Wethered v. Elliott

32 S.E. 209, 45 W. Va. 436, 1898 W. Va. LEXIS 112
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 30, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 32 S.E. 209 (Wethered v. Elliott) 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
Wethered v. Elliott, 32 S.E. 209, 45 W. Va. 436, 1898 W. Va. LEXIS 112 (W. Va. 1898).

Opinions

English, Judge:

This suit in equity was instituted in the circuit court of Webster County by P. B. Wethered against C. D. Elliott and others on the 27th of April 1893, for the purpose of setting aside and annulling a certain deed which purported to have been executed by said P. B. Wethered and Jonathan Bennett to C. D. Elliott on February 20, 1891, on the ground that said Elliott, acting for and on behalf of C. B. Hart, in his own right and as trustee, and J. N. Vance, on behalf of himself and said Hart and Vance, induced the plaintiff and said Jonathan Bennett to drink intox [438]*438icating liquors to such an extent that they become g-rossly intoxicated, non compos mentis, and totally in capacitated for .the transaction of business, and, while so incapacitated, caused and procured the plaintiff and said Bennett to acknowledge a writing on that day purporting to be a deed conveying certain lands therein described to said C. D. Elliott for the purported consideration of five thousand two hundred and forty dollars, by said writing acknowledged to be in hand paid. This land at the date of said writing was very valuable as coal and timber land, and was located within one mile of the West Virginia & Pittsburgh Railroad, and well adapted to agricultural purposes, and well worth fifteen dollars to twenty dollars per acre, and the consideration named in said deed was grossly inadequate, to such an extent as to shock the conscience of a court of equity. Plaintiff also alleged that although said deed recited a consideration of five thousand two hundred and forty dollars, and acknowledged the payment, in fact not one cent of the purchase money so recited as paid was ever paid to him; that as soon as he recovered from his intoxication, and learned that he and said Bennett had executed said writing, he notified Elliott that he repudiated said deed and the sale therein represented, and that, unless the land was reconveyed to him, he would bring- suit to set aside said pretended deed and sale; and he prayed that said writing purporting to be a deed from himself and said Bennett, dated February 20, 1891, might be set aside, canceled, and annulled, and for general relief.

On the 24th of November, 1893, said chancery cause was transmitted from the circuit court of Webster County to the circuit court of Braxton County; and on November 29, 1893, the judge of said court being so situated that he could not properly preside at the hearing of said cause, W. W. Brannon was elected special judge to try the same. On the 4th of December, 1893, C. D. Elliott filed his separate answer, and C. B. Hart and J. N. Vance filed their joint and several answer to plaintiff’s bill, and the plaintiff replied generally thereto. Depositions were taken in the cause, and on December 18, 1894, a decree was rendered in favor of the plaintiff holding that the defendants Hart, trustee, and Vance were not entitled to hold said [439]*439land under the deed made to C. B. Hart, trustee, by the defendant C. D. Elliott on the 14th of March, 1891, hut that said Hart, trustee, and Vance were entitled to charge said land with the amount paid by them for the land conveyed by the last-mentioned deed before notice of the plaintiff’s rights, after first abating the relative value of the two tracts of one hundred and six and sixty-six acres conveyed by said deed upon the basis of seven dollars per acre for the whole of the land conveyed by said deed, and also the relative value upon the same basis of the tract of one hundred acres conveyed by Jonathan Bennett to C. D. Elliott, bearing date February 20, 1891. Butsuch charge in their favor was made subject to the right of the defendant John D. Alderson, commissioner, to enforce his lien for purchase money upon one undivided third of said one thousand three hundred and ten acres. It was further held that said deed from Bennett and the plaintiff to said Elliott, and the deed from said Elliott to defendant Hart, trustee, so far as the same conveys the said tract of one thousand three hundred and ten acres, be canceled and annulled; and the defendant Jonathan Bennett was declared to be a trustee holding the legal title to said one thousand three hundred and ten acres as to two undivided thirds thereof, and the equitable title in the other undivided third for the benefit of the plaintiff, subject, however, to a charge thereon in favor of Jonathan Bennett for the amount which may have been paid by him on plaintiff’s behalf on account of taxes against said land, which amount, with any other taxes assessed thereon that mig-ht be paid by him, should be payable next after the sum to be charged in favor of the defendants Hart, trustee, and J. N. Vance; and said Bennett was restrained from making any sale or conveyance of said land until the further order of the court, and an account was directed. On April 29, 1895, said Elliott asked leave to file a bill of review in said cause, accompanied by the original deed from Bennett and Weth-ered to Elliott mentioned in the cause, and also by several affidavits, basing his application on the ground of newly-discovered evidence; and the plaintiff in said cause, P. B. Wethered, appeared and objected to the filing of said bill of review, and demurred thereto, in which demurrer said [440]*440Elliott joined. On consideration whereof it was ordered that said bill of review be filed, and the same was remanded to rules, to be there matured for hearing- as to the parties not appearing thereto, and said Wethered had leave to file his answer to said bill of review within thirtj days after the adjournment of court; and Wethered was enjoined from the prosecution of said suit, and the execution of the decree to be reviewed, until the final hearing oí the matters arising upon said bill of review, upon said Elliott executing bond, with good security, in the penalty of three hundred dollars, to be approved by the clerk. Weth-ered answered said bill of review. Depositions were taken thereon by plaintiff and defendant, and the cause was matured for hearing; and on May 5, 1897, the cause was again heard upon the bill of review, and the court dismissed said bill, dissolved the injunction, and decreed that Elliott pay the costs of the proceeding. From this and the former decree, Elliott appealed.

The appellant assigned six grounds of error, the last of which claims that the court erred in dismissing the bill of review filed in the case, and was not warranted in dismissing it by the law or the evidence, but, instead, the said bill of review should have been sustained, and said former decree reversed and annulled, and the plaintiff Wethered’s bill dismissed with costs. Counsel for the appellee Weth-ered, on the other hand, in their brief assign as cross error the overruling of the demurrer of Bennett and Weth-ered to th.e bill of review. The only special ground assigned'in the demurrer was that the bill of review did not point out in what particular the decree asked to be reviewed was claimed to be erroneous; the only allegation being that “said decree of 18th December, 1894, was erroneous because of the evidence not in the cause, which has been discovered,” etc. This cross error applies to the action of the court on the 28th of August, 1895, upon the demurrer; and assignment No. 6 of appellant refers to the action of the court on May 5, 1897, when said bill was dismissed on the hearing of the cause. Counsel for the appellee insist that the decree overruling said demurrer was erroneous because the ground of demurrer relied on was not sufficient, and that it should have pointed [441]*441out specifically the paticulars in which in was claimed the decree was erroneous; citing 3 Enc. Pl.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
32 S.E. 209, 45 W. Va. 436, 1898 W. Va. LEXIS 112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wethered-v-elliott-wva-1898.