Bebout v. Old Kentucky Manufacturing Co.

141 S.W. 406, 145 Ky. 756, 1911 Ky. LEXIS 954
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 7, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 141 S.W. 406 (Bebout v. Old Kentucky Manufacturing Co.) 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
Bebout v. Old Kentucky Manufacturing Co., 141 S.W. 406, 145 Ky. 756, 1911 Ky. LEXIS 954 (Ky. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

OPINION op the Court by

Judge Lassing

Affirming on original and reversing on cross-appeal.

In May, 1904, there "was organized in Paducah a trading corporation known as the Old Kentucky Manufacturing Co. This corporation was organized to deal in proprietary stock foods. The affairs of the company were controlled by a hoard of directors and a general manager. The directors were H. R. Lindsey, H. C. Overby and Charles-R. Allcott. John W. Bebout was a stockholder and the general manager of the company, and to him was entrusted practically the management and control of the company. Under his direction and immediate supervision the affairs of the company were conducted until ' in May, 1909, when he was called upon by the stockholders and officers to render a detailed statement of the affairs of the company. About that time he was taken sick, and not until June first was the statement as to the condition of the company’s affairs rendered by him. In this statement he charged to his personal account about $8,000, $4,200 of which he claimed represented accounts owing by the company for merchandise and supplies which had not been paid or credited by him, and $3,800 thereof was represented as having been added to the merchandise sales account for the purpose of making it [757]*757appear- tbat -the company was doing a larger business than it-really was. This disclosure of the real condition of the affairs of the company resulted in a meeting between Bebout and the other directors and stockholders, in which he agreed to settle his indebtedness to the company by transfering to it a house and lot owned by him, which he valued at $3,000, and by transferring to the other stockholders alhof his stock in the company, to-wit, seventy-five shares, upon which there was an incumbrance of $4,500. This stock was to be taken at a valuation of fifty cents on the dollar, and he was to give to the company his two notes, one for the difference between the value of the stock and the incumbrance on it,'amounting to $750, and the other for. the difference between his individual indebtedness to the company and the value of the house and lot which he transferred to it, this second jrote calling for something over $4,600.

In accordance with this arrangement the deed was executed, the notes signed, the stock transferred and delivered, and the matter closed. But after the lapse of a short-time he and his wife instituted a suit against the company and its directors above named, in which they sought to have the deed set aside, and the notes can-celled, and the whole transaction nullified, on the ground that, under threats of a criminal prosecution they were forced to convey the property and sign the notes as indicated, and that, in ignorance of the law and his rights, they had yielded to the urgent demands of the directors of the company and conveyed their property and signed the notes solely to avoid a criminal prosecution. They insisted that, while the entries made upon the books by Bebout were irregular, and, as he expressed it, for the purpose of juggling the company’s affairs in such a way as that it would appear to be in a prosperous condition and making money, he had in fact done no wrong and had not misappropriated any of the company’s money; that his padding of the invoices had the effect only of making it appear that the company had made more money than it in fact had; and that his failure to transfer certain accounts to the suspense account was simply a violation of the instructions which he had received from the directors as to the way in which these accounts should be kept; and that, while he had reported sales in excess of what they really were, the company had not been injured because he had accurately accounted for all monies which he had [758]*758received. The company and the directors defended and denied that the transaction between the plaintiffs and themselves was the result of an effort on their part to coerce or enforce him into the execution of the notes and the sale of the house and lot, but stated, rather, that it was the voluntary act of the plaintiff and his wife in an effort on their part to right as far as they could the wrong which the plaintiff, Bebout had done the company.

Proof was taken in support of the respective claims as made by the pleadings, and upon submission the chancellor .found in favor of the defendants as to the execution of the deed and the transfer of the stock, but held that the evidence showed that plaintiff and his wife had surrendered the house and lot and the seventy-five shares of stock in settlement of Bebout’s indebtedness to the company, and that there was no consideration for the execution of these two notes. He accordingly directed that they be coneelled. Prom this judgment the plaintiffs have prosecuted an appeal, and the defendants have, prosecuted a cross appeal.

Two questions are raised: First, it is insisted that there was no privy examination of the wife in the execution of this deed, and, therefore, she is not bound by its terms; and second, it is urged that, as Bebout and his wife were forced under the threat of immediate prosecution to convey to the company their house and lot, this conveyance should be set aside. For appellees, on their cross appeal, it is urged that the execution of the deed and the notes and the transfer of the stock evidenced one contract and agreement or understanding; that either they were the free and voluntary acts of Bebout, or else he was forced to sign them; that they are entitled to have the trade upheld in its entirety or else it should be set aside as having been procured by means not countenanced by the law.

Disposing first of the question of the privy examination of the wife, the évidence shows that this aeknowladgment was taken in a storeroom. Bebout wrote the deed himself and he and his wife took it to Alleott’s storeroom. He had previously signed it. A young lady who was a notary was called upon to take their acknowledgment. Mr. Alcott testified that after Bebout acknowledged the deed he walked with him toward the other end of the store, and while they were some distance, away from the notary and Mrs. Bebout, her acknowledgment was taken. As opposed to his testimony Bebout and his [759]*759wife say that he was present when her acknowledgment was taken. The certificate of the officer shows that it was acknowledged in due form, and in such case, as was expressly held in Cox v. Grill, 83 Ky., 669:

“Parties will not be permitted to show under the allegation of a mistake that the certificate was not in the form of or as required by law, or that the clerk was out of the county when he took the acknowledgment. When the certificate is regular and proper on its face, and admitted to be signed, and the deed acknowledged before one authorized to take the acknowledgment, what the clerk states as to when it was acknowledged, and the manner of acknowledgment, can not be assailed on the idea that the clerk has made a mistake, and parol proof allowed to contradict the legal effect of the certificate by showing that the clerk certifying took the acknowledgment somewhere else, or that the husband was present when the deed was acknowledged by the wife, or that the clerk failed to read and explain the contents of the deed to her.”

The principle announced in this case was approved in the later case of Tichenor v. Yankee, 89 Ky., 508, in which the court says:

“Undoubtedly, the officer may sometimes fail to fully discharge his duty, but the desired stability of title to real estate, and the protection of purchasers and the public, demanded the adoption of the statute.

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Bluebook (online)
141 S.W. 406, 145 Ky. 756, 1911 Ky. LEXIS 954, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bebout-v-old-kentucky-manufacturing-co-kyctapp-1911.