Young v. Devries

31 Va. 304
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 23, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 31 Va. 304 (Young v. Devries) 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
Young v. Devries, 31 Va. 304 (Va. 1879).

Opinion

Christian, J.

This case is before us on appeal from a decree of the circuit court of Loudoun county.

The bill was filed by the appellees, Devries, Stephens & Co., for the purpose of enforcing their judgment lien against certain lands in the hands of the vendees of their judgment debtor, Tazewell Lovett.

At the August term, 1866, of the county court of Loudoun, the appellees recovered a judgment against Lovett for the sum of $1,305.44 with interest from April 10th, 1866, and $6.33 costs.

This judgment was docketed on the 15th day of November, 1866. An execution proving unavailing, this suit was instituted to enforce the lien of said judgment against the real estate of said Lovett. Under the proceedings in this suit certain real estate of Lovett’s was sold and the proceeds distributed among his creditors according to the priority of these liens. But after the distribution of the fund realized by this sale there still remained an unpaid balance due to the appellees, Devries, Stephens & Co., amounting to the sum of $821.63 on the 1st November, 1871; Thereupon they filed an amended bill in the same cause, in which they [306]*306charge that in addition to the lands already sold to satisfy liens against Lovett they have a lien, by reason of their said judgment, against certain tracts of land which formerly constituted a part of the real estate of Lovett, and which had been sold by him; and they seek by their amended bill to subject these lands in the hands of Lovett’s vendees to the satisfaction of the unpaid balance of their judgment.

The bill alleges that Tazewell Lovett, the judgment debtor, was the owner of five several tracts of land, which he had conveyed to the several parties therein named, and against which they insist that they have the right to enforce their judgment lien in the hands of the alienees of Lovett.

Lot No. 1 is described as a parcel of land in the county of Loudoun, containing five acres, three roods and eight poles, which was conveyed by Lovett and wife to one Frederick Miller by deed acknowledged on the 9th of January, 1868, and put on record on the 10th January, 1868.

Lot No. 2 is described as a tract of land lying in said county, containing ten acres, and conveyed by Lovett and wife to Ellen Kelly, Mary Kelly and Michael Kelly by deed acknowledged on the 25th January, 1867, and recorded on the 8th March, 1867.

Lot No. 3 is described as a parcel of land lying in said county, containing five acres, and conveyed by Lovett and wife to Mary Kelly, Margaret Kelly, John Kelly and Catharine Kelly by deed dated November 27th, 1866, acknowledged 12th January, 1867, and recorded on the 23d January, 1867.

Lot No. 4 is described as a tract of land lying in said county, containing two hundred and sixteen acres, two.roods and seventeen perches of land, which was conveyed by Lovett and wife to Abram Young [307]*307by deed dated 2d February, 1863, but not recorded until 17th December, 1866.

Lot No. 5 is described as a tract of land lying in said county of Loudoun, containing twenty-nine and a half acres, conveyed by Lovett and wife to "William Brislau and Michael Brislau by deed bearing date 13th December, 1866, and was put upon record on the 14th December, 1866.

Against all these five tracts of land the appellees .(plaintiffs in the court below) are seeking to enforce their judgment liens; and the vendees of each tract are made parties defendant.

The case was heard upon the bills, original and amended, and answers to the same, and the depositions of witnesses, and the circuit court held by the decree appealed from that all these lands are liable to the lien of the appellees’ judgment docketed on the 15¿/i November, 1866, and decreed a sale of said lands in default of payment of the amounts ascertained by said decree to be due. From this decree an appeal was allowed by this court.

I am of opinion that this decree is in part erroneous. By the answers of the defendants and the evidence filed with the record, it is plain that according to the repeated decisions of this court a part of these tracts of land above mentioned were not liable to the enforcement of the appellees’ lien as against them in the hands of Lovett’s vendees.

The three first-named lots or tracts of land—to-wit: that sold to Frederick Millei’, that sold to Ellen Kelly and others, and that sold to Mary Kelly and others— were sold to the parties respectively under a loritten contract, and it is shown by the pleadings and the proofs in the cause that these parties took possession of the same under these written contracts. None'of these contracts were ever recorded. As to these, the [308]*308lien of tlxe judgment -was properly enforced. They come within the very terms of-the statute, which declares that “every such contract, every deed conveying such.- estate or term, and every deed of gift or deed of trust or mortgage conveying real estate of goods and chattels shall be void as to creditors and subsequent purchasers for valuable consideration without notice, until and except from the time it is duly admitted to record in the county or corporation wherein the property embraced in such contract or deed may he,” •

This statute has been construed by this court in two very recent cases. See Eidson v. Huff, 29 Gratt. 338, and March, Price & Co. v. Chambers, 30 Gratt. 299.

Tinder these decisions, the alienees of Lovett going into possession under a written contract, which they had failed to have recorded, and there being no evidence of a pre-existing parol agreement, cannot assert their title against the lien of the judgment creditor of their vendor. If any injustice is done to them in subjecting the lands in their hands to the judgments rendered against their vendor, it is due to their negligence. The law pointed out to them a plain duty: that of putting on record the evidence of their title Having failed to do so, the loss must fall upon them. As was well said by Judge Staples in Eidson v. Huff, supra, p. 344: “This court cannot construe away a plain statute to avoid cases of individual hardship. The legislature has thought proper to place all written contracts for the sale of land upon the same footing as deeds of conveyance, so far as they come within the influence of the registration acts; and we have no alternative but to enforce the law as it is written.”

I think, therefore, it is clear that the decree of the circuit court enforcing the judgment lien against lands in the-hands of those alienees of Lovett who went [309]*309into possession of the same under a written contract, unrecorded, must to this extent he affirmed.

But I am further of opinion that so much of said decree as subjects the lands in the possession of Abram Young and "William and Michael Brislau is erroneous. These last-named purchasers (together with Osborne, who purchased a small portion of the tract sold to Young,) were let into possession under a parol agreement, and having paid the purchase-money, and being in a condition to call upon the vendor for specific execution before the judgment was rendered, upon the principles settled by this court in Floyd, trustee, v. Harding, and cases there cited, the judgment cannot be enforced against these lands.

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Bluebook (online)
31 Va. 304, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-v-devries-va-1879.