Brown v. Farmers' Deposit Bank

3 S.W.2d 215, 223 Ky. 171, 1928 Ky. LEXIS 306
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedFebruary 17, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 3 S.W.2d 215 (Brown v. Farmers' Deposit Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Farmers' Deposit Bank, 3 S.W.2d 215, 223 Ky. 171, 1928 Ky. LEXIS 306 (Ky. 1928).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Thomas

Affirming.

Prior to the taking effect of chapter 17, Acts of 1920, each county in the commonwealth constructed and maintained its portion of through highways connecting county seats, and it was so done under what was designated as the “state and federal aid plan.” In the latter part of 1918 or the first part of 1919, the citizens of a number of counties in the commonwealth between Louisville and Paducah, Ky., began'an agitation for the construction of a through highway connecting those two cities. A great many if not all of the counties did not have, nor could they legally raise, a sufficient amount by taxation *173 to defray their part of the construction of such through highway, and, to supplement its part of the cost, some of the citizens of Meade county signed articles, of subscription by which they agreed to donate the amount set opposite their names in order to supply such deficit. Two of such subscribers were the appellants, G-abe Brown and Pete Sheeran, in the two cases stated in the caption, the former subscribing $500 and the latter $1,000. The subscription paper that each of them signed read:

“We, the undersigned subscribers, hereby subscribe, bind, and obligate ourselves to pay the amount set opposite our name to help construct a federal highway in Meade county, Ky., known as the federal highway between Paducah, Ky., and Louisville, Ky., provided said highway passes through the following places in Meade county, Ky.: Running from Tip Top, Ky., to Grahampton, Ky.; thence to Hog Wallow; thence to William Hilf’s farm — and we further agree and bind ourselves to. donate any lands or ground necessary for a right of way for said federal highway which is to be built, according to federal and state plans, and we further guarantee the payment of my said subscription to the Farmers’ Deposit Bank, Brandenburg, Ky.”

Later, and on August 15, 1919, each of them signed notes made payable to the appellee and plaintiff below, Farmers’ Deposit Bank of Brandenburg, Ky., in which their subscriptions were divided into installments payable at designated dates, the last one due on January 1, 1922, and it was stipulated in the notes that, if any installment became due and unpaid, the due dates of all future ones would be precipitated, and might be collected “by suit or otherwise.” It was also stipulated in the notes that:

“We hereby expressly agree that the entire proceeds of this note shall be placed and shall go to the credit of the federal and state highway which it is proposed to build through Meade county, Ky., and no part of the proceeds of this note is to go to our individual credit.”

At the time of the execution of the notes, Meade county had taken no step toward the actual construction of the road, but after the effective date of the 1920 act the county in connection with the state highway commis *174 sion became active in preparing for and constructing tbe road through it. Under that act it became the duty of the county to furnish the right of way along the route to be selected by the highway commission, which latter had the right to accept donations from the various counties through which state highways were constructed, as well as from individuals and corporations, and the act by express terms kept alive all promised donations theretofore made to the counties for the construction of state and federal aid roads under previously existing law. In conformity therewith, the fiscal court of Meade county, after the effective date of the 1920 act, legally appropriated or donated to the state highway for the construction of the road through that county a sum equal to the amount of its authority to raise by taxation, plus the amount of prior donations, including those made by the two defendants herein.

These two actions were filed against the respective defendants in the Meade circuit court by the Farmers’ Deposit Bank, the state highway commission, and Meade county, to recover from the defendant Brown the full amount of his note and from the defendant Sheeran the balance due on his note, he having theretofore made payments thereon. The answers were denials of some of the. material averments of the petitions, but the execution of the notes was admitted, and other paragraphs asserted (a) failure of consideration; (b) breach of condition by not constructing the the highway along the route agreed upon; and (e) that the attempt of the 1920 act to keep alive the subscription for the benefit of the state highway commission altered the obligation of the notes executed in satisfaction of the subscription contracts, contrary to both the federal and state Constitutions. Defendant Sheeran also sought to recover the amount previously paid by him in a counterclaim incorporated in his answer. The case was submitted to the court without the intervention of a jury, and it rendered judgment against Brown for the full amount of his note and against Sheeran for the unpaid balance due on his note and dismissed his counterclaim, to reverse which these appeals are prosecuted and are heard together- and will be disposed of in a single opinion.

Before answers were filed, the respective defendants moved that the state highway commission and Meade county be stricken as parties plaintiff in the actions, which was overruled, with exceptions, and complaint is *175 made of that ruling, but, if it should be conceded that it was error, it could not possibly prejudice plaintiffs, since the notes were absolute promises to pay the amounts to the bank to which they, were executed, not in its individual capacity, but, as stated in the note, “to the credit of the federal and state highway which it is proposed to build through Meade county,” and, as we have seen, in the subscription paper the donations were made “to help, construct a federal highway in Meade county, Ky., known as the federal highway between Paducah, Ky., and Lou-, isville, Ky.” The' promises therefore were clearly and indisputably made to whatever governmental agency had the right and whose duty it was to construct the through highway at the time it became necessary to make the expenditure, and both the subscriptions and the notes were made for the benefit of whatever state agency performed that task, though it might be one thereafter created and upon which the same powers and duties of the existing agency at the time of the subscription and the execution of the notes were cast. Clearly, the bank to whom the notes were, executed for the benefit of another could maintain the action under the express provisions of section 21 of the Civil Code, as could also the beneficiary of the notes, but, whether it was proper for the fiduciary and the cestui que trust to join as plaintiffs, it is unnecessary to determine, since in no event could it possibly prejudice plaintiffs.

The substance of the argument in support of defense (a) is that the donations were made and the notes executed for the purpose of the construction of a road by Meade county, and that it did not do so, and that the project in aid of which the donations were made was abandoned, but which we think is entirely unsound. Nothing appears in either the subscriptions or the notes to show that they were conditioned upon the construction of the road by Meade county.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 S.W.2d 215, 223 Ky. 171, 1928 Ky. LEXIS 306, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-farmers-deposit-bank-kyctapphigh-1928.