Wilcoxon v. Carrier

53 S.E.2d 620, 132 W. Va. 637, 1949 W. Va. LEXIS 69
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 5, 1949
Docket10067
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 53 S.E.2d 620 (Wilcoxon v. Carrier) 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
Wilcoxon v. Carrier, 53 S.E.2d 620, 132 W. Va. 637, 1949 W. Va. LEXIS 69 (W. Va. 1949).

Opinion

Riley, Judge:

This is a suit in equity brought in the Circuit Court of Wood County to establish a resulting trust in favor of the plaintiff, Alpha D. Wilcoxon, in a certain residential property in Parkersburg. The holder of the legal title, Zina Wilcoxon, now Zina Wilcoxon Carrier, the older daughter of plaintiff and Minnie Mae Wilcoxon, together with her husband, John Carrier, in an answer suggested that Minnie Mae Wilcoxon had either a full or part interest *639 therein, and asked that the latter be made a party defendant. Subsequently, Minnie Mae Wilcoxon in her answer and cross bill made claim to the property in issue, likewise on the theory of a resulting trust. From a decree, providing that the property be conveyed to the plaintiff, Alpha D. Wilcoxon, and Minnie Mae Wilcoxon, jointly, plaintiff, Alpha D. Wilcoxon, prosecutes this appeal.

In the bill of complaint plaintiff alleges that he purchased the property with his own funds; that at time of the purchase his wife had a judgment outstanding against her and, as a matter of convenience and precaution, the deed thereto was taken in the name of his daughter, Zina Wilcoxon, to prevent the property from becoming involved in any litigation; that plaintiff took immediate possession of the property, improved the same, paid the taxes thereon, insurance premiums and other expenses, and in due time paid off the purchase price for the property; that Zina Wilcoxon had expended no sum or sums of money thereon; that John Carrier had no inchoate right of dower therein; and that Zina Wilcoxon, having no interest in the property, held the same for plaintiff, and should be required to transfer the property to him.

Zina Wilcoxon and her husband, in their answer “deny that they were holding the legal title to said property in trust for” Alpha D. Wilcoxon; charge that ownership “is vested in full or in part in” Minnie Mae Wilcoxon; and assert that they are willing, on direction of the court, to execute and deliver a deed to the real owner or owners of the property.

Minnie Mae Wilcoxon in her answer denies the material allegations of the bill of complaint. By way of cross bill, she alleges that, while plaintiff and she were living together as husband and wife in Mason County, she was the owner of several parcels of real estate in that county; that plaintiff and defendant, Minnie Mae Wilcoxon, became estranged; that both she and her husband were threatened with separate court proceedings; that a judgment was *640 taken against her in Mason County in the amount of $2,500.00, on September 9, 1935, which has been fully satisfied; that she and her husband decided that moving to Parkersburg would help to settle their domestic and financial differences; that purchase was made of the property involved herein, it having been agreed between them that the property be conveyed to the daughter in trust for both plaintiff and his wife; that since 1940 she has been forced to make her own living; that plaintiff seeks to deprive her of her legal rights and peaceable enjoyment of the property; that the placing of the property in the daughter’s name was to avoid any judgment that might be taken against plaintiff, and eventually to get the property in the latter’s name; and that by such fraud plaintiff is not entitled to maintain his suit. The cross bill prays that Zina Wilcoxon be required to convey the property, or at least a one-half interest therein, to her; and, in the latter event, if the property is not susceptible of partition that it be sold and the proceeds derived therefrom be divided between Minnie Mae Wilcoxon and plaintiff.

In a replication, plaintiff avers that the judgment in Mason County against his wife had never been fully satisfied; denies again that his wife has any interest in the property; and, further, avers that Zina Wilcoxon holds the property in trust for him, and not for him and his wife jointly.

From the time of their marriage in 1902 to January, 1935, at which latter time the family moved to Parkers-burg, the Wilcoxons had resided continuously in Mason County. Plaintiff, a carpenter by trade since 1908, had engaged to some extent in buying and selling small tracts of real estate and making small loans, practically all of such transactions having been carried on in the name of his wife. He states, and his wife admits, that such was the practice, at least in so far as plaintiff’s property was concerned, the Parkersburg purchase in 1935 being an exception.

*641 During their residence in Mason County, Minnie Mae Wilcoxon had devoted most of her time to looking after the home and tending the cows and chickens. She testified that she sold chickens and eggs and did a little sewing, for which she received money. However, the husband paid for the feed for the cows and chickens and kept up the family table. But the record is silent as to the amount Minnie Mae Wilcoxon earned by her sewing and farming activities, and the husband testified that his wife’s earnings did not exceed $100.00.

Prior to the moving to Parkersburg an action had been instituted in the Circuit Court of Mason County against Mrs. Wilcoxon for an assault on another woman in the vicinity of the Wilcoxon’s then home. On September 9, 1935, a judgment was entered against her in such action in the amount of $2,500.00. Mrs. Wilcoxon testified that plaintiff was for a time apprehensive concerning a possible action against him based on a charge of alienation of affections. However, nothing ever came of such threat, if one ever actually existed.

The deed for the Parkersburg property bears date of March 30, 1935, Zina Wilcoxon being designated therein as grantee. The consideration was $2,800.00: “Twelve Hundred ($1200.00) Dollars, cash in hand paid, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged”, and a series of, thirty-two notes, each in the amount of $50.00, executed by Alpha D. Wilcoxon and Zina Wilcoxon, respectively, one note coming due every two months. The notes were all paid within two years, and a vendor’s lien, retained to secure payment thereof, was released March 9, 1937. The deed after recordation was mailed to plaintiff at Parkers-burg, and the notes as paid, together with the release of the vendor’s lien, were turned over to plaintiff.

At the outset it should be pointed out that Zina Wil-coxon holds subject to a resulting trust. “A resulting trust arises out of payment of purchase money, or the equivalent thereof and not otherwise.” Cassady v. Cassady, 74 *642 W. Va. 53, 56, 81 S.E. 829. See also Crawford v. Workman, 64 W. Va. 19, 61 S.E. 322. The grantee, as well as the other parties in interest, admits that she took the title without paying even any part of the purchase price. So the question here is: In whose favor is this resulting trust to be decreed?

Plaintiff testified that the down payment mentioned in the deed for the Parkersburg property consisted of a “Cashier’s Check” on the Mason County Bank at New Haven, West Virginia, in the amount of $700.00’, and an additional $500.00 which he borrowed from his brother. The $700.00, accounted for by the cashier’s check, was a part of the.$1,200.00 which plaintiff said he had accumulated over a period of some twelve to fifteen years, from pension, labor as a carpenter, dealings in real estate and the making of small loans.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
53 S.E.2d 620, 132 W. Va. 637, 1949 W. Va. LEXIS 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilcoxon-v-carrier-wva-1949.