Thorn v. Sprouse

20 S.E. 676, 39 W. Va. 706, 1894 W. Va. LEXIS 104
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 18, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 20 S.E. 676 (Thorn v. Sprouse) 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
Thorn v. Sprouse, 20 S.E. 676, 39 W. Va. 706, 1894 W. Va. LEXIS 104 (W. Va. 1894).

Opinions

English, Judge :

This was a suit in equity brought by Z. B. Thorn, in the Circuit Court of Wirt county against Nicholas Sprouse and others, to the March rules, 1891, for the purpose of enforcing a'vendor’s lien reserved on the face of a deed from Samuel Ii. Smith and wife to Bichólas Sprouse dated the 19th day of May, 1877, to secure a balance of purchase-money, and to set aside as fraudulent a certain deed made by Nicholas Sprouse and wife to one Susan R. Dalrymple, and also a deed from said Susan R. Dalrymple to Louisana Sprouse, wife of said Nicholas Sprouse, and to subject the land §,o conveyed to the payment of a judgment obtained by said Z. E. Thorn against said Louisana Sprouse and Nicholas Sprouse in an action of ejectment in the Circuit Court of Wirt county on the 29th day of March, 1890.

The material facts relied on by the plaintiff in his bill are, that on the 19th day of May, 1877, said Samuel H. Smith was possessed of a tract of land containing one hundred and thirty five acres, situated in said county; and that in consideration of six hundred and thirty dollars of which three hundred and seventy five dollars was in hand paid, and the residue of which was to be paid as follows : Said Nicholas Sprouse assumed to pay to E. O. McCutcheon one hundred and fifty five dollars which sum was then due, and executed his single bill for one hundred dollars, payable twelve months after date — said Smith and wife by [deed .of that date sold and conveyed said tract of one hundred and thirty five acres of laud to-said N. Sprouse, and said deferred payments ivere secured by vendor’s lien reserved on the face of said deed. Some time in the year 1891, the said Samuel H. Smith, for a valuable consideration, indorsed and delivered said single bill for one hundred dollars to plaintiff and thereby assigned and directed the balance remaining due and unpaid on said due bill to be paid to the plaintiff, which singlé bill yet remains unpaid except as [708]*708to certain credits indorsed thereon, which are set forth, and that the balance due on said single bill is a valid lien upon said one hundred and thirty five acres of land, which he has a right to have enforced. The defendant has paid off said one hundred and fifty five dollars due to said B. C. Me-Cutcheon. On the 29th day of March, 1890, he recovered against the said Nicholas Sprouse and Louisana Sprouse a judgment for his costs in and about a certain ejectment suit prosecuted by him against them, amounting to the sum of one hundred and thirty eight dollars and twenty oue cents as taxed by the clerk of said court. The defendants Nicholas Sprouse and Louisana Sprouse, on the 3d day of March, 1881, with intent to hinder, delay and defraud the creditors of the said Nicholas Sprouse then existing as well as the subsequent creditors of the said Nicholas Sprouse conveyed said tract of one liuudred and thirty five acres of land to his sister-in-law Susan R. Conrad, who since married one William Lalrymple. While there is a consideration of three hundred dollars recited in said deed, there was in fact not one cent consideration paid for said deed. The same was voluntary and without consideration deemed valid in law and was made with intent to hinder, delay and defraud the creditors of said Nicholas Sprouse, and is fraudulent and void as to said judgment of plaintiff. The said Susau Conrad in pursuance of said fraudulent intent and to further carry the same into effect did on the 6th day of September, 1882, make and deliver a deed for the said one hundred and thirty five acres of land to her sister Louisana Sprouse, reciting the same consideration contained in the said Susan Conrad deed. Although more than one year and six months elapsed between the date of said deeds, and said one hundred and thirty five acre-tract was an improved farm, and attended in crops, said Nicholas Sprouse continued to occupy it, and exercise acts of ownership over it, and to cultivate, use and enjoy the same as his own property without hindrance from said Susan Conrad, and continues so to use the same. Said Susan Lalrymple and Louisana Sprouse, and each of them, had notice of said vendor’s lien and assumed the payment thereof.

Plaintiff also alleges that he holds certain certificates for [709]*709the attendance of witnesses on belialf of said defendants Louisana and Nicholas Sprouse in said ejectment canse, which he describes and gives the amount of, and charges that he has a right to charge the rents, issues, and profits of said land with his said judgment for costs and claims for witnesses’ attendance against said Louisana Sprouse, if the court is of opinion that said conveyance to her by Susan Conrad is not fraudulent, as charged. Plaintiff also gives the amount and dates of several judgments which had been recovered against said Nicholas Sprouse by different parties in the county of Wirt, which he alleges had been docketed in the judgment-lieu docket of said county, and which have never been released, and says he is, not advised whether they have been paid or not; and he prays that the conveyances from Nicholas Sprouse to Susan Conrad, and from Susan Conrad to Louisana Sprouse, for said land, may be canceled, set aside, and annulled as fraudulent, and that said land may be decreed to be sold in satisfaction of said several sums of money due the plaintiff.

On the 17th day of June, 1891, the defendant Louisana Sprouse demurred to the plaintiff’s bill, because the plaintiff had not made or stated such a cause of action in his bill, as would entitle him to the relief sought. And, for special cause of demurrer said defendant said (1) that, as will appear from the allegations in said bill, the note claimed by plaintiff to have been assigned by defendant S. Ii. Smith to plaintiff was barred by the statute of limitations prior to said assignment; (2) that said plaintiff shows by his said bill that his judgment of one hundred and thirty eight dollars and twenty one cents recovered against her and Nicholas Sprouse for one hundred and thirty eight dollars and twenty one cents, was recovered in a court of law, and that, as shown by said bill, she is a married woman, the wife of her co-defendant Nicholas Sprouse, and that said judgment is a nullity so far as she is concerned; (3) that said bill is multifarious, and for other causes, etc.; and she prays judgment, etc. This demurrer was set down for argument and having been argued and submitted was overruled.

The defendant Louisana Sprouse also filed an answer to plaintiff’s bill, admitting the allegations of the bill with [710]*710reference to the conveyance of said tract of land by S. II. Smith in the year 1877, and stating that all of the purchase-money was paid about the same time, except the note for one hundred dollars ; also admitting that the credits indorsed on said note for payments were made since by her co-defendant Nicholas Sprouse, and that there is a small balance due upon said note and unpaid, which is a lien upon said land owned by her. She, however, denies that said conveyances from N. Sprouse to Susan Conrad, and from her to respondent, were for the purpose of hindering, delaying, or defrauding his creditors in any way, and charges that all the creditors of said N. Sprouse to whom he was indebted at the time of the making of said conveyances, and before, have been fully and entirely paid off and satisfied, except the balance on said note, which she is ready to pay, and that, if the said Nicholas Sprouse has since contracted debts, tlie creditors could not in auy way be prejudiced by the conveyances to her, as the same were on record, and they had fair and .full notice that he was not the owner of said real estate.

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Bluebook (online)
20 S.E. 676, 39 W. Va. 706, 1894 W. Va. LEXIS 104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thorn-v-sprouse-wva-1894.