Anderson's v. Mason

36 Ky. 217, 6 Dana 217, 1838 Ky. LEXIS 27
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 12, 1838
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 36 Ky. 217 (Anderson's v. Mason) 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's v. Mason, 36 Ky. 217, 6 Dana 217, 1838 Ky. LEXIS 27 (Ky. Ct. App. 1838).

Opinion

Judge Marshall

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

In October, 1820, John T. Mason purchased the respective interests of Robert Stockton and Joseph Me* Murtry in the Iron works and appurtenances which, up to that time, had been held by Mason, Stockton and McMurtry, as partners under the name of the Beaver Company — except five hundred acres of land, called the Salt Lick tract, which had been contributed to the joint stock by McMurtry, and was, in this contract of dissolution, surrendered back to him. ' •

For McMurtry’s interest, besides this surrender, Mason agreed to give “six thousand dollars, in three equal annual payments, from the first- day of January (then next ensuing,) in equal parts of bar .iron and castings, at the wholesale prices; but the said McMurtry to have the amount of each instalment in castings at any time of the year preceding the period stipulated for payment, that he makes demand thereof.” Mason also reserved the right of purchasing, at any time, the Salt Lick tract, at the price of two thousand dollars in castings, and acquired, by the express terms of the contract, the entire interest in several stores connected with the establishment, and in the debts due thereto, except certain accounts charged to Stockton. 'By this acquisition, he became entitled to all balances justly chargeable to Mc-Murtry, on his past dealings with said stores; and as to all subsequent accounts, while he should continue to be the proprietor of the stores, hp of course would be the creditor. But no reference is made to any past or future accounts of McMurtry, except what is contained in the stipulation that he is to have the amount of each instalment in castings when demanded during the year [218]*218preceding the day it was to fall due. It was stipulated, by the agreement, that Mason should give James and Richard M. Johnson as sureties for the performance of his undertakings; and, in July and September, 1821, he delivered to' McMurtry six notes executed by himself, Cave Johnson and R. M. and James Johnson, some or all of whom appear to have been then or afterwards his partners in the Beaver Works, or some of the establishments connectedtherewith. Of these notes, three were for one thousand dollars each, payable in bar iron on the first day of January, in the years 1822, ’23 and ’24, and the remaining three for a like sum payable in castings on the same days. ,

At the date of the contract, there were several ac- ’ counts standing .against McMurtry, in the different branches of the establishment; and he continued until some time in the year 1824 or 1825, to take up various articles, which were charged to him in account. Various particular credits were entered'on these accounts, but they all remained unsettled. The earlier accounts were left standing, probably under the expectation that they would always be allowed against so much of the demand, growing out of the contract of 1820; and the credit afterwards given to McMurtry was no doubt founded on the debt due to him, and kept open under the expectation that the accounts against him, would, on settlement, discharge so much of that debt. The condition of both the parties authorizes the assumption that neither intended or expected any thing else than that these accounts, when correctly adjusted, should be set-off against McMurtry’s demands. One item alone, consisting of a charge, under date of May 31, 1821, of two hundred and twenty one salt kettles, at one hundred dollars per ton — three thousand and forty eight dollars seventy five cents, is to be distinguished from the rest of the account.

On the first of March, 1821, McMurtry, by letter, ordered at least thirty tons of salt kettles, of a designated pattern, to be made for him ás soon as it could be done; and although he makes no reference to the contract, he must be understood as making the requisition on the [219]*219ground of the right given by it. The salt kettles above mentioned were furnished under this order, but not immediately.

Before the end of the year 1821, Mason took the Salt Lick tract, according to the terms of the contract.

On the 22d of November, 1821, the first note for bar iron, due the first day of January, 1822, was assigned by McMurtry to S. D. Everett, and on the 8th of January following, he assigned it to John Anderson, who shortly afterwards commenced suit on it, and on the 12th of November, 1823, obtained a judgment for eleven hundred dollars, in damages. In October, 1826, that judgment, for the reversal of which the defendants had prosecuted a writ of errof with supersedeas, was affirmed by this Court; and in October, 1827, the obligors in the note (except James Johnson, who was then dead,) filed this bill, against Everett, Anderson and McMurtry, praying, not only ¿hat the judgment on the first note should be enjoined, but that the other notes should be surrendered up, on the ground that the first note was in fact discharged before it was assigned, by the salt kettles delivered in the year preceding the time of its falling due; and that, of the other, notes, some were discharged, also, by that item, and the rest should? in equity, be set-oif against the pums due from McMurtry on the various accounts above referred to — it being, alleged that McMurtry was insolvent, except to the extent of his demands against the complainants, growing out of said contract, and which they said were restricted to the six notes, as they denied that the ‘Salt Lick tract’ had been purchased by Mason.

Before this bill was filed, the second note for bar iron had been assigned to Ennis Combs and John B. Duke, and the third to E. Combs, T.'Jameson and C. Banks, and suits had been brought upon both notes, though judgments were not obtained until 1830, when Combs and Duke recovered fourteen hundred and sixty five dollars — and the other assignees fourteen hundred and five dollars. In the same year, McMurtry, who had never assigned either of the three notes for castings, recovered judgments, upon the first for fifteen hundred [220]*220and twenty five dollars, and on the two others, for about oné thousand four hundred dollars.

In 1828, an amended bill was filed, by which Duke and Combs and the administrators of Jameson and Banks were made defendants.

The answer' of McMurtry denies the correctness of the accounts set up against him, and especially in regard to the time of delivery of the two hundred and twenty one salt kettles, and the price charged; he also alleges, that the Salt Lick tract had been bought by Mason, before the first of January, 1822; and claims a credit for four hundred dollars in castings, due before the same time, on an agreement made before the sale of his interest to Mason.

The other defendants require proof of the allegations, of the bill.

Many depositions and exhibits were filed; and the Circuit Court having, by interlocutory decree, declared that the salt kettles delivered under McMurtry’s order of March, 1821, should be credited upon the note for bar iron, assigned to Anderson, and also, that Mason should be charged with the purchase of the Salt Lick tract, at two thousand dollars in castings, appointed a commissioner to state an account between the parties, reducing such of Mason’s accounts as were charged at Commonwealth’s paper prices, to their specie value at the time, &c.

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Bluebook (online)
36 Ky. 217, 6 Dana 217, 1838 Ky. LEXIS 27, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/andersons-v-mason-kyctapp-1838.