Court Opinion

ID: 8176478
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 22:21:44.60029+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:39:58.640122
License: Public Domain

Robinson, Judge:
Gray conveyed a large and valuable tract of timber land, and other timber rights and personal property in connection therewith, to Hart, Thurston and Eldred. The consideration was $61,500, of which the sum of $53,500 was deferred' in payment. And on the same day the vendees executed a deed of trust on the whole property to George A. Larkin, trustee, to secure this deferred purchase money. Two attachment liens existed against the property at this time, growing out of pending actions of trespass against Gray; one in favor of Brown & Hill, claiming $50,000 damages, and the other in favor of E. D. Tupper, claiming $30,000 damages. As to each of these actions and the attachment proceedings therewith a lis pendens had been theretofore duly recorded. The deferred purchase money, evidenced by notes, was payable in instalments. The deed of trust provided for a sale by the trustee upon default in the payment of any note. Some of the purchase money notes were paid. Default in the payment of others being made, however, the trustee, at the request of Gray, advertised the property for sale pursuant to the terms of the deed of trust.
Hart sought an injunction to stay the sale. It was awarded. He complained that the trustee had not given bond before proceeding to execute the trust. His bill averred the existence of the attachment liens and showed that the uncertainty in the amount of each of them rendered a. fair and advantageous sale of the property impossible. He also set up as between himself and his co-tenants, or partners, certain claims and equities, which had arisen subsequent to the purchase of the property *229and the execution of the deed of trust securing the purchase money. A subsequent deed of trust, in favor of the wife of Thurston, was attacked as invalid as to plaintiff’s interest and rights in the property. The substance of the prayer was that the trustee be inhibited from enforcing the deed of trust until' he should give bond, until the amounts of the prior liens should be ascertained, and until the rights and equities of the plaintiff against his co-owners of the property should be settled and determined.
Depositions were promptly taken on behalf of plaintiff. This evidence related wholly to the claim of Iiart against his co-owners and has nothing to do with the debt of G-ra.y sought to be enforced by the sale which was enjoined. Thereafter, upon notice to Hart, the judge of the circuit court, in vacation, heard a motion made by Gray to dissolve the injunction. The motion was considered upon the bill, depositions, and answers of Gray and the trustee. The trustee offered bond for the faithful performance of his duties. A recently executed release of the Tüpper lien was averred and shown. The existence of the Brown & Hill lien was admitted and a bond of $100,000 to secure the same was tendered by Gray. The judge entered a vacation order approving this bond tendered by Gray and dissolving the injunction. Hart lias appealed.
The complaint that the trustee had given no bond does not avail the plaintiff. It is not shown that a bond was required of him by the grantors in the deed of trust or the beneficiary thereunder. Hart cannot complain that the trustee is acting without bond until he demands that one be given and the trustee then fails to execute bond and have the same approved by the county clerk. Code, chapter 72, section 6.
The argument that Gray could not proceed to collect the purchase money until he cleared the property of prior liens is not tenable. He conveyed by general warranty, but did not covenant for further assurance. Only upon a showing of his insolvency would equity retard the collection of the purchase money solely because he failed to clear the land of prior liens. The purchasers took no assurance as to the payment of these liens other than the personal responsibility of Gray. The covenant of general warranty is not a covenant against the mere *230existence of encumbrances. McClaugherty v. Croft, 43 W. Va. 270; Cain v. Fisher, 57 W. Va. 492.
Gray was not obliged to discharge the prior liens before proceeding to foreclose the deed of trust which secures the purchase money. The collection of the purchase money may not be retarded merely because Gray has not cleared the land of these liens. He may demand and recover the purchase money before the liens are paid by him. Yet the principle that he may do so does not mean that he may use an inequitable method of collection. The absence of a covenant against liens does not give up the property to sacrificial sale. That want of covenant means no more than that Gray may collect the purchase money before paying the liens. It does not mean that he may use a method of collection discountenanced by equity. It does not mean that he may violate that principle of equity which requires that the uncertain amount of each of the liens be made certain before he may have a sale under the deed of trust. Miller v. Argyle’s Ex’r, 5 Leigh 460; Payne v. Webb, 23 W. Va. 568.
That there were impediments in the way of a fair execution of the trust, when the injunction was awarded, is clear. The attachment liens were plainly uncertain as to amounts. They were dependent in this particular upon actions at law, for un-liquidated damages, yet to be tried. No one could bid on the property with a certainty as to what he would have to pay on account of these liens. A purchase would be subject to them. An intending purchaser could not calculate what he could afford to pay for the property. The unascertained amounts of the liens would prevent bidding. Thus the value of the property at trustee’s sale would be depreciated. TJnder such circumstances equity lends aid to the trustee, or to the debtor if the trustee fails to seek it. Tucker’s Com., Book 2, p. 106; 1 Lomax’s Digest, 425; 2 Minor’s Inst., (4th Ed.), 344; George, Trustee v. Zinn, 57 W. Va., 15; Hartman v. Evans, 38 W. Va. 669; Rossett v. Fisher, 11 Grat. 492.
The release of the Tupper lien, however, took it out of consideration as an impediment to a sale by the trustee. The answer of Gray averred this release and exhibited the document evidencing it. The judge, in vacation, of course, has power to consider an answer and the proof of its allegations upon a mo*231tion to dissolve an injunction. The point that this release conld not be considered at such vacation hearing is groundless.
Brit the acceptance and approval of the bond tendered by-Gray to perform and- satisfy any judgment that Brown & Hill might obtain against the property was not warranted. This was an act beyond the authority that a judge has to consider and act upon the pleadings and proofs in the cause when a motion to dissolve an injunction is made in vacation. The bond was not received and acted upon as a proof supporting the answers of Gray and the trustee. They did not aver that the Brown & Hill lien was out of the way. Gray asked in fact that it be put out of the way by the substitution of the bond for it. And that bond was acted upon as an independent thing, and virtually declared to be a release of Brown & Hill’s attachment lien. Yejxims action was solely upon motion to dissolve the injunction, as to which motion Brown & Hill did not even have notice. The motion to dissolve did not extend so far. Mark you, the bond was not presented in pleading or proof as one duly accepted by the officer who levied the attachment. It was not offered as a bond having the effect, under the statute, to release the lien of the attachment. Code, chapter 106, sections 10 and 11. That would have made a very different case. If the fact had been presented that by some lawful act, or order of court in the attachment suit, the lien had been discharged, it could have been considered upon the motion to dissolve. But upon that motion 'the judge could not make an order substituting a bond for the lien. Such action was not only beyond the province of the motion, but beyond the power of the judge in the premises. Monroe v. Bartlett, 6 W. Va. 441; Kinports v. Rawson, 29 W. Va. 487.
The Brown & Hill lien still existed, notwithstanding the giving of the bond. Only by proper proceedings in the attachment case could that lien be discharged, unless by formal release of the parties. In no way did the bond effect Brown & Hill’s right to the lien. An intending purchaser would say that the lien still existed; that Brown & Hill might resort to it rather than to the bond. They never consented to receive the bond as a discharge of their attachment. They were not parties to its acceptance. They were given no day to object to its sufficiency, even if the judge had been clothed with power to take the bond as *232a substitute for their right under the lien. The impediment to a fair sale under the deed of trust was not eliminated by the bond. That impediment was as much as ever in the way. Because it continued to exist, the order dissolving the injunction was erroneous.
The other features of the cause do not now demand consideration. Thejr pertain to its further progress. The order dissolving the injunction will be reversed, the injunction re-instated, and the cause remanded to be proceeded in according to principles of equity.

Reversed and Remanded.