Worrell v. Lusk
Worrell v. Lusk
Opinion of the Court
The bill in this cause seeks award to the plaintiff, of a certain sum of money which, at the date of the filing thereof, was in the possession of the general receiver of a court, by virtue of an order of the court, entered in another proceeding, one of condemnation, requiring payment thereof to him and authorizing him to receive it. On a demurrer thereto; lack of jurisdiction in equity is urged. Ground of such jurisdiction is clearly manifest. If the plaintiff is em titled to the specific money he seeks, there is no remedy in a court of law by which he can obtain it. His purpose is not recovery of a judgment or personal decree against the defendant. He asserts right, as against the defendant, to certain money not in his possession or control. If he has made proper parties to his bill, his right to prosecute this suit is clear, for the law court does not afford him an adequate remedy, nor any at all for recovery of the particular fund in controversy. Yost v. Wills, 86 W. Va. 71.
No necessary party has been omitted, unless the general receiver having the fund in his hands is such. He was not formally made a party, but the bill, treating the fund as being in court, prays for an order directing him to pay it to the plaintiff. Prom the answer to an amended and supplemental bill which does not show the exact status of the fund, and the evidence, it appears that it was placed in the hands of the general receiver, by an order entered in the condemnation proceeding, to await and abide the result of this suit which had not then been instituted, but was then contemplated and commenced immediately afterward. Hence, the fund, though not originating in nor growing out of this suit, has been validly placed to the credit thereof in the hands of the general receiver. Having received the money under an order of the court, to hold until this controversy is settled by a final decree, and being an officer of the court, he is in court for the purposes of this cause and may be deemed to be an informal party thereto.
The fund is part of the compensation paid by the Virginian Railway Company for four lots taken for its pur
Finding for the plaintiff on all issues as to the existence of the contract and its terms and conditions, the court e'ntered a decree in this cause, awarding the plaintiff $700.00 of the amount in controversy, on the theory of his having contracted a sale of the property to the railway company at the price of $3,500.00, and his right to the difference between that sum and $2,800.00. Both parties complain of the decree, Lusk by this appeal and Worrell, by a cross-assignment of error, based on disallowance of his claim to $1,000.00 of the fund.
Although the plaintiff contracted a sale of the lots to the railway company, at the price of $3,500.00, neither he nor the railway company would pay the money and accept such title as the defendant was then able to convey. This he admits in his testimony, but he insists that the content binding the defendant to convey good title subsisted pending the proceedings for perfection of title, which was accomplished by the condemnation suit, or the decision in Frantz v. Lester. Until the latter suit was decided, nothing was finally or irrevocably settled. When the title was found to be good the property went to the railway company, not by virtue of the contract only, nor at the price previously agreed upon, but by virtue of an adjudication based upon a new agreement as to the price.
At the date of the contract, no such defect as was later discovered was either known or suspected. What was foreseen amounted to no more than necessity of a simple and short proceeding for passage of the title of the infant owners. For
At the date of the commencement of the condemnation proceeding, the contract was unenforceable, as made, because the defendant’s title was deemed to be bad. The defect in it 'had been adjudged to be fatal. There was only a fighting chance to sustain it. If it had not been validated in Frantz v. Lester, it would have been void. And the inability of the defendant to convey good title was not due to any fault of his. Hé was an innocent holder of a bad title, one the vendee would not accept. Under these circumstances, he could not delay election to take such title as the vendor could convey, with an abatement of purchase money, or to take it without an abatement, for a period of four or five years. He was allowed only a reasonable time for such election, and, it not having been made within such time, specific performance of the contract cannot be enforced. Neill v. McClung, 71 W. Va. 458.
Nor can this result be avoided on the ground of perfection of title by prosecution of the condemnation suit. That was
Our conclusion is that the decree complained of will have to be reversed and the prayer of the defendant’s answer for award to him, of the sum of money in controversy, granted, without prejudice, however, to any right the plaintiff may have to sue for damages for breach of the contract of sale or for compensation for services rendered in the transaction out of which this controversy arose.
Costs in this court as well as in the court below will be decreed to the defendant.
TLeverseá and rendered.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Grover C. Worrell v. Levi Lusk
- Status
- Published