Barnett v. Howard

102 S.W.2d 44, 267 Ky. 316, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 321
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedFebruary 19, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 102 S.W.2d 44 (Barnett v. Howard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barnett v. Howard, 102 S.W.2d 44, 267 Ky. 316, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 321 (Ky. 1937).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Perry

Affirming.

This is an appeal from a judgment for $6,000 against appellant, Dorcas Barnett, in favor of Eliza and L. D. Howard, appellees, as vendors of a certain parcel of land conveyed her for such recited consideration.

For a clearer understanding of the questions here presented, a brief preliminary statement of the antecedent steps and facts taken and disclosed in this protracted litigation appears needful.

This is the third appeal prosecuted in this case.

By a reference to the first appeal, styled Bank *317 of Commerce, etc., v. Howard et al., 257 Ky. 395, 78 S. W. (2d) 36, 37, it is disclosed that the appellee Howards had executed a large combined note to the Hargis Bank & Trust Company to secure the payment of which they mortgaged it their Breathitt county lands lying in some three or four tracts.

Upon a foreclosure suit brought by the Bank of Commerce upon their note, for the amount of some $12,000, the Howards answered, alleging that the note sued on had been procured from them by the fraud and deceit of the Hargis Bank & Trust Company, to which executed, and that the Bank of Commerce was not the real and beneficial owner of the note, but that the Hargis Bank & Trust Company was, and further charged that the note contained a large amount of usury, and should, together with the mortgage, be canceled. Upon submission the trial court so adjudged.

Upon the bank’s appeal, this judgment was reversed, holding that the appellants were entitled (and should have been allowed) to raise the issue of usury against the Hargis Bank & Trust Company, as the real owner of the note, but that there was nothing in the record sustaining the judgment canceling the note and mortgage. The opinion concluded with the language that: “The court should have gone into the question of the extent of usury, if any, contained in the obligation, and have purged it of whatever that might be.” In conformity with this direction, the note, upon the return of the case, was purged of usury and judgment thereupon given the bank for the amount of the debt found legally due, or, that is to say, for $6,398.98, and its' lien of mortgage against the appellees ’ three tracts of land was ordered enforced by their sale or a sufficiency thereof to satisfy the judgment.

At the commissioner’s sale of the land had thereunder, after selling two of the three tracts of land, the last tract, No. 3, called the “home place,” was offered and bid in at $5,000 by the appellant, Dorcas Barnett, or for a sum largely in excess of the balance then remaining due on the judgment for which directed sold, after crediting it with the proceeds derived from the sale of the two other tracts, which were disposed of for some $3,375, and which two sales were duly reported and confirmed.

*318 2ls high bidder for tract No. 3, appellant offered to execute bond to the commissioner for the remainder of the judgment debt, which the commissioner refused to accept in such amount, whereupon, complaining of the sale as irregular, in failing to sell the lands according to the directions of the judgment, or only a sufficiency of tract No. 3 thereof to satisfy the balance owing of the judgment debt, and in refusing to accept from her, as purchaser of tract No. 3, a bond offered in the amount of some $3,200 or sufficient to satisfy the unpaid remainder of the judgment, she filed exceptions to the sale of the tract, therein also further setting out her ownership of the tract, subject to the bank’s mortgage, alleging that in January, 1931, the appellees, Eliza and L. D. Howard,, her parents, had by their general warranty deed sold and conveyed to her this tract No. 3, subject to the plaintiff bank’s mortgage. Further, it appears from the record that, in addition to so pleading her purchase of the land from her parents, she had tendered in the action, upon its second hearing in the Breathitt circuit court, her petition to be made a party, also a counter-claim and cross-petition, in which she alleged substantially what was later included in her exceptions.

Objections were made to the filing of this pleading by appellant, and also a demurrer filed to her exceptions to the sale, both of which were sustained.

Complaining of such ruling upon her exceptions, to the sale, a second appeal was prosecuted, styled Barnett v. Bank of Commerce, et al., 264 Ky. 179, 94 S. W. (2d) 334, wherein it was held that the judgment of the lower court, overruling her exceptions, was in error and reversed it, with directions to permit her to execute, as proffered, a bond for the unpaid remainder of the judgment debt, with the further provision that upon her failure to do so the court should direct a resale of such tract.

Upon a remand of the case, the defendants therein, here the appellees, tendered and were allowed to file, over the exceptions thereto of appellant, their amended separate answer, counterclaim, and cross-petition against the appellant, upon which summons was served, wherein they sought to recover damages for her alleged violation of the contract entered into be *319 tween them and the appellant in January, 1931, providing as follows:

“This contract made and entered into this 26th day of January, 1931, by and between Dorcas Barnett, party of the first part, and Eliza Howard, party of the second part,
“Witnesseth: that whereas second party has this day sold and conveyed to first party a certain tract of land lying and being on Quicksand Creek, known as the home place and being a part of the same land now embraced in an action in the Breathitt circuit court wherein Bank of Commerce is plaintiff and Eliza Howard, etc. are defendants, Now in consideration of said conveyance the said Dorcas Barnett agrees to pay all costs and expenses of said action, including attorney fees and to pay or satisfy $6,000.00 of said mortgage, less said expenses and costs, and further agrees that seeond party may have the rentals from the oil lease on said land, so long as they live provided such rentals are paid.
“In testimony whereof witness our signatures the day and date aforesaid.”

This contract was duly acknowledged and put to record.

Further, the cross-petition alleged that the appellees had grown old and wished to salvage of their lands, all in lien for their indebtedness to the bank, a part thereof for a home, and to carry out such purpose, during the pendency of the bank’s suit to foreclose its mortgage upon all the land, they had in January, 1931, sold and conveyed to their daughter, the appellant, tract No. 3 of their land, called the “home place,” for an agreed cash consideration of $6,000; that the deed executed did not recite the consideration to be paid, but the writen contract, as set out supra, executed simultaneously with the deed, did.

Further, the pleading recited that appellant has since had the use and possession of this “home place” conveyed her, but had failed to pay them the agreed $6,000 purchase price, nor had they ever been paid any part of it.

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Related

Howard v. Bank of Commerce
111 S.W.2d 594 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1937)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
102 S.W.2d 44, 267 Ky. 316, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 321, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barnett-v-howard-kyctapphigh-1937.