Anderson v. VanRensselaer

211 S.W. 553, 184 Ky. 133, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 33
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 2, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 211 S.W. 553 (Anderson v. VanRensselaer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anderson v. VanRensselaer, 211 S.W. 553, 184 Ky. 133, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 33 (Ky. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Clarke

Affirming.

On May 21, 1908, T. S. Anderson executed and delivered to appellee a deed of assignment for the benefit of his creditors and upon June 5,1908, this action for a settlement of the assigned estate was instituted by the assignee against the creditors, the appellant being made a defendant. On June 12, 1908, all creditors, including appellant, were enjoined from prosecuting their claims [134]*134except in this action and were required by order to properly present their claims herein on or before August 1, 190g.

Appellant, ■ pursuant to that order, filed numerous claims, including one for $3,000.00, which we shall refer to as the Tyler claim, and which was allowed, but the claim to preference was denied, and the correctness of this denial is the first question raised by this appeal.

On February 17, 1917, appellant, for the first time, presented claims aggregating more than $100,000.00 on numerous notes executed by various persons and payable to the assignor, which he had previous to the date of his general assignment discounted to appellant’s assignor, Daviess County Bank & Trust Company, for value and in due course. These claims the trial court refused to allow and of that order appellant is also complaining here.

The remaining question presented by this appeal is whether the court erred in charging to the “Cemetery Fund” an allowance of $500.00 a year to the assignee for his services in operating, pursuant to the court’s orders, the Elwood Cemetery, owned and assigned by the assignor.

We shall dispose of these three questions separately and in the above order.

1. Mrs. Matilda Tyler was a sister of the assignor and for his accommodation executed to him a note for $3,000.00, which he endorsed to appellant. Thereafter she died, leaving a will in which assignor was named as executor, and as such he settled her estate, accounting for all moneys in his settlement made in the county court about a year after his assignment, but this $3,000.00 had not been paid, and in the settlement he acknowledged a contingent indebtedness to her estate in the amount thereof, although her estate had not paid the note nor does it seem ever to have been proven, presented or asserted as a claim against her estate. Appellant is asserting it here against the assigned estate of the payee and endorser, who was the real obligor, as a preferred claim under that portion of sec. 74, Kentucky Statutes, which provides “that debts due by the assignor as guardian, committee, trustee, &c., or as personal representative, shall be paid in full before the general creditors receive anything. ”

[135]*135This provision plainly safeguards specified trust funds held by an assigned trustee, for.the purposes of the trust, even though commingled with his personal funds or converted by the trustee, but this is all it does; so the question is whether assignor’s liability to the appellant upon the Tyler note is his own personal liability, or a liability as the personal representative of Mrs. Tyler. If the former, it is not a preferred claim, and only if the latter is* it within the statute. Plainly it was assignor’s personal liability and as executor he held no funds liable for the note, either» actually or constructively, for it was not and had never been even his duty as an individual to pay the amount to his testator or her personal representative, since the claim never having been proven or presented to him as executor, and being the real obligor himself, Mrs. Tyler having.executed the note simply for his accommodation, his duty and obligation to all parties was to pay the appellant. In other words his contingent liability to her estate has never matured into an actual indebtedness.

Tire supposed analogy upon which counsel for appellant relies to sustain his contention, does not obtain between this case and the authorities cited by him, since the debt is not a preferred one, and hence there is no preference to which he can be subrogated; the circumstance that would have preferred it never having happened.

For application of the rule as stated in 37 Cyc. 426, and as applied in the cases cited, the debt must be one entitled to preference on account of its character. Such character is attained under the statute only when trust funds held by the assignor are subject to the payment of the debt, which is not the case here. Hence the claim is not within the purview of the statute, and the court did not err in rejecting the claimed preference.

!2. To the claims filed for the first time Feb. 17, 1917, by appellant, the appellee filed exceptions, pleading therein as a bar that more than five years, the applicable statutory limitation period, had elapsed from maturity before the date upon which they were filed. To avoid this plea appellant urges the fact that five years had not elapsed before this suit was filed, and that as the assignment created an express trust, the time that elapsed after the suit was filed must be excluded in estimating the limitation period. This presents a vexatious question upon which the authorities in this jurisdiction are hopelessly tangled [136]*136(see Biggs v. Lex. & B. S. R. Co., 79 Ky. 470; Barnes v. Green, 3 Ky. L. R. 253, 11 Ky. Opinion, 236; Dugan’s Admr. v. Mitchell, 5 Ky. L. R. 150; Pearce v. Mann, 10 Ky. L. R. 448; Feighey v. Feighey’s Admr. 12 L. R. 557; Bryson’s Admr v. Biggs, 32 Ky. L. R. 159, 104 S. AV. 982, and Richardson v. Chanslor’s Trustee, 103 Ky. 425) and which we shall not now attempt to decide, because for another reason the chancellor’s judgment rejecting these claims must be upheld.

In utter disregard of the court’s order directing claims to be proven and filed on or before August 1, 1908, appellant, though a party to the suit from the beginning, did not present these claims until nine years thereafter, and then without explanation or'excuse for this delay beyond the original statutory period of limitation, during which time the major portion of all funds available to general creditors had been distributed.

By sec. 90 of the statutes, an assignee is required within two months after his appointment to give notice of the time and place where he will receive claims, and that 1 ‘ any creditor failing to present at the time named or within three months thereafter his claim” properly verified ‘ ‘ shall be deemed to have waived his right to any part of the assigned estate; but the court may direct the assignee to receive the claim at any time before the final distribution of the estate and allow the same and pay dividends thereon as other claims, if there is sufficient unappropriated assets in his hands. ’ ’ This section plainly refers to the powers of the county court and duties of the assignee, where no suit has been filed in the circuit court for a settlement as here, but sec. 96 of the Statutes, by an amendment of March 16, 1898, confers all the power and authority theretofore conferred upon the ' county court upon the circuit court.

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Bluebook (online)
211 S.W. 553, 184 Ky. 133, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-v-vanrensselaer-kyctapp-1919.