Bridgford v. Barbour

80 Ky. 529
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 7, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 80 Ky. 529 (Bridgford v. Barbour) 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
Bridgford v. Barbour, 80 Ky. 529 (Ky. Ct. App. 1882).

Opinion

JUDGE PRYOR

delivered the opinion of the court.

A part of the present record, involving a settlement of the estate of Joshua B. Bowles, deceased, has' been heretofore in this court, and the rights of his heirs and devisees finálly disposed of as to the issues then made. The principal issue determined on the former hearing was as to the nature and character of advancements made to each of his heirs and devisees. What constituted an advancement, and when the advancement was to be charged, were questions that had necessarily to be determined before a final settlement and division of the estate could be made between the ■parties ih interest. The case went back from this court, after all such questions had been passed on, for the purpose ■ of a final settlement' and distribution that all the parties -■were seeking to obtain.

[531]*531The testator died, leaving a last will, but omitted to devise by any of its provisions some valuable real estate, and leaving property devised and undevised, it became neces-’ sary to equalize the heirs and devisees in the division and distribution of the undevised estate. The action was originally instituted by Thomas J. Barbour as the sole executor •of the will of the testator, in which he alleged that a sale of the real estate was necessary for the payment of debts, and asked for a reference to' the matter that a settlement might be had, showing the condition of the estate, and the necessity for making a sale of a part of the realty. He asked for a settlement of his accounts as executor, and for a partition of the real estate remaining after the payment of debts, cIre., and also attempted to set forth the advancements made to each heir and devisee, with a view of having this settlement and partition. He further asked for all such ■orders and decrees as may be just and eqtdtable, and for all general relief. After the filing of this petition, to which James Bowles, one of the present appellants, was made a defendant, the latter, upon his motion, was united with Barbour as plaintiff in the original action, it appearing that, by the will of the testator, both Barbour and James Bowles (a son of the testator) had been designated as executors, and had qualified. An amended petition was then filed by the two executors, asking the same relief as in the original ■action by Barbour — that their accounts be settled, and a discharge from all liability as executors; that their individyal interests be protected, concluding with a prayer for 1 all proper eqtdtable and general relief

It seems that, prior to the death of the testator, Barbour ■(named as one of the executors), as his agent, had collected xents from this realty, and that after his death continued to' [532]*532.collect the rents up to 1874. After 1874, the rents of this undevised estate (the realty) were collected by the appellant •James Bowles, and in the report of his settlement made with the commissioner in this action some time in the year 187.5, he is charged with the rents, having reported them as-a part of the estate of his devisor; or, if not a part of his. estate, as assets, for which he should account in the distribution or partition of the estate between himself and the-other heirs. The precise amount of rent collected and. accounted for by James Bowles does not appear, but it is. manifest that he was accounting for the rent up to that, time as if it constituted a part of the estate of the testator. When the report of settlement up to that date in 1875 was. confirmed, and the question of advancements passed on by the court below, the case was brought to this court by an-appeal, and the judgment left undisturbed by the decision, here, except as to the advancements.

After the appeal had been taken, and before the return-, of the case to the lower court, James Bowles made an assignment of the whole of his estate for the benefit of creditors, to 'the appellant Bridgford. The case having been reversed, and the rights of the heirs and devisees settled as to advancements, the court below proceeded to settle the estate between all the parties in- interest as if no assignment had been made by the appellant, J. W. Bowles. The latter proceeded to collect the rents accruing upon the.undevised real estate during the pending of the appeal in, this court, and long after the case had been remanded to-the court below for further settlement. The commissioner .made his additional report of settlement,in June, 1877, by which it appeared* that J. W. Bowles was indebted to the-estate of his father in a sum exceeding eleven thousand dol[533]*533lars. About one half of this sum consisted of rents that he had collected from the undevised realty, all of which was reported and embraced in the report of settlement made by the commissioner. That report was approved By the court, and made the basis of the judgment from which this appeal is prosecuted. J. W. Bowles, in his own right, and as executor, and the assignee Bridgford, as the privy of J. W. Bowles, are each complaining of that judg-ment.

The judgment determines that J. W. Bowles is indebted 'to the estate of Joshua Bowles in the sum of $11,310.40, •and as the share of J. W. Bowles in the real estate divided «exceeded in value the amount he was owing the estate, the «court adjudged that the share or lot assigned him should be «charged with the payment of his indebtedness, and directed ,.a sale for that purpose. The assignee Bridgford was not made a party to the action, nor did he assert any claim or interest in the subject-matter of controversy until after that -final judgment, and has only complained by the prosecution «of this appeal.

It is claimed by the appellants, J. W. Bowles and his .assignee Bridgford, that the undevised real estate descended to the heirs of Joshua Bowles, deceased, and that in the ■collection of the rents, he was only acting as the agent of ¡the other heirs, and liable to them in his individual capacity, «and not as executory that the assignee of J. W. Bowles was a purchaser for value, and.held his interest in the unde•vised realty, by reason of the assignment for the benefit of •all his creditors, and that no latent equity,- existing between 4he heirs and devisees by reason of the collection of these ¡rents, can affect Bridgford, the purchaser.

[534]*534It is further maintained, in behalf of J. W. Bowles, and1 also Bridgford, that no judgment could have been rendered against Bowles for the amount of rent collected, as. no charge was made by the heirs or devisees for the rent, nor any such claim asserted by the pleadings. That each one of the heirs of Joshua Bowles had an undivided interest, in the real estate not devised by the will is unquestioned, and the extent of that interest would be necessarily controlled by the value of the advancements made to each one-of the heirs and devisees. The appellant, J. W. Bowles, as the executor of his father’s will, had no control over the undevised real estate by reason of- his qualification as executor, but held and was possessed of this realty as a coparcener in conjunction with his brothers and sisters.

A purchaser, therefore, for value of his interest in the land undevised would doubtless obtain his title free from, any claim that coparceners might have against him for rent, unless an action was pending between the coparceners, at the time of the purchase, with reference to the realty and: the rents, that could be regarded as a lis pendens.

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Bluebook (online)
80 Ky. 529, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bridgford-v-barbour-kyctapp-1882.