Bondurant v. Tally's Trustee

229 S.W. 377, 191 Ky. 202, 1921 Ky. LEXIS 289
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMarch 1, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 229 S.W. 377 (Bondurant v. Tally's Trustee) 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
Bondurant v. Tally's Trustee, 229 S.W. 377, 191 Ky. 202, 1921 Ky. LEXIS 289 (Ky. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Settle

Affirming.

[203]*203The appellant, C. T. Bondurant, having- contracted to perform certain constructive levee work in the Reel Foot district in Fulton county, this state, sublet a part of the work to one Ben Tally who owned an outfit consisting- of mules, implements and machinery required for doing-such work. But as Tally was short of money, appellant agreed and undertook to advance him from 'time to time during- the progress of the levee work to he done by the latter, money, amounting- in the aggregate to $4,000.00, with which to pay his hands and provide them and his stock with necessary supplies, the money so advanced by appellant to be repaid by Tally with and out of such sums as might by the contract between them be due and payable to the latter as the work progressed; and as all of this money would be owing Tally by appellant and received by him, it was to be credited by the latter as due upon the indebtedness of Tally to him for the advancements received by Tally.

The above contract was made July 5, 1912, at which time Tally executed to appellant his note, payable one year after date, for the $4,000.00, to be thereafter advanced him by appellant in the manner stated, and to secure its payment gave him a mortgage 'upon his (Tally’s) mules, implements and machinery used' by him in the work of levee construction. For some reason unexplained the mortgage, though written July 5, 1912, was not acknowledged by Tally until October 10, nor put to record until October 23, 1912. On November 22, 1912, it became apparent to appellant and Tally that the $4,000.-00 note and mortgage previously executed by the latter did not or would not include the entire amount of money received by him and to be advanced by appellant to enable him to do the work required of him, so it was then agreed between them that to cover such additional advancements, not exceeding in the aggregate $2,000.00, as might be required by Tally he would execute to appellant a note of that amount payable eight months after date, to be secured by a second mortgage on the same property covered by the first mortgage; this note, like the one of $4,000.00, was to be credited by such amounts as might be due Tally from time to time on his work until fully paid. Pursuant to this agreement the note and mortgage • last mentioned were on November 22,1912, duly executed and the mortgage put to record January 4, 1913.

[204]*204Shortly after the two notes were executed they, together with the mortgage liens by which they were secured, were assigned by appellant to the Farmers and Merchants Bank of Hickman as collateral security for loans it made him. January 3, 1913, Ben Tally in the District Court of the United States for the Western Division of the Western District of Tennessee, was adjudged a bankrupt upon the petition of certain of his creditors, and on January 12, 1913, the appellee, J. Creer Rogers, was appointed and duly qualified as the trustee in bankruptcy of his estate and at once began the administration thereof. When adjudged a bankrupt Tally had not completed the work he undertook to perform for the appellant, and upon his abandonment of the work shortly thereafter'he left the property upon which he had given appellant the two mortgages in the latter’s possession, who used it in his work of levee construction, and was so using it when appellee as trustee in bankruptcy of Tally demanded its surrender to him for the benefit of the bankrupt’s creditors. Appellant refused to comply with the demand and appellee thereupon brought an action against him in the Hickman circuit court for the recovery of the property. But the action was dismissed by the adjustment of the controversy between them over the property, through the appellant’s purchase of it at the agre'ed price of $3,000.00, for which he and W. E. Bondurant executed to the appellee their joint promissory note payable six months after date, without interest until maturity, containing, however, a provision to the effect that, if the two mortgages given on the property by Tally to appellant should be held by the court valid and preferred liens to secure the amount of Tally’s entire indebtedness to appellant, then the proceeds of the property should be applied on such indebtedness; otherwise such proceeds should be paid to appellee as trustee in bankruptcy for the benefit of Tally’s creditors,,

. Before this adjustment was effected, however, suit had been brought by the Farmers and Merchants Bank of Hickman in the court below upon the notes of $4,000.00 and $2,000.00, respectively, executed by Tally to appellant and assigned it by the latter, seeking an enforcement of the mortgage liens for their payment, to which the appellant and W. E. Bondurant were made defendants; and the appellee, as the trustee in bankruptcy of Tally, by interpleader and cross petition against the bank and. appel[205]*205lant also seems to have been made a party, and to have attacked the note's and mortgages given by Tally to appellant as preferential, fraudulent and void. But before any preparation of the action for trial the appellant paid to the bank the two notes in question and caused them to be reassigned to him; and this fact being set up by an amended answer filed by the latter, he was substituted on the record for the bank as ’owner of the notes, and by subsequent pleadings filed by him and appellee all issues of law and fact involving the validity of the mortgage liens asserted as preferred debts by the former and controverted by the latter seem to have been presented.

In the meantime the appellee as trustee in bankruptcy of Tally sued the appellant and W. E. Bondurant in the same court, seeking to recover of them the amount of the note or bond of $3,000.00 they executed to him for the property upon which they were claiming preferred liens by virtue of the mortgages from Tally to C. T. Bondurant. By answer the latter and W. E. Bondurant resisted the recovery sought and substantially set up their alleged liens upon the property for which the note to appellee was given, their alleged preferential character and that they should be credited on the note with the amount of Tally’s indebtedness to G. T. Bondurant which would more than discharge it. After the filing of a reply by appellee controverting the affirmative matter of the answer and attacking appellant’s alleged debts and liens as preferential and fraudulent, the action was transferred to the equity docket and consolidated with the one previously brought by the bank.

Following the taking of proof by the parties and submission of the consolidated causes, the circuit court rendered judgment, the essential parts of which are as follows : [206]*206Therefore it is adjudged by the court that the plaintiff, J. Greer Rogers, trustee in bankruptcy as aforesaid, recover of the defendants, C. T. and W. E. Bondurant, the sum of $2,565.07, with interest thereon at 6 per cent, per annum from October 28, 1913, and his costs in these actions, and execution is awarded thereon.”

[205]*205“And now upon the whole case the court finds that the obligation sued on by the plaintiff J. Greer Rogers, trustee in bankruptcy of Ben Tally, should be credited, as of the date of its execution, by the sum of $434.93, that being the difference as shown by the deposition of G. T. Bondurant -and the 'statement of accounts filed herewith between the charges of O. T.

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Bluebook (online)
229 S.W. 377, 191 Ky. 202, 1921 Ky. LEXIS 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bondurant-v-tallys-trustee-kyctapp-1921.