party of the first part agreed to make, execute and deliver to the parties of the second part, or to such person, persons or corporation as they might designate, as soon as might be after the execution of the contract and not later than the 1st day of July, 1904, a good and sufficient deed for all said real estate with covenant of general warranty and free from all encumbrances, together with such bill or bills of sale for the personal property as the parties of the second part might request or desire; the [388]*388parties of the second part were to have full and complete possession of all said personalty and title thereto immediately upon the payment of the said sum of $62,500 and the execution of the notes for the $37,500 together with the right to enter in and upon the real estate and to cut and remove the timber therefrom, or the coal thereunder, and to operate, use and control the said railroad and to receive and collect the revenues arising therefrom; and in the event of the said Spies not being able to deliver to the parties of the second part the total acreage of land, coal or standing timber described, in that event there should be abated from the purchase price therein agreed upon the sum of $3.00 per acre for each acre of surface so conveyed, $7.00 per acre for each acre of coal, and $19.00 per acre for each acre of standing timber or an aggregate sum of $29.00 per acre for each acre of land containing both coal, standing timber and surface; or, if the title should fail as to any portion so conveyed, a like abatement and no more should be made upon such failure. It was further understood and agreed that if said Spies should be unable by the 1st day of July, 1904, or at the time of the delivery of the deed mentioned, to make good title to any of the tracts of the land, coal and standing timber intending to be conveyed by said agreement, the same might be conveyed by him to the parties of the second part at any time before the final settlement should be made of the purchase price therein agreed upon upon the perfecting of his title thereto and no abatement should be made of said purchase price by reason of any such tracts so conveyed before final settlement. The said Spies further covenanted that there were no liens or encumbrances upon any of the personal property and that the description of the same should be taken and held to include the locomotive engine then lately ordered on behalf of said railroad company and not yet then delivered to it.

On the 4th day of August, 1905, Henry Spies filed his bill of complaint in the circuit court of Upshur county against Ida M. Butts, James McCormick, Harry T. Wilson, as individuals in their own right and as partners trading under the firm name of the Butts, McCormick and Wilson Company, The Pickens and Hackers Valley Railroad Company, á corporation, The Butts, McCormick and Wilson Company, a corporation, the Ohio River Lumber Company, a corporation * [389]

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Related

Town of Sparta v. Hamm
387 S.E.2d 173 (Court of Appeals of North Carolina, 1990)
In re Eakin Lumber Co.
34 F. Supp. 460 (N.D. West Virginia, 1940)
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119 S.E. 104 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1923)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
53 S.E. 897, 59 W. Va. 385, 1906 W. Va. LEXIS 122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spies-v-butts-wva-1906.