Bryant v. Stephens

111 S.W.2d 622, 271 Ky. 125, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 214
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 17, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 111 S.W.2d 622 (Bryant v. Stephens) 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
Bryant v. Stephens, 111 S.W.2d 622, 271 Ky. 125, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 214 (Ky. 1937).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Perry

— Reversing.

This is the second time this case has come before us on appeal, and the record herein is the same as was considered by us in Bryant’s Trustee v. Stephens et al., 265 Ky. 615, 97 S. W. (2d) 553, 560.

The facts and pleadings in the above case and the ruling of the trial court thereon, of which complaint is here made as improper, are as follows:

Closely following the Civil War, James M. Bryant and John S. Van Winkle became the owners of some 120,000 acres of land situated in Whitley, Montgomery, and other counties of Kentucky and Scott and Campbell counties of Tennessee.

Both of these owners died in 1888, when L. E. Bryant, the oldest of James M. Bryant’s children, took charge of the estate.

In 1896 the estate was apportioned and the title to the respective shares put in the names of Louise D. Van *126 Winkle and Roberta S. Bryant. The title remained in Mrs. Bryant until about 1924, during which, time L. E. Bryant had sole charge of the estate, living on the land and looking after its development and management;

Afterwards, Mrs. Bryant conveyed the title to this larger estate to her three children in the ratios of 43 1/3 per cent, to L. E. Bryant, 23 1/3 per cent, to the appellant, D. E. Bryant, and 33 1/3 per cent, to Hester Bryant dore and her husband, W. S. Grlore, but, notwithstanding such division, L. E. Bryant continued in charge of the property and carried on its development and management in the name of the Bryant Estate. Notes, contracts, and deeds called for in the course of his management and mining development of the estate were made in the name of “The Bryant Estate” and signed iiBryant Estate, by L. E. Bryant, Agent.”

The notes which are the subject of this litigation are so signed and also signed by L. E. Bryant personally.

We deem it unnecessary to discuss in any detail the evidence showing the different steps taken by L. E. Bryant in his attempted development of these lands or to say more than that the estate became involved in debt and that the law firm of Stephens & Steely, the appellees, represented it in all the courts in the handling of its various legal matters.

Final settlement was made of the estate in 1928,, when it appears some trouble and friction had developed among the members of the family as to the handling of the estate and their interests ■ therein and that they entered into a contract between themselves, in which, among other things, it was provided that L. E. Bryant individually should assume and pay the outstanding Bryant Estate debts, including the notes given for attorney fees to the appellees, Stephens & Steely, without either member of the law firm having, it appears, any knowledge of this family arrangement until the contract evidencing it was filed in the later bankruptcy proceedings in October, 1933.

Late in 1931, I. N. Steely, a member of the law firm, died. Thereafter, in order to better secure the indebtedness of the Bryant Estate, evidenced by these certain notes and which in their aggregate amounted to some $9,000 (given in consideration of their professional services rendered the estate), the mortgage* *127 which is the subject of and involved in this litigation, was executed by L. E. Bryant to them.

This mortgage covered real estate in Whitley and Montgomery counties, which at that time were jointly owned by L. E. Bryant, Hester Bryant Clore and husband, and D. E. Bryant.

On November 23, 1932, these members of the Bryant family apportioned the estate lands, consisting of approximately 70,000 acres, between themselves. D. E. Bryant, the appellant, received ten separate tracts in Kentucky and one tract of 5,000 acres in Tennessee. The tenth tract of the Kentucky lands allotted him in McCreary county was included in the family mortgage executed to Stephens & Steely by L. E. Bryant.

The validity of this mortgage, it appears, was never questioned by the family, but only by the trustee for the creditors, in so far as it included the lands conveyed, in their partitioning, to the bankrupt, L. E. Bryant.

In this partition, L. E. Bryant received all of the lands in Whitley county covered by this mortgage; D. E. Bryant received the portion of the mortgaged real estate lying in McCreary county, described as his tract No. 10, while Hester Bryant Clore and husband received as their portion of the estate other lands, not covered by the L. E. Bryant mortgage.

Later, on February 4, 1933, D. E. Bryant executed a mortgage to the First National Bank of Somerset, Ky., to secure, a note he owed it for $10,874,-due six months thereafter. There was included in that mortgage his aforesaid tract No. 10, which, as stated, was also covered by the mortgage previously executed by L. E. Bryant to Stephens & Steely.

This D. E. Bryant mortgage to the bank contained this provision:

“Provided, however, that the mortgage hereby made shall, as to tract No. 10 mentioned above, be junior and inferior to such claim and lien, if any, as may be hereafter determined to accrue to E. L. Stephens, not to exceed, however, the sum of $2,500, whether such lien be now of record or not.”

Soon following this partition of this jointly owned estate in November, 1932, L. E. Bryant, in December, 1932, was adjudged a bankrupt and within six months thereafter his trustee in bankruptcy filed suit in the *128 Whitley circuit court against Stephens & Steely, attacking the mortgage the bankrupt had executed them as a_ fraudulent and preferential conveyance of a part of his estate to them.

The _ defendants filed answer, counterclaim, and cross-petition in response to the trustee’s petition, wherein they pleaded at length the circumstances involving the creation of the joint tenancy between L. E. Bryant, Hester Bryant GHore, and D. E. Bryant, alleging that the notes secured by the mortgage were their joint obligations, as the joint tenants and owners of the Bryant Estate, and, further, by the pleading sought to have the trustee’s petition dismissed on several grounds and also to have the court determine the amount which should be credited against the notes by reaso'n of the joint nature of the obligation and the fact that a portion of the lands covered by the mortgage lay outside of the lands owned by the bankrupt at the time of the filing of the petition in bankruptcy.

Although $2,500 was named as the amount which Stephens & Steely sought by their cross-action to have adjudged a credit on the debt secured by .the mortgage, as representing the land of D. E. Bryant, which, although covered by the mortgage, was yet outside that conveyed L. E. Bryant in the partition of the estate lands, no direct relief against the cross-defendants was asked.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
111 S.W.2d 622, 271 Ky. 125, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 214, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bryant-v-stephens-kyctapphigh-1937.