Woodcock v. Barrick

91 S.E. 396, 79 W. Va. 449, 1917 W. Va. LEXIS 105
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 23, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 91 S.E. 396 (Woodcock v. Barrick) 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
Woodcock v. Barrick, 91 S.E. 396, 79 W. Va. 449, 1917 W. Va. LEXIS 105 (W. Va. 1917).

Opinion

Miller, Judge:

The object of the bill was, first, to have cancelled and set aside as clouds on plaintiff’s title' a contract of June 24, 1913, between plaintiff and defendant Barrick, procured by Barrick, and supposed to contain the terms of his employment by plaintiff, as an attorney at law, to represent him in certain litigation begun or threatened, and in respect to his [451]*451interests in the estate of his uncle, the late Edwin M. Stewart, a one half interest in which contract was, on June 28, 1918, assigned by Barrick to defendant Yost; and also to obtain a decree requiring said Barrick and Yost to reconvey to plaintiff all his right, title and interest in and to all the property mentioned and described in seven several paper writings purporting to have been made and executed by plaintiff to them, all dated June 30, 1913, as follows: First, a deed purporting to convey to defendants jointly, “in consideration of the sum of one dollar and other good and valuable considerations, paid and settled”, the receipt whereof is thereby acknowledged, all his (plaintiff’s-) “right, title, interest and claim in and to all the real estate, oil, gas and other minerals of which Edwin M. Stewart died seized and possessed, situate in Jackson Township, Monroe County, Ohio”; also “all the oil and gas royalty, or oil royalty, or gas royalty, that has been produced from the lands aforesaid, from 'the date of the death of the said Edwin M. Stewart, to-wit: from the 2nd day of April, 1912, up to this date, together with full power and authority to the said parties of the second part, the said Charles W. Barrick and E. H. Yost to sign, execute, acknowledge and deliver in my name any receipt, order or division order or other paper necessary to be signed in order for the said Charles W. Barrick and E. H. Yost to receive and receipt for all of said oil royalty and gas royalty that I may be entitled to as one of the heirs of the said Edwin M. Stewart, deceased.”

Said deed also contains this provision: “But this conveyance is made upon the express agreement that the said parties of the second part are to settle and account to me for one half of all the proceeds of my interest in the estate aforesaid. ’ ’

Second, six other papers, all of them, except the first, which recites no consideration, purporting to be “for value received”, and without reservation or exception, purporting to assign to defendants respectively all plaintiff’s right, title, interest and claim, (1) to a certain sum of $401.72, in the hands of W. H. Boyd and T. J. Moffett, under an agreement of October 17, 1912; (2) certain bonds and stock owned by [452]*452the said Edwin M. Stewart at Ms death; (3) three shares of the capital stock of the Dollar Savings and Trust Company, of Wheeling, West Virginia, standing in the name of said Stewart at his death; (4) ten shares of the capital stock of the National Exchange Bank of Wheeling, West Virginia; (5) thirty shares of sixty seven shares of the common stock of the Columbus Street Railway Company,' also owned by said decedent; (6) one first mortgage six per cent, gold bond, No. 33, of the Mound Coal Company, of Wheeling, West Virginia; and all of said several assignments purporting also to constitute said defendants plaintiff’s true and lawful attorney for him and in his name, place, and stead, to make transfers of said stock, bonds, etc., and with power of substitution, etc.

The interests of the plaintiff in said real and personal property, as alleged, was an undivided fourteen one thous- and and eightieths, -(14-1080), and the grounds alleged for the relief prayed for are substantially: First, that at the time said several contracts, deeds, and assignments purport to have been made and executed the relationship of attorney and client had already been established between plaintiff and defendants, and that the properties purporting to be conveyed or assigned constituted the subject matter of their said employment, and that plaintiff has the right, at his election, to rescind or nullify said deeds and contracts, which for the reasons alleged he has elected to do: Second, that plaintiff’s original contract, first with defendant Barrick, and afterwards with Yost also, after assignment by Barrick to him of a half interest therein, was that for their services for representing his interests in said properties and in recovering the same, they were to be paid by plaintiff one half of the net proceeds realized by him from the property so recovered; that at the time of said purported conveyances no services had been rendered by said defendants, and notwithstanding the recitals in said papers no consideration was ever paid plaintiff by defendants therefor: Third, that at the time plaintiff signed said first contract with defendant Barrick, of June 24, 1913, after Ms employment, as aforesaid, Barrick, as a means of procuring the same, falsely repre[453]*453sented that it was intended simply to secure him his fees as agreed for services to be rendered, and that plaintiff relied on the reading and interpretation thereof by said Barrick, and trusted in him, and did not read the same himself; that subsequently, and but a few days later, namely, on June 30, 1913, when plaintiff was procured by said Barrick to sign and acknowledge an absolute deed to Barrick' and Yost, of that date, for all of said real estate and royalty interests, and with the provision for an accounting only by the grantees to him for a half interest in the proceeds of said property, and the making of said several assignments of the’same date purporting to sell and transfer to them his interest in said personal property, Barrick falsely represented to him that they, with a number of other papers, were simply notices to the corporations or other persons affected of his (plaintiff’s) interest in said stocks and bonds, and of defendants’ right to represent him in reference thereto, and that ne so read some of them to plaintiff, who trusted him, and did not read them himself, and that plaintiff was not advised to the contrary nor of the claims made by defendant under said deed and assignments until shortly before the beginning of this suit; and that respecting the interest of plaintiff in the estate of his mother Mary Woodcock and of his father George B. Woodcock, referred to in said agreement of June 24, 1913, plaintiff then had no interest therein and made no claim thereto, and did not agree to assign or transfer to defendants any such interest therein: and Fourth, that defendants, claiming under said alleged contract, deed, and assignments, first intervened by a so called cross petition in a certain suit in partition, in Monroe County, Ohio, brought by John L. Woodcock against plaintiff, themselves, and others, to partition said real estate, and oil and gas interests, setting up in accordance with the allegation of the plaintiffs’ petition therein, that plaintiff and themselves were owners in fee simple of interests in said land and oil and gas interests, in the proportion of seven one thousand and eightieths (7-1080) to plaintiff, and seven twenty one hundred and sixtieths (7-2160) respectively to each of themselves, and that the decree or order of partition, pronounced by said court, [454]

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Aldrich v. Aldrich
127 S.E.2d 385 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1962)
Welsh v. Welsh
69 S.E.2d 34 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1952)
Bank of Mill Creek v. Elk Horn Coal Corp.
57 S.E.2d 736 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1950)
Boyd v. Pancake Realty Co.
46 S.E.2d 633 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1948)
Scruggs v. Jefferson Standard Life Ins.
23 S.E.2d 74 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1942)
Ashton v. Skeen
39 P.2d 1073 (Utah Supreme Court, 1935)
Toro v. Shilling
152 S.E. 6 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1930)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
91 S.E. 396, 79 W. Va. 449, 1917 W. Va. LEXIS 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woodcock-v-barrick-wva-1917.