Tate's Ex'r v. Hull

22 S.E. 502, 2 Va. Dec. 161
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJuly 25, 1895
StatusPublished

This text of 22 S.E. 502 (Tate's Ex'r v. Hull) 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
Tate's Ex'r v. Hull, 22 S.E. 502, 2 Va. Dec. 161 (Va. 1895).

Opinion

Keith, P.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

A bill was filed in the circuit court of Wythe county by [162]*162Henry B. Hull and William A. Stuart, afterwards removed to Wythe county, in which they state they are the owners of the mineral rights in a certain tract of land in Rye Valley, Wythe county, Va., commonly known as the £‘Rock Ore Bank Tract” ; that one-half interest in this land was purchased by R. K. Williams from Moses Peirce, and on the death of Williams descended to his heirs, by whom it was conveyed to the plaintiffs. The other half of the said tract of land was owned by George Peirce, the brother of Moses Peirce, and was purchased by G. E. Barton in the chancery suit of Barton v. Peirce’s Heirs, lately pending in the circuit court of Wythe county. Barton afterwards sold the land thus purchased to R. K. Williams, and bound himself to make a good and sufficient deed for the same. It thus appears that R. K. Williams had both the legal and equitable title to one-half of the Rock Ore Bank Tract, derived by deed from Moses Peirce, and was the equitable owner of the other half, derived through the Bartons from George Peirce. It is alleged that Williams and those holding under him have had continuous and uninterrupted possession of the Rock Ore Bank Tract of land from January 21, 1857, to the present time. At Eebruary rules, 1871, M. B. Tate filed his bill in chancery against G. E. Barton and others in the circuit court of Wythe county. The object of the bill was to enforce the lien of a judgment in the name of the Northwestern Bank of Virginia against G. E. Barton, Conrad Earris, and William Porter for the sum of $418, with interest and costs. The bill averred that Barton owned several tracts of land in Wythe county, on which the judgment was a lien. Among other tracts described, and the only one in which the parties to this suit are concerned, is the Rock Ore Bank Tract. At the April term, 1872, of the court, George E. Penn was directed to take an account of the debts and their priorities. His report was filed on the 14th of August, 1872. At the September term following, the court confirmed the said report, and Derric was appointed a commissioner to sell the lands of G. E. Barton, [163]*163mentioned in the bill. On the 27th of August, 1872, G. E. Barton filed his petition in the district court of the United States, asking to be adjudged a bankrupt, and upon his petition such proceedings were had that he was adjudged a bankrupt, and subsequently obtained his discharge. With his petition to the bankrupt court, Barton filed schedules of his real estate, and a list of his creditors. M. B. Tate, the plaintiff here, who represented the greater part of the indebtedness against G. E. Barton, appeared before the commissioner in pursuance to notice, proved his debts against the bankrupt, amounting to §3,246.14, and Daniel Trigg was chosen assignee of the bankrupt, which position was duly accepted by him. The debts proven in the bankrupt court were the same as those proven in the cause of M. B. Tate v. Barton, above referred to, pending in the circuit court of Wythe county. The debt of the Northwestern Bank was not reported either by Commissioner Penn in the state court or before the commissioner in the proceedings in bankruptcy; but subsequently, at the instance of the administrator of Conrad Farris, who was one of the sureties in the debt due the Northwestern Bank, Tate was compelled to prove his judgment, and it was paid out of the proceeds of the sale of the tract of land containing 127 acres, upon which it constituted a lien. On the 13th of December, 1872, the district court of the United States issued a restraining order prohibiting Commissioner Derrio from making sale of the lands of Barton under the decree of the circuit court of Wythe county. A copy of this order of injunction is filed as a part of the bill in this case.

Barton, by his schedule filed in the bankrupt court, surrendered various tracts of land, and among them he recites the tract which is now in dispute in this case, described as the ‘ ‘Bock Ore Bank Tract”; and upon the schedule is indorsed, “This tract is in the possession of the heirs of Bufus BL Williams. ’ ’ As soon as it became known to the heirs of Williams that Barton had surrendered the lands in which they were [164]*164interested, they filed their petition in the district court of the United States, and thereupon such proceedings were had that Daniel Trigg, the assignee, was ordered to make a conveyance of the land embraced in the petition to the heirs of B. K. Williams. This deed was duly executed by the assignee, acknowledged, and admitted to record, and is filed as an exhibit with the bill. It will thus be seen that the legal title to George Peirce’s interest became united by the deed of Daniel Trigg, assignee, as aforesaid, with the equitable title in the heirs of B. K. Williams. It further appears from the bill that the plaintiffs purchased this half also from the heirs of B. K. Williams. All this while the original suit of M. B. Tate v. G. F. Barton and others remained upon the docket of the circuit court of Wythe county, and on the 24th of April, 1878, more than three years after the recordation of the deed from Daniel Trigg, assignee of G. F. Barton, to the heirs of R. K. Williams, an order was entered in the cause, reviving it against Daniel Trigg, assignee as aforesaid. By an order of the 30th of September, 1878, James H. Gilmore was substituted as commissioner in the place of Derric, and directed to sell the land in the bill mentioned. The sale was made, and M. B. Tate, the plaintiff, was reported, at the April term, 1879, as the purchaser of the one-half interest of George Peirce in the Bock Ore Bank Tract for the sum of §10. Subsequently, James H. Gollihorn, who had been substituted as commissioner, was directed to execute to M. B. Tate a deed for the land purchased by him at the sale made by J. H. Gilmore, and confirmed as above set forth. The bill of Hull and Stuart, after setting out in much detail the facts, a mere synopsis of which has been here given, charges that the deed made by Commissioner Gollihorn constitutes a cloud upon their title, so far as it relates to the Bock Ore Bank Tract, and prays that it be set aside and annulled, and that M. B. Tate be perpetually enjoined and restrained from any further proceedings in the suit of M. B. Tate v. G. F. Barton and others, in the circuit [165]*165court of Wythe county, so that their title to the Bock Ore Bank Tract may be established and quieted, and for other and further relief. To this bill Tate filed his answer, which denies that the complainants are the owners of the mineral rights in the Bock Ore Bank Tract. He alleges that the title bond from Barton to Williams was never recorded, and therefore' denies that B. K. Williams was ever the owner of the said tract, except subject to liens of creditors of G. F. Barton upon judgments obtained before the recordation of the said title bond, or the deed afterwards obtained by the heirs of B. K. Williams under the proceedings in bankruptcy, heretofore described. Despondent also denies that B. K. Williams, and those holding under him, have held continuous and uninterrupted possession of said land from the 21st of January, 1857, to the present time. He sets forth the proceedings in the suit of Tate v. Barton, the record in which he prays may be made a part of his answer, and avers that Williams and his heirs were in fact pendente lite purchasers with full knowledge of the litigation in the case of Tate v. Barton, in which the land in controversy was sold; and, having knowledge of those proceedings, it was their duty to assert their rights in that case, if they had any.

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Bluebook (online)
22 S.E. 502, 2 Va. Dec. 161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tates-exr-v-hull-va-1895.