Sutherland v. Rasnake

192 S.E. 695, 169 Va. 257, 1937 Va. LEXIS 173
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 23, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 192 S.E. 695 (Sutherland v. Rasnake) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sutherland v. Rasnake, 192 S.E. 695, 169 Va. 257, 1937 Va. LEXIS 173 (Va. 1937).

Opinion

Eggleston, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

At the first May rules, 1935, R. C. Rasnake filed his bill in the court below against Fausie Musick alleging that they were joint owners of four tracts of land in Russell county, and praying that the said real estate be divided in kind, or in case it be not divisible in kind that it be sold and the proceeds divided. The defendant, Fausie Musick, filed her answer to the said bill, admitted the allegations to be correct and prayed that her share of the lands be laid off in a particular manner.

By a decree entered shortly thereafter the court ascertained that the lands were divisible in kind and appointed commissioners who were directed to make a proper partition thereof. Pursuant to this decree the commissioners went upon and partitioned the lands and filed their report, to which exceptions were taken by Fausie Musick.

Before these exceptions had been passed upon Fausie Musick filed an amended answer and cross-bill, in which she attacked the title of the said R. C. Rasnake to any interest in the lands sought to be partitioned. This title, she alleged, had been acquired by deed dated February 21, 1933, from R. S. Meade, special commissioner, pursuant to the decrees of the same court in the chancery suit of R. C. Rasnake v. Stafford S. Sutherland.

The cross-bill alleged that the entire proceedings in the said chancery suit, including the decree of sale and the deed whereby Rasnake had acquired title to the land, were null and void. It was alleged that it was the purpose of the said suit to subject the interest of the said Stafford S. Sutherland in said lands to .the lien of two judgments in favor of Rasnake against him, one being for the sum of $20 (subject to a credit of $10), and the other for the sum of $10; that there had been no compliance with the provisions of Code, section 6473, requiring a thirty days notice to the said Sutherland that the said suit would be instituted unless the said judgments were paid within that time; and that the giving of the required notice was jurisdictional.

[262]*262The cross-bill prayed that the said R. C. Rasnake and Stafford S. Sutherland be made parties defendant thereto and required to answer.

Process was issued under the cross-bill and served on Sutherland, who appeared and filed an answer and cross-bill. Sutherland adopted the allegations of the cross-bill of Fausie Musick and attacked the validity of the title of Rasnake to any interest in the said lands on the same grounds alleged by her. He further alleged that the property had been acquired by Rasnake at a grossly inadequate price, to-wit, $60; that the deed whereby Rasnake had acquired title to the property, and the decrees based thereon, had been procured by the fraud of Rasnake, who had led him (Sutherland) to believe that the sale of the property would not be consummated; that he had fully paid and satisfied the judgments and thought that the chancery suit had been abandoned; and that he did not know until the institution of the partition suit that Rasnake had obtained a deed to the said lands.

After Rasnake had filed demurrers and answers to each of the cross-bills, Sutherland proceeded to take the depositions of witnesses in support of the allegations of his cross-bill. The entire proceedings in the former chancery suit of Rasnake v. Sutherland were offered in evidence and brought under review. Rasnake offered no evidence.

When the matter came on to be heard the trial court entered a decree refusing to set aside the deed whereby Rasnake had acquired title to the property, and from this decree the present appeal has been taken.

Code, section 6472, provides: “Jurisdiction to enforce the lien of a judgment shall be in equity. If it appear to the court that the rents and profits of the real estate subject to the lien will not satisfy the judgment in five years, the court may decree the said estate, or any part thereof, to be sold, and the proceeds applied to the discharge of the judgment.”

Code, section 6473, provides: “If the amount of the judgment does not exceed twenty dollars, exclusive of in[263]*263terest and costs, no bill to enforce the lien thereof shall be entertained, unless it appear that thirty days before the institution of the suit, the judgment debtor or his personal representative, and the owner of the real estate on which the judgment is a lien, or, in case of a non-resident, his agent or attorney (if he have one in this State), had notice that the suit would be instituted, if the judgment was not paid within that time.”

It is admitted that at the time of the institution of the suit of Rasnake v. Sutherland the total amount due on the two judgments, exclusive of interest and costs, did not exceed $20, and that the notice required by Code, section 6473, had not been given.

The appellants insist that the statutory requirement of this notice is mandatory; that the failure to give it left the court without jurisdiction and rendered all of the proceedings in the suit null and void; and that hence Rasnake acquired no valid title to the lands in question.

We think this contention of the appellants is unanswerable.

The provision in question, in substantially its present form, was first enacted by the General Assembly in the Acts of 1877-78, ch. 78, p. 68, and was carried into the Revised Code of 1887 as section 3572. The revisors of the Code of 1919 (section 6473) reduced the notice from sixty to thirty days.

The evident purpose of this statute is, we think, to spare a judgment debtor the expense of a suit brought to enforce the lien of a judgment in such a small amount until he shall have been given a final opportunity of paying the claim. It was designed to prevent just what occurred in the present instance. Here a suit in chancery was brought to subject the lands of the debtor to the lien of two small claims, the total of which did not exceed $20, exclusive of interest and costs. The record shows that these judgments were easily collectible,—they were paid in full pending the suit or certainly a short time thereafter. In the meantime [264]*264court costs amounting to three times the principal of the claim had been incurred in the chancery suit.

We further think that the requirement of the notice is jurisdictional. The language is: “* * * no bill to enforce the lien thereof shall be entertained,”—that is, no suit shall be brought,—“unless it appear that thirty days before the institution of the suit” the required notice has been given.

But the appellee claims that this court held in Hawpe v. Bumgardner, 103 Va. 91, 48 S. E. 554, that Code, section 6473, has no application to a general creditors’ suit. He says that his was a general creditors’ suit; that while he did not specifically allege that the suit was for the benefit of other judgment creditors, as well as himself, he did allege the existence of other judgment liens on the debtor’s lands; that the prayer of the bill was that the lands should .be subjected to the lien of all of said judgments. In any event, he says, upon the entry of the decree referring the cause to a commissioner to take an account of the liens on the real estate of the judgment debtor, etc., the suit became, a general creditors’ suit under the holding in McClanahan’s Adm’r v. Norfolk & Western Ry. Co., 118 Va. 388, 405, 87 S. E. 731.

This interpretation of Hawpe v.

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

Related

Veronica M. Johnson v. Rock Solid Janitorial, Inc.
Court of Appeals of Virginia, 2023
Toni Sue Stacey v. Commonwealth of Virginia
Court of Appeals of Virginia, 2021
Michael Jonthan Garland Saunders v. Commonwealth of Virginia
753 S.E.2d 602 (Court of Appeals of Virginia, 2014)
Matthews v. Matthews
675 S.E.2d 157 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 2009)
Commonwealth v. Bailey
28 Va. Cir. 243 (Accomack County Circuit Court, 1992)
Commonwealth v. Heflin
26 Va. Cir. 261 (Nelson County Circuit Court, 1992)
Eden Drainage District v. Swaim
54 So. 2d 547 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1951)
Chaney v. Kibler
198 S.E. 877 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1938)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
192 S.E. 695, 169 Va. 257, 1937 Va. LEXIS 173, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sutherland-v-rasnake-va-1937.