Bassett v. Bassett

166 S.W. 763, 159 Ky. 117, 1914 Ky. LEXIS 734
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 21, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 166 S.W. 763 (Bassett v. Bassett) 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
Bassett v. Bassett, 166 S.W. 763, 159 Ky. 117, 1914 Ky. LEXIS 734 (Ky. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Carroll

Reversing.

The appellee, R. J. Bassett, in 1912 brought this suit in equity against the appellant, E. R. Bassett, in which he averred that in 1909 he and E. R. Bassett entered into a verbal agreement to and did purchase certain tracts of land in Grayson County, Ky., aggregating 2,650 acres, describing it. That E. R. Bassett, fraudulently and knowingly, and without his knowledge or consent, had the title to the land conveyed to himself, when it should have been conveyed to both of them jointly so as to invest each with an undivided one-half inters est. That he had equally and jointly with E. R. Bassett assisted in raising and securing the purchase price and contributed equally and jointly with him in paying for the land. That when he discovered that the title had been conveyed to E. R. Bassett alone, he demanded of him some acknowledgment of his interest in the land, and thereupon E. R. Bassett executed and .delivered to. him the following paper j

[118]*118“July 5, 1909. Whereas on May 20, 1909, the Cincinnati Cooperage Co. made a deed to E. R. Bassett conveying 2,650 acres of land in Grayson County, Ky., for the sum of $8,925.00. Now this is to certify that R. J. Bassett is to pay one-half of said purchase price of the land and one-half of all expense, interest and costs and taxes, and to share equally with E. R. Bassett in the profits arising from the sale of said land and to share equally with E. R. Bassett in any losses that might be sustained. ’ ’

' He further averred that since the purchase of the land E. R. Bassett had sold a part of it, and prayed for a reformation of the deed so that it might show his interest in the land, for a settlement of the partnership and a sale of the land remaining unsold.

In an amended petition, filed after all the evidence in the case had been taken, and for the purpose, as averred, of conforming to the proof, he set up that in May, 1909, they entered into a verbal partnership agreement under and by the terms of which they were to purchase and sell for their joint account the land described in the petition. That the land was bought for the purpose of being sold, and they were to share equally in the profits that might be made and bear equally any losses that might be sustained in the venture. That when the partnership was formed, they agreed upon a plan for raising the money with which to make the cash payments on the land, and under this agreement each of them was to assist in raising the fund, and that he performed his part of the agreement. That neither of them furnished any of his own money with which to make the payments, but that through their joint efforts and the use of their joint credits, the money to make the payments was secured.

The amended petition was controverted of record, and to the original petition E. R. Bassett filed an answer in which, after denying many of the averments of the petition, including so much of it as averred that there was a verbal agreement of partnership between them, he admitted the execution of the writing dated July 5th, 1909, but averred that it had never been accepted by R. J. Bassett. That the writing was executed in consideration of the agreement of R. J. Bassett to pay one-half of the purchase price of the land and one-half of all expense, interest, cost and taxes, and that he had failed to [119]*119pay any part thereof. That the payment of these sums was a condition precedent to his acquiring any interest in the land and to his liability on the writing, and that the writing was in fact merely an offer to allow R. J. Bassett to acquire an interest in the land by the payment of the sums stipulated in the writing. That as R. J. Bassett had never paid anything, the writing never became binding, and therefore he was not entitled to any interest in the land.

A reply, controverting the affirmative matter in the answer, completed the pleadings. ■

It will be observed that in the petition, R. J. Bassett, after setting up the verbal agreement of partnership and the writing of July 5th acknowledging its existence, expressly averred that he “equally and jointly and with the said defendant assisted in raising and securing the money to pay the said purchase price and contributed equally and jointly with the defendant in paying for same”; while in the amended petition he abandoned the theory that he had paid or contributed to pay any part of the purchase money or expenses attending the transaction, and put his right of recovery upon the ground that “by the terms of the agreement the said tract of land was bought to be thereafter sold, and the plaintiff and defendant were to share equally in the profits that might be made or any losses that might be sustained in the venture; that they at said time agreed upon a plan for raising the money with which to make cash payments on the land, and under said agreement each of them was to assist in raising said funds.”

‘ ‘ That the plaintiff performed his part of said agreement, and on the..................day of May, 1909, as such partners they purchased from the Cincinnati Cooperage Co. the land. That neither the plaintiff nor defendant furnished money of his own with which to make the payments or any payments, but through their joint efforts and the use of their joint credit money was secured with which to make said payments. * * * ■ That thereafter on his demand the defendant prepared, executed, signed and delivered to this plaintiff a writing mentioned in the original petition, and that said writing was intended as an acknowledgment of the previous parol contract which had been made between the plaintiff and defendant and as an evidence thereof.”

[120]*120The record shows without contradiction that on May 20, 1909, the land was conveyed to E. E. Bassett for the consideration of $8,925.00, $5,000.00 of which was paid in cash and of the remainder $1,000.00 was to be paid in sixty days and the balance in equal payments due in twelve and eighteen months, and further shows that the writing of July 5th was executed and delivered.

E. J. Bassett testified very positively that a verbal contract of partnership was entered into before the deed was made, and that the writing of July 5th was executed merely for the purpose of evidencing the parol contract which had theretofore been made; while E. E. Bassett is equally emphatic in his denial that there was at any time any verbal contract of partnership between them and in his assertion that the writing contained the only contract. Eelating how the writing of July 5th came to be executed, E. E. Bassett said:

“After I had gone to Cincinnati and made the deal with the Cincinnati Cooperage Co., had paid the purchase price, executed the notes for the deferred payments and got my deed, I talked to a good many people in and around the bank about what a good thing I had in the purchase, and E. J. Bassett seemed to want to get into it. I thought that if he would perform the stipulations in this writing by paying one-half the purchase price, and one-half the interest, taxes and costs, that it would make money matters with me easier, and I might be able, if he would comply with the terms of this contract, to handle other deals of this kind. I doubted his ability to perform his part of the agreement, but I wrote out this paper and gave it to him some two months after the deal was made with the Cincinnati Cooperage Co. He failed and has never complied with any of the terms of. this writing, and I have treated it as a nullity long since. * '* *

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Goldstein v. McDonald
3 S.W.2d 200 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1928)
Ewing v. Bond
215 S.W. 934 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1919)
Bassett v. Bassett
200 S.W. 915 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1918)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
166 S.W. 763, 159 Ky. 117, 1914 Ky. LEXIS 734, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bassett-v-bassett-kyctapp-1914.