Union Central Life Insurance v. Wilson

161 S.E. 237, 157 Va. 454, 1931 Va. LEXIS 335
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 17, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 161 S.E. 237 (Union Central Life Insurance v. Wilson) 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
Union Central Life Insurance v. Wilson, 161 S.E. 237, 157 Va. 454, 1931 Va. LEXIS 335 (Va. 1931).

Opinion

Browning, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

B. T. Wilson, an attorney at law, of Lebanon, Russell county, Virginia, defendant in error, instituted an attachment suit against The Union Central Life Insurance Company, of Cincinnati, Ohio, plaintiff in error, in the circuit court of the said county, to recover attorney’s fees, commissions and expenses of sale, aggregating the sum of $2,140.00, with interest thereon from the 28th day of April, 1928. The parties will be referred to hereafter as plaintiff and defendant, the relation borne by them in the trial court.

It was alleged that the principal defendant was a foreign corporation, and had estate and debts owing to it within the said county. This estate was attached and levied upon, as was an indebtedness of $871.00 due the principal defendant by Mrs. Nannie E. Wilson, who was impleaded for the purpose as a party defendant.

The plaintiff’s claim consisted of six separate items:

“(1) Attorney’s fee in the chancery suit of Elizabeth Combs v. Virginia A. Lambert, et als, in the Circuit Court of Russell county............................ $500.00
“(2) Attorney’s fee in the chancery suit of Virginia A. Lambert v. B. T. Wilson, trustee, et als....................... 500.00
“(3) Trustee’s commission on sale by him April 28, 1928, in foreclosing deed of trust.............................. 550.00
“(4 & 5) Expenses of sale and fee for additional abstract..................... 90.00
“(6) Fees on the collection of $11,000.00 of amount due by notes which provided for ten per cent attorney’s fee........ 500.00
“$2,140.00”

[458]*458The verdict of the jury was for the plaintiff for the full amount claimed, with interest from the 28th day of April 1928.

The defense was that the first item was barred by the statute of limitations (Code 1919, section 5810). The suit which was the basis of the fee charged was ended by a final decree of January 15, 1924, and the evidence discloses that the motion of an appeal was abandoned on August 6, 1924. The present suit was instituted on the 28th day of September, 1929, thus the five year statutory period had elapsed between the date of the completion of the services of the plaintiff and the bringing of this suit. The plaintiff sought to counter this defense by reliance upon a part of the contents of a letter received by him from the defendant, the alleged effect being a waiver of its right to plead the statute. This letter of November 15, 1926, was in reply to a letter of the plaintiff to the defendant.

The portion of the letter appearing in the record as a part of the evidence and which we are discussing is as follows: “You say that there is some question as to the statute of limitations running against the right to collect your attorney fee in this case. I do not understand this as under the terms of our agreement your fee is not earned until the property is sold and your charges paid out of the proceeds of the sale.”

It will be noted here for the purpose of making this reference understandable that in 1918 the defendant had made a loan of $12,000.00 to Charles A. Combs and. wife which was secured by a deed of trust on two tracts of land in Russell county. Subsequently the Combses sold and conveyed these lands to Virginia Lambert, who assumed the payment of the said loan, which was evidenced by a series of notes aggregating the principal sum. Some time after the conveyance to Virginia Lambert a suit in chancery was instituted against her, The Union Central Life In[459]*459surance Company and others, by Elizabeth Combs, asserting a life estate in the larger of the two tracts of land, as outstanding in her and superior in dignity to the rights of Virginia Lambert, and the other defendants. The defendant, The Union Central Life Insurance Company, employed the plaintiff to defend its interest in said suit. The deed of trust securing the defendant’s loan contained a clause by which the mortgagors agreed to pay any reasonable attorney’s fee and all expenses incident to any litigation involving the property, or incident to any sale of the property or the attorney’s fee for collection of any note secured thereby collected without suit. The letter of the defendant engaging the plaintiff’s services stated that he would be permitted to retain as full compensation therefor the attorney’s fee recovered and collected in the suit and requested him to make claim for the fee as provided in the mortgage or deed of trust and the plaintiff replied that this fee arrangement was satisfactory to him. The life tenant was successful in establishing her claim as asserted and the suit went off the docket. No sale was had therein of any of the land embraced in the trust deed.

The quotation from the defendant’s letter of November 15, 1926, which is urged by the plaintiff as constituting a waiver of its right to plead the statute against the plaintiff’s fee of $500.00, item (1), arose out of the facts stated. We do not think the letter bears the legal effect sought to be given it.

A waiver must be clear and distinct. It cannot be said that the intent and purport of the words used were to waive the benefit of the statute, pleaded in an action instituted years afterward, and not contemplated by the writer at the time of the writing, however, the claim of the plaintiff, designated “item 1” for $500.00 was not barred by limitation and the trial court did not err in refusing to so instruct the jury.

[460]*460It is perfectly clear that the plaintiff’s fee, by the terms of the deed of trust, was secured by the grantors or mortgagors, on the lands embraced therein, but the provision was really for the benefit of the mortgagee, the defendant, in the immediate case. The plaintiff agreed that this should be the source of his fee but he had no right of action against the landowners on this account; this was only within the power of the defendant and its right to recover it was alive and existed as long as the deed of trust debt was in date, and, indeed, in grade and dignity of lien it was superior to the debt itself.

Our position as to this is fortified by the holding of this court in the case of Smith’s Ex’x v. Washington City, etc., Railroad Co., 33 Gratt. (74 Va.) 617, in which it was said in the syllabus:

"In the case of a claim secured by a mortgage, although the remedy by an action at law for the claim may be barred by the statute of limitations, the remedy under the mortgage will not be affected by any lapse of time short of the period sufficient to raise the presumption of payment.”

It will be noted that the purchase price of lands sold in foreclosure proceedings by the trustee under the deed of trust, under the ruling of the above case, was charged with the payment of the plaintiff’s fee, and the defendant cannot avail under the plea of the statute.

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Bluebook (online)
161 S.E. 237, 157 Va. 454, 1931 Va. LEXIS 335, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-central-life-insurance-v-wilson-va-1931.