Buttermore v. Hensley

103 S.W.2d 68, 267 Ky. 669, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 363
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMarch 12, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 103 S.W.2d 68 (Buttermore v. Hensley) 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
Buttermore v. Hensley, 103 S.W.2d 68, 267 Ky. 669, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 363 (Ky. 1937).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Perry

Affirming.

William Henry Hensley died intestate, a resident of Harlan county, Ky.,. leaving surviving him his widow, Rebecca Hensley, and eignt children: Carl Hensley, Roy Hensley, and Howard Hensley, who are all adults, Virr *670 gie Hensley, an infant under twenty-one years of age and more than fourteen years of age, and Elva Jean Hensley, Elzo Hensley, Georgia Etta Hensley, and Rodney Hensley, all infants under the age of fourteen years.

The widow, Rebecca Hensley, was appointed and qualified as his administratrix, and had so acted for more than six months, when the appellants, C. B. Spicer and Dr. H. K. Buttermore, filed their joint suit on October 19, 1934, in the Harlan circuit court against her personally, and as administratrix of the estate, and the aforesaid heirs at law to settle the deceased’s estate and to further therein collect certain named indebtedness which they alleged was owing each of them by it.

Further the petition alleged that the deceased had left no personal estate, save what had been set aside to the widow as exempt to her, but that he had died the owner and in the possession of a certain 47-acre tract of land and also of a half interest in another or second tract (the acreage of which was not stated), situated in Harlan county, which were together of the market value of from $1,500 to $2,000, and in both of which the widow was entitled to an allotment of dower.

Further plaintiff Spicer, who acted as attorney in bringing the action, stated that the estate was indebted to him in the sum of $100, as his contract fee had with deceased for defending his title to one of these tracts and foreclosing a mortgage thereon, and by reason of which service he asserted he was entitled to a lien thereon, as provided by section 107, Ky. Statutes.

Further the coplaintiff, Dr. Buttermore, alleged that the estate was indebted to him in the sum of $300 for medical services rendered and money loaned the deceased. *

Wherefore, they prayed judgment for a settlement of the estate, for C. B. Spicer and Dr. H. K. Butter-more $100 and $300 respectively, with interest, and for a sale of the property described in the petition to satisfy their debt, interest, and costs.

This petition was verified and upon it summons was issued upon the defendants, all of whom were duly served.

*671 At the 1935 February term of court, M. F. Hall, a regular practicing attorney, was appointed guardian ad litem for the infant defendants, who at the March term filed his report as such, in which he made no defense on behalf of the infants, but only asked that the court render sueh judgment as the pleadings and proof might warrant.

The cause was thereupon submitted, when, no defense being made, Spicer was adjudged to have the lien claimed for his attorney’s fee upon the land of the deceased and, further, that the plaintiffs recover against the defendants the amount of their debts as sued for, with interest, and that the whole or both tracts of said property, or so much thereof as necessary to satisfy the claims of the plaintiffs, together with interests- and costs, be sold by the master commissioner.

Pursuant to such direction of the judgment, the commissioner advertised for sale, and sold, the whole of the said property, of which he made report at the following May term, showing that the entire two tracts had been bid in by plaintiffs for the amount of their judgment debts.

The report of sale having laid over the required time without exceptions filed thereto, it was confirmed and a deed ordered made by the commissioner to the plaintiff purchasers for these two tracts.

Thereafter, the administratrix finding herself and her children divested and deprived by the court’s judgment of all her and her children’s right and interest in the estate’s two tracts of land, alleged in the petition to be worth some $1,500 to $2,000, she then employed the present counsel to take such steps as he could in the case to set aside this complained of default judgment and the alleged improper orders of the court confirming the sale and ordering deed executed.

Thereupon, at the following August or second term of the court after rendition of judgment, and within the first three days thereof, motion was filed by the defendants (here appellees) to set aside the judgment and order of confirmation of sale and to cancel the deed made pursuant to it.

This motion, made upon notice given, set out therein that the grounds on which they sought to obtain such *672 relief were: (1) That while the suit was brought by-plaintiffs to settle the decedent’s estate under sections 428 to 438, Civil Code of Practice, no order of reference was asked for or had therein, as thereby required; (2) that the judgment had adjudged the whole or the entire two boundaries of the estate land sold if necessary to satisfy plaintiffs’ debts, even though it was expressly set out in the petition that the decedent owned only a one-half interest in one of them, and that the judgment was therefore a misprision; (3) that the complained of judgment was taken by default, without defense made on behalf of the infant defendants; and (4) that no proof of claim, as required by the Statutes, was made by the plaintiffs of their claims against the •estate, for which a personal judgment was rendered against all the defendants.

To this motion appellants entered their appearance, resisting the setting aside of the judgment as was asked or sought by the motion, and filed responsive opposing briefs, contesting upon the merits defendants’ right to the relief sought by the motion.

Upon submission of the motion for judgment, the court, after hearing argument of counsel and duly considering their briefs, adjudged that the judgment and the complained of orders, confirming the sale and directing a deed made, be all set aside, upon the several grounds urged and argued in the motion, which are: (1) That proof of the claims sued on was not made, as by the law required; (2) that no defense on behalf of the infant defendants was made to the action, their guardian ad litem being satisfied with simply filing a formal report and permitting a default judgment to go against them; (3) that the judgment was in error in directing a sale of the entire two tracts of land, if necessary to satisfy plaintiffs’ debts, in that their petition, seeking a settlement of the estate, had expressly alleged that the estate owned only a half interest in one •of the tracts but that, notwithstanding this, the master commissioner had sold and conveyed the whole of the two tracts to the plaintiffs; and (4) that while the petition had alleged that the land sought to be sold was worth from $1,500 to $2,000, it had been sold away from these infants to satisfy the plaintiffs’ debts, amounting to but a small fraction of the value of the lands or some $400. For these reasons and guided by *673 such considerations, the lower court sustained the motion, stating that “equity and justice” imperatively demanded that it be sustained.

The appellants, dissatisfied with such ruling of the court upon the motion, have appealed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
103 S.W.2d 68, 267 Ky. 669, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 363, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buttermore-v-hensley-kyctapphigh-1937.