Boreing's Admr. v. McHargue

153 S.W. 463, 152 Ky. 360
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedFebruary 20, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 153 S.W. 463 (Boreing's Admr. v. McHargue) 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
Boreing's Admr. v. McHargue, 153 S.W. 463, 152 Ky. 360 (Ky. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Opinion or the Court by

Judge Lassing

Affirming.

Many years ago Vincent Boreing, Robert Boyd, Sr., ánd C. W. Jones purchased, in partnership, several tracts of land in Whitley County, Ky. Under the terms of their agreement, Boyd and Boreing were to furnish the money to pay for the lands, the costs incident to the survey of same, and 'any other expense incurred in the acquisition of title; Jones was to do the actual work of purchasing, examining titles, looking after surveys, etc., and when the lands were sold, the money so advanced by Boyd and Boreing, was to.be returned to them with interest from date of payment, and any profit realized out of the transaction was to be divided equally among the three. The partnership extended over quite a number of years. Lands were bought and sold- and_ timber contracts were made, which rendered their transactions, to some, extent, complicated. Boyd, Boreing and Jones all died, leaving their partnership matters in an unsettled condition. iSudt was brought to settle, the estate of Vincent Boreing, and in this same suit a settlement of the partnership was asked and ordered. In due course of time, the partnership lands were directed to be sold by the commissioner for the purpose of settling the partnership and distributing the proceeds. In 1908, an agreed judgment was entered directing this property to be sold. Jones, in his lifetime, sold his interest in certain tracts of this partnership land to R. Boyd, Jr. These are known as Gr., H. & L, and the personal representative and heirs of Jones have no interest in them. This, litigation concerns only the proceeds of sale of these three tracts.

On March 4, 1909, the court rendered a- judgment in which it held that Boyd, Boreing and Jones purchased the lands, described in the pleadings as Gr., H., I., K., L., and M.; that the purchase price, and all expenses, incident to the purchase thereof, were paid by Boyd and Boreing. The dates of said payments, together with the amounts thereof, are fully set out in said judgment. The court then adjudged that the [representatives of Bfoyd andi Boreing were entitled to receive from the proceeds of sale [362]*362of the above designated lands the money so expended by them. The court then found the money which Boyd and Boreing had received for timber sold from said land, together with the dates upon which these payments had been received; and directed the money, to which Boyd and Boreing were entitled, to be credited by the money which they had received from timber sales. In said judgment it is provided that the personal representatives of said Boyd and Boreing are entitled to receive from the proceeds of sale of said lands, said sums with interest thereon from date of payment. The judgment then provides that the balance realized by the sale of said land should be divided equally among the estates of Boyd, Boreing and Jones, and that the interest of Jones in the tracts, Gr., H. & I. should be paid to Robert Boyd, Jr., under his purchase. The property was sold on October 5, 1903, and the tracts Gr., II. & I. brought $10,300.

When the sale bonds became due and were paid, and the commissioner was ready to distribute the proceeds thereof, R. Boyd, Jr., objected to the distribution, on the ground that the commissioner had erred in his method of calculating the interest on the sums paid and received by Boyd and Boreing, it being a question whether the interest on these respective sums should be calculated from the date of their payment to the date of sale, or whether upon the partial payment plan. It is conceded that the difference in the method of calculation would materially affect the interest of R. Boyd, Jr., under his purchase from Jones, and the parties being unable to agree among themselves, the commissioner in the old suit filed a petition in the settlement suit, in which he sought the guidance and direction of the chancellor as to how the interest should be calculated. In the meantime, the parties wanted their money, and the commissioner was willing to distribute all of it save $600.00. This, he proposed keeping until it should be definitely determined how the interest should be calculated. Finally he and the parties agreed that he should páy out the money according to the terms of the judgment, as he construed it; and that, if the court should hold that he had not adopted the proper method and that R. Boyd, Jr., was right in his contention, then the parties were' to refund to him to the extent that he had over-paid them. On March 23, 1911, in response to the commissioner's application for guidance and direction in the [363]*363matter of calculating the interest, the court entered a supplemental judgment directing the commissioner to calculate the interest on the sums invested by Boyd and Boreing in the tracts of land Gr., H. and I. from the date said sums were paid until the day of sale, and to calculate the interest on the payments that they had received from timber sold from said tracts, in the same way; and the court found that, by pursuing this method, the sums, so paid out by Boyd and Boreing, with interest.'to day of sale, amounted to $7,584.64; and that the sums which they had received from sales of timber, with interest thereon to the day of sale of the land, amounted to $5,449.91; that the sale bonds, with interest, amounted to $11,321.42; that the money paid out by Boyd and Boreing, with interest thereon, exceeded by $2,135.73, the amount received by them; and that their estates were therefore entitled to receive, out of the proceeds of the sale of these lands, this $2,135.73 before any division was made; and that, after this was deducted, the balance of the proceeds realized from the sale of the tracts Gr., H. and I. was to be divided equally .among the Boyd and Boreing estates, and R. Boyd, Jr. At the succeeding term of court, Boreing’s administrator filed a motion to vacate and set aside this judgment directing the commissioner how the interest should be calculated, and this motion having been overruled, he appeals and calls in question here the validity of the judgment of March 23, 1911, and the correctness of the court’s ruling in declining to vacate and set aside this judgment.

The effect of the court’s ruling was to require Boreing’s administrator to pay to the commissioner $231.00. It is conceded that, if the court had authority to entei the judgment of March 23, 1911, the commissioner overpaid Boreing’s administrator in the sum of $231.00. The question is also raised as to the right and power of the court, in a summary way, to require Boreing’s administrator to pay to the commissioner this $231.00, it being contended by his counsel that, if the commissioner is entitled to recover this money at all, he would have to proceed by suit. These are the only questions raised upon this appeal.

The original judgment, entered' by agreement, directed the commissioner to calculate the interest on all payments, made on these lands by Boreing and Boyd, and from this principal and interest, thus ascertained, [364]*364to deduct all .sums received by them with interest, and then, from the proceeds of the sale of this' land, to deduct the balance found to be due Boreing and Boyd. It will be observed that, in this judgment, the method as to how the interest should be computed is not set out. The commissioner undertook to adopt the partial payment plan, asi authorized by the statute, but R. Boyd, Jr., objected to this method of calculation, upon the ground that it had the effect of giving to the estates of Boreing and R.

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153 S.W. 463, 152 Ky. 360, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boreings-admr-v-mchargue-kyctapp-1913.