Bybee v. Tharp

43 Ky. 313, 4 B. Mon. 313, 1843 Ky. LEXIS 140
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 24, 1843
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 43 Ky. 313 (Bybee v. Tharp) 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
Bybee v. Tharp, 43 Ky. 313, 4 B. Mon. 313, 1843 Ky. LEXIS 140 (Ky. Ct. App. 1843).

Opinion

Judge Marshall

delivered the .opinion of the Court.

This writ of error is prosecuted to reverse a decree for $5506 71, rendered against Bybee and others, his sureties in bond for the performance of his duties as guardian of Mrs. Tharp, formerly Sarah Anne Roane, and a decree over for the same sum, in favor of two of said sureties against Adair and Bridges, who had entered into a covenant to indemnify them against their said suretyship, in consideration of their releasing a mortgage which Bybee had executed to them for the same purpose.

It seems that in 1822., Bybee intermarried with Mrs. Roane, the mother of Sarah Anne, and in January, 1823, was appointed guardian of the latter, then about seven years of age; that by the end of that year, in virtue of his marriage and guardianship, he became possessed of a large number of slaves, of both sexes and of all ages and descriptions, which had b,een conveyed, in trust, for the [314]*314benefit of his wife and ward, by the former husband of Mrs. Bybee, and also of the notes taken and money received by the Trustee, for the hire of the year 1823, and also, about the same time, of three slaves, a bed and a horse, bequeathed to his ward by her aunt; and that on his marriage he took possession of the household furniture in the house of his wife, which is now alledged to have been covered by the deed of trust. The ward continued to live in the house with her step-father and guardian until her marriage, in July, 1833, with A. W. Trap-nail. The slaves also, with few exceptions, remained in Bybee’s possession until after that time, many of them having been employed by him in a bagging factory, from the year 1825 or 1826. There was no division of the slaves until 1827, when a suit in Chancery, brought to set aside the deed of trust, by Bybee and wife, the latter of whom claimed the slaves under a will of her deceased husband, was decided against them.

It further appears, that during the period of more than ten years, that the ward lived with her step-father, the mutual affection and confidence commonly belonging to the relation of parent and child was strongly felt and displayed between them; that Bybee took great pains to give to his ward the mental and personal accomplishments befitting her fortune and family; that he devoted his own time and attention to her education; employed private teachers, and occasionally, though but for a short period, sent her to distant schools; that the. ward, as she grew to womanhood, displayed talents and great susceptibility of improvement, with a disposition wayward, but liberal, generous and leading to extravagance, which it was difficult, if not impossible absolutely to restrain, without a rupture, and without injury to the ward and offence to her family, and which was indulged by her guardian to an extent beyond the limits of prudence.

In March, 1833, Bybee having never, until that time, made report to the County Court, of the estate of his ward, and having neglected to kegp an account of its management or of her expenses, (in neglecting which duties he was guilty of an unpardonable and most dangerous fault,) made a settlement of his accounts as guar[315]*315dian, with four Commissioners, appointed for the purpose by the County Court, and which was intended to cover all his transactions in that character, from the time of his appointment up to the 1st of January, 1833. The Commissioners had resided, during that period, in the same town, or its immediate vicinity, in which Bybee and his ward had lived ; they had a general knowledge of the slaves of the ward, and of the value of hire in that neighborhood, and upon this knowledge and the information of Bybee as to age, capacity and other circumstances affecting the charge, they charged him what they considered to be a reasonable annual hire for the slaves, making allowance for the care of suchas were unable to maintain themselves. They knew also the manner in which the ward had been treated in the house of her guardian and her mother; how she had been educated, and how she had appeared in society, and upon this knowledge they estimated the reasonable expense of her maintenance and education for the first four or five years, and for the residue of the time, allowed such additional accounts of articles purchased by and for her, as she then, an intelligent young lady of 17 or 18 years of age, indorsed as being correct. They allowed also the half of certain payments made by Bybee, of debts affecting jointly his own and bis ward’s estate, and also travelling expenses incurred about her education or in her visiting, and one half of travelling expenses and other costs incurred about the defence of suits affecting equally the estate of both. The account made up in this manner, and of which the basis is stated in their report, exhibits a balance in favor of Bybee of $1699 94, all of which, except $524 50, alledged to be the actual expenditure of money on account of the ward’s estate, the report says he released, on condition that no attempt should be thereafter made “to repress that account and seek a settlement of the same upon technical rather than liberal and just principles.” And the report expresses the opinion of the Commissioners, as founded on their personal observation of the liberal manner in which the ward was supplied, that in relying upon estimates for the earlier part [316]*316of the account, they have rather fallen short of tíre fact than exceeded it.

The 6'bjeet ,óf complainant’s bill. Thedeleneg.relied on.

On the 4th of July following this settlement, which was approved by the Court, Sarah Anno Roane was married to A. W. Trapnall, then about twenty-three years of age, a young lawyer of intelligence and capacity, who had been raised and had lived, until a few month's before; in the immediate vicinity of Bybee, and having, as may be presumed, a general knowledge of the habits of the Wald, and of the indulgence extended to her, and also of the condition and quality of her estate. He, some short time after his marriage, examined the settlement at the office in which it was recorded, obtained a copy of it; and upon such consideration and inquiry as he deemed satisfactory, and doubtless upon consultation with his wife and a communication of all facts within her knowledge, and after stating to one witness that he had examined the subject and was satisfied, acknowledged, in the office of the same Clerk, and deposited for record therein,a writing, under his hand and seal, importing, that having examined the settlement of accounts, (which is particularly described,) he admitted said account as completely satisfactory. This instrument bears date on the 14th of August, 1833; about the same time Trapnall executed a deed of trust, conveying all the slaves, with one or two exceptions, to Bybee and another, in trust, for the wife of the grantor, and in a year or two after died.

In 1837, the widow of Trapnall having intermarried with Tharp, who afterwards took administration on the estate of Trapnall, this bill was filed by them to impeach the settlement and have a re-settlement of the account. They charge that the settlement was unfair; that many items were omitted with which Bybee should have been charged; that the hire charged against him was too little, and the credits allowed too great, and many of them unfounded.

The defendants relied upon the various circumstances which have been stated, and particularly upon the effect of the instrument executed by

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Related

Ward's Committee v. Kimbel
1 S.W.2d 952 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1928)
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8 Ky. Op. 553 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1875)

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Bluebook (online)
43 Ky. 313, 4 B. Mon. 313, 1843 Ky. LEXIS 140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bybee-v-tharp-kyctapp-1843.