Hurt's Adm'x v. Prillaman
Hurt's Adm'x v. Prillaman
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court:
In March, 1877, John Prillaman filed his hill in the circuit court of Franklin county against Ira B. Hurt and others. The object of the suit was to subject a tract of 400 acres of land, on the head waters of Pigg river, in Franklin county, of which said Ira B. Hurt died seized, to the satisfaction of the alleged lien of a decree recovered by said Prillaman against one Cary Gray at the April term, 1867, of the circuit court of Floyd county, for the sum of $1,314.06, which judgment or decree was afterwards, to wit: on the 8th day of October, 1867, duly docketed in the clerk’s office of the county court of Franklin county. The case is this: Sometime in the year 1859, in a suit in chancery then pending in the county court of Franklin, a decree was rendered directing the sale of a tract of land belonging to the estates of Peter Guerrant, deceased, and William Snuffer, deceased. The sale was made and the said Cary Gray became the purchaser thereof, and his son William R. Gray (known in the record as Riley Gray) became his surety for the purchase money.
On the 29th day of February, 1868, some four months after the docketing of plaintiff’s judgment lien, for the consideration of $3,700, expressed on the face of the deed, I. M. Jones, the commissioner who made said sale, conveyed the tract of land in question to said purchaser, Cary Gray, the deed reciting the payment of said sum by said Cary Gray. On the same day, for the consideration expressed of $2,000, Cary Gray and Rebecca his wife, conveyed said tract of land to his son, Harvey Gray, the receipt of said purchase price being acknowledged on the face of the deed. On the 25th day of August, 1871, Harvey Gray and Haney E., his wife, conveyed said tract of land to
At the institution of this suit, Ira M. Hurt, in whose hands the land in question was sought to be subjected to the lien of the plaintiff’s said decree, was living. He alone answered the bill. In his answer, he denies the lien as alleged, and to make good his defence, he says this land was sold before or during the late war under a decree of the county court of Franklin county, in a suit to which the personal representatives and heirs at law of Peter Guerrant, deceased, and William Snuffer, deceased, were parties, and purchased by the defendant, Cary Gray; that the defendant, William R. Gray, called in the plaintiff’s bill Riley Gray, became the surety of the said Cary Gray, on the bonds for the purchase; that Cary Gray became insolvent, and never paid one cent of the purchase money, but that Wm. R. Gray paid every dollar of the purchase money, and it was agreed between Oary Gray and Wm. R. Gray, that Wm. R. Gray must take the land to indemnify himself for the purchase money paid by him; that this was done long before the recovery of the plaintiff’s judgment, and that early in the year 1866, more than a year before the recovery of the plaintiff’s judgment, the said Wm. R. Gray sold said land to the defendant, Harvey Gray, and placed him in possession thereof, and that he was in possession thereof, holding and using and claiming the same at
None of the defendants, except Ira M. Hurt, having answered, and the-cause having been matured at the October term, 1879, of said circuit court, an order was made submitting said cause to the judge of said court for decision in vacation; and on the 25th day of May, 1880, a decree was accordingly rendered subjecting said tract of land to the lien of said Prillaman’s decree, and directing a sale thereof to satisfy the same.
In the meanwhile Ira M. Hurt had died, and an appeal from said decree was applied for by Lavinia J. Hurt, as administra
In the lower court the cause was regularly revived against said administratrix and the heirs of said Ira M. Hurt, all of whom were infants. After the revival the plaintiff took additional testimony, and the infant defendants answered by their guardian ad litem.
On the 14th day of May, 1883, an order was again entered submitting the cause for decision in vacation, and accordingly, on the 20th day of October, 1883, a decree was entered by the judge of said court to enforce said lien upon the land in question by a sale thereof for that purpose, in default of the payment thereof as required by said decree ; and from that decree the case is here on appeal, and now to be determined.
Were the facts and circumstances few and simple, as in the case of Floyd, Trustee, v. Harding, supra, relied on by the appellants, then but little, if anything more could be necessary than a reference to that case as settling, one way or the other, this case. In that case, there was no controversy as to the facts. In this case, every material fact relied on by the appellants to sustain the parol contract attempted to be set up by them, is sharply contested in the testimony. Here the depositions of numerous witness, pro and con, were taken. In many respects their statements are unsatisfactory, or of doubtful import, and in others the witnesses are directly in conflict with each other. We have recourse only to this mass of testimony, much of which is either irrelevant or so remotely connected with the case as to furnish no reliable guide to the real facts of the case.
The question of law involved in this case is the same as that in Withers v. Carter & als., 4 Gratt. 407, and Floyd, Trustee, v. Harding & als., 28 Gratt. 401, to-wit: can a fair purchaser of the equitable estate hold it against creditors of the vendor, who
Delivering the opinion in Floyd v. Harding, supra, Staples, J., with great clearness and force, says: “In order to prevent the possibility of fraud in engrafting this exception upon the statute of frauds, it is settled that the parol agreement relied on must he certain and definite in its terms; the acts proved in part performance must refer to, result from, or he done in pursuance of the agreement, and the agreement must have been so far executed that a refusal of full execution will operate as a fraud upon the party, and place him in a situation which does not lie in compensation;" citing Wright v. Pucket, 22 Grratt. 370; and Leading Cases in Equity, 2d vol., 1052. And further on, the same learned judge says: “when these circumstances concur it is as much a matter of course for the equity courts to decree a specific execution, as for the common law courts to award damages for the breach of a written contract.” It must, however, be borne in mind always that the above recited, requisite facts must concur, as the effect is, when they do so concur, to engraft upon the statute of frauds (a statute founded in wisdom and sanctioned by long experience) a most important exception.
In view of these principles let us inquire : (1), what were the facts in Floyd, Trustee, v. Harding and als., supra; and (2), what are the facts in the case under consideration, in order to ascertain whether this case can be brought within the influence of that case as contended by the appellants. In that case, in the year 1856, James W. Leftwich sold to Lewis H. Turnbull a tract of land. The contract was not reduced to writing, but Turnbull was placed in immediate possession, and the whole of the pur
It must be observed that the facts found—in other words, the parol agreement relied on in Floyd, Trustee, v. Harding and als., came square up to the requisite standard of being certain and definite in its terms. The same cannot be said of the parol agreement relied on in this case, even as averred in the answer of the defendant, Ira M. Hurt. The agreement relied on here, as stated in the answer, briefly stated, is this : That Cary Gray, the purchaser at the judicial sale, executed his bonds with his son, William B. Gray, as surety, for the purchase money ; that Cary Gray became insolvent and never paid any portion of the purchase money, and that William B. Gray paid the-entire purchase price, and that it was agreed between Cary Gray and William B. Gray that the latter must take the land to indemnify himself for the purchase money paid by him, and this was done, though it was not said when, long before the recovery of Prillaman’s judgment. Observe, it is not stated in explicit terms that Cary Gray and William B. Gray made an agreement by which the latter purchased of the former his equitable interest acquired as purchaser at said judicial sale. On the contrary the agreement, as alleged, seems to indicate incompleteness, is indefinite and uncertain, partaking rather of the nature of a transaction from which a resulting trust might be
But, however, this may he, though it might be that this parol agreement, as alleged, is, for all practical purposes, sufficiently certain and definite, yet behind all that is the question, was there a parol agreement in fact, and, if so, what was it ? To determine this we must look only to the evidence contained in the record, hearing in mind that the contract or agreement, if any he proved, must he that, in this case, set up in the answer, and not a different one. The parol agreement relied on is affirmative matter set up in the answer, in no manner responsive to the hill, and must he proved as alleged.
In looking to the evidence we are met at the threshold with these pregnant circumstances, (1), the indefiniteness of the terms of agreement, and (2), the failure of the only three persons who knew all the facts, to wit: Cary Gray, William B. Gray and Harvey Gray, to answer the plaintiff’s hill, and failure to take the depositions of the last two of them. William B. and Harvey Gray, if entitled to credit, could have fully explained this matter; it appears from the record that their depositions might have been taken, one of them being quite convenient and the other in the state of Texas; but neither of them was called to testify. The fair inference is, that if called on, their evidence would not have been favorable to the defence set up. True, the deposition of Cary Gray was taken, and he says he never paid any part, not even one cent of the purchase money for the land in question, and that all thereof that was paid was paid by his son and surety, William B. Gray.
How, it was after the war that Cary Gray says he discovered that he could not pay for the land, and that then it was that he let his son, William B., have the land. Yet, strange to say, it appears in evidence and at variance with the agreement by parol, as stated in Hurt’s answer, that the land was not, strictly speaking, purchased at said judicial sale by Cary Gray, but by Isaac M. Jones for himself and Valentine
Again, after the sale of this Snuffer land, by Thrash and Kefauver, commissioners, and their report of the sale, they were appointed receivers, and directed to collect the purchase money thereof. Subsequently they reported to court that they had collected $715, and thereafter, to-wit: at the November term, 1860, of said county court of Franklin, a decree was entered specifically directing them how to disburse that sum. It is not pretended that Wm. E. Gray then claimed this land, and this sum of $715 must have been paid by Cary Gray; in fact nothing to the contrary is pretended. And in addition, as late as the 11th day of May, 1865, long after the rendition and docketing of the plaintiff’s decree, it seems that after his purchase Cary Gray sold certain machinery connected with a mill on this Snuffer land, to Geo. W- Huff, it being what in the record is called a mill and fan, for $243; and Thrash being indebted to him, it was agreed that Huff should credit Thrash with that amount, and that Thrash should credit Cary Gray with the same amount on his purchase money for this Snuffer land; and Huff says: when this agreement was consummated, Cary Gray
There is yet another view which overwhelms the defence set up, to-wit: that Cary Gray being unable to pay after the war, sold by parol agreement to his son, Wm. R. Gray, and that the latter, by like agreement, sold to Harvey Gray, and put him in possession, and that, being so in possession, his father, Cary Gray, on getting the title from the commissioner, on the same day conveyed to Harvey Gray, and that the latter being unable to pay, conveyed the land to Wm. R. Gray, who sold and conveyed to Hurt.
It will be observed it is not even averred in the answer of Hurt, nor is it anywhere proved that Wm. R. Gray ever had possession, actual or constructive, until after the conveyance from Harvey Gray to him in 1871, four years after the docketing of Prillaman’s lien, during all which time Cary Gray was the ostensible owner and in the actual possession; an ownership and possession questioned only by some evidence in the record taken to show that Harvey Gray managed and controlled the property as owner, prior to his conveyance to Wm. R. Gray. But, for all that period Cary Gray lived on the land, and his son, Harvey, a young unmarried man without means, lived with him.
Surely, it cannot be successfully contended that these indefinite, tortuous ways and pretences constitute acts of part performance which refer to, resulted from, or were done in pursuance of any legitimate agreement between Cary Gray and Wm. R.
Decree aeeirmed.
Reference
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- Hurt's Adm'x & als. v. Prillaman & als.
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- Syllabus
- 1. Equitable Title—Judgments after Parol Sale.—An equitable title held by a bona fide purchaser, though by a parol contract, who has paid the entire purchase .money and received possession, will be preferred in equity to the liens of judgment creditors subsequently acquired against the vendor, provided the parol contract relied on is certain and definite in its terms, and is sustained by satisfactory proof. Floyd, Trustee, v. Harding & als., 28 Gratt. 401. 2. Idem—Case at Bar one where the parol contract relied on is too uncertain and indefinite, and too unsupported by proof to bring it within the protection of the rule laid down in Floyd, Trustee, v. Harding & als., supra.