Baker's adm'r. v. Baker's adm'r.

52 Ky. 406
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 27, 1852
StatusPublished

This text of 52 Ky. 406 (Baker's adm'r. v. Baker's adm'r.) 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
Baker's adm'r. v. Baker's adm'r., 52 Ky. 406 (Ky. Ct. App. 1852).

Opinion

Judge Simpson

delivered the opinion of the court.

In the year 1819, Beckwith Baker executed to his brother John Baker a bill of sale for a mulatto boy named John, in which it was stated that-the sale had been made in 1817, for the consideration of three hundred and fifty dollars, sixty dollars of which had been paid on the day of the sale, and that the balance had been paid and secured to be paid on the day the writing was executed.

In the year 1825, Beckwith Baker instituted a suit jn chancery against John Baker, and alleged in his bill, that although the aforesaid bill of sale was absolute on its face, yet it was intended by the parties to be, and was in reality, a mere mortgage to secure a loan of about one hundred dollars, which had been made to him by his brother, who was claiming the slave as his own, and had refused to permit the complainant to redeem him. He claimed a right to redeem, and prayed for an account to be taken of the hire of the slave, during the time he had been in the defendant’s possession.

[407]*407The defendant, John Baker, answered the bill in Í826. He denied the complainant’s right to redeem, and contended that he had purchased the slave absolutely, although he admitted that part of the purchase money remained unpaid. He also denied that the instrument of writing was intended to operate as a mortgage, or that he had loaned any money to the complainant, and claimed the slave as his own property.

The complainant proceeded to take depositions to prove that the sale was made merely for the purpose of securing the payment of money he had borrowed from the defendant. The last deposition taken in' the' cause bears date in 1828.

In February, 1832, an order was made abating, the suit, on' account of the death of the complainant.

In March, 1847, the administrator of Beckwith Baker filed a bill of revivor, and John Baker the defendant having died in 1836, the suit was revived against his widow, she having administered on the estate of her deceased husband. No administration was granted on the estate of Beckwith Baker until the year' 1846.

The defendant, in her answer to the bill of revivor^alleged that her husband, and his brother Beckwith Baker, had, as she had been informed by her husband, and which she believed to be the fact,- compromised* and settled the controversy about the slave, in the lifetime of the complainant’s intestate. She relied for the establishment of the fact upon the presumption arising from the lapse of time, and the failure of” Beckwith Baker to prosecute the suit during the space' of several years immediately preceding his deaths-She also relied upon the statute of limitations, and' the staleness of the claim, to defeat the relief sought for by the complainant.

The circuit court; upon the hearing of the cause, dismissed the complainant’s bill, and he has prosecued a writ of error to reverse that decree.

Í. It is a well Settled rule, that When, the statute of limitations begins to run in bar of a right to recover personal property, it continues to run notwithstanding the death of the claimant. (1 Bibb, 181; 2 lb. 537; 3 Monroe, 41;) but if it did not begin to run before the death of the claimant, it would not commence until administration graftted.

[408]*408The principal question to be considered is, the effect which the lapse of time is to have on the right of redemption attempted to be asserted in the suit; for we entertain no doubt that the bill of sale was executed for the purpose, solely, to secure a loan of money, and that a right of redemption once existed;

It was decided in the case of Fenwick v. Macey, 1 Dana, 276, that a bill to redeem slaves might be maintained at any time within twenty years, unless the mortgagee had been in the adverse possession of the slaves,- claiming them as his own, and openly denying the mortgagor’s right of redemption, and then a bill to redeem could not be maintained after the expiration of five years, if the adverse possession had continued during that time.

In this case the vendee, before this suit was instituted, claimed the slave as his own, and denied that Ms vendor had any right of redemption. This fact is’ stated by the complainant in his original bill. If. this adverse possession had been continued by the vendee for five years before the suit was commenced, the' vendor’s right of redemption would have been lost and as this adverse holding began before the suit was brought, and has been continued ever since, xhe inquiry is, whether, under the circumstances of the' case, the right of redemption has been preserved or has been lost by the lapse of time. Whether the rule adopted by the chancellor limiting the time in which the right to redeem will be recognized and enforced,is founded on the statute of limitations or a rule of policy, or on equitable presumptions merely, still, in the application of the rule, the principles that have' been settled in relation to the operation- of the statute" upon legal rights will be regarded.

It is a well settled doctrine, that with respect to claims to personal property, when the statute bégíns to run, it continues to run, notwithstanding the death of the claimant. (1 Bibb, 181; 2 Bibb, 537 ; 3 Monroe, 41.) There is no saving in the statute by which the interval that elapsés after the death of the claimant, [409]*409before administration upon his estate has been granted, is excluded in the computation of the time necessary to complete the bar. When the statute commences running in the lifetime of the claimant, it is not interrupted by his subsequent death, although if the cause of action did not accrue in his lifetime, it would not commence running until administration upon his estate was granted.

2. If a suit is comrftefteed before the right of action is barred, and abates by the death of the party, plaintifforeomplainant, but is again commenced, or revived within one year, it comes within the equity of the proviso in the statute in regard to specified actions. (1 Washington, 302; 8 Cranch, 84; 4 Bibb, 306.)

Where, however, a suit has been commenced within the time limited, and that time runs out, and the suit abates by the death of the plaintiff, it has been dicided, that if a suit be commenced within a year after the abatement, the plaintiff comes within the equity of the proviso in the statute, allowing a year within which a new action may be brought in certain specified cases. (1 Wash. Rep. 302; 8 Cranch, 84.) And in the case of Montgomery v. Caldwell, 4 Bibb, 306, it was said by the court, that where the plaintiff’s action abates in consequence of his death, it might be proper, although the time of limitation may have elapsed, to permit the executor or administrator, under the equity of the statute, to maintain a new suit within the time mentioned in the proviso.

When, therefore, the suit in this case was abated by the death of the complainant, the statute having commenced running in his lifetime, would, according to the legal rule, have continued to run after his death, notwithstanding no administration was granted on his estate, although in analogy to the principle adopted at law in similar cases, another bill might have been exhibited within a reasonable

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Related

Fenwick v. Macey's Executors
31 Ky. 276 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1833)
Watson v. Wilson
32 Ky. 406 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1834)
Montgomery v. Caldwell
7 Ky. 305 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1816)

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Bluebook (online)
52 Ky. 406, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bakers-admr-v-bakers-admr-kyctapp-1852.