Chenault v. Bush

2 S.W. 160, 84 Ky. 528, 1886 Ky. LEXIS 99
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 7, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 2 S.W. 160 (Chenault v. Bush) 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
Chenault v. Bush, 2 S.W. 160, 84 Ky. 528, 1886 Ky. LEXIS 99 (Ky. Ct. App. 1886).

Opinion

JUDGE BENNETT

delivered the opinion oe the court.

On tlie 18th. of December, 1882, J. Gh Williams and W. D. Stevenson, as partners, trading under the firm name of Williams & Stevenson, sold to the appellee, V. W. Bush, several pieces of property. Appellee executed to the said firm several notes for said pieces of property, due and payable at short intervals of time. Among the property thus bought were four mules, four sets of harness, one log wagon and chains, at the price of $590, for which appellee executed his note, due and payable thirteen days after date. Shortly after this, transaction, and before the maturity of any of said notes, Williams & Stevenson, both as a firm and as individuals, made a deed of assignment of all of their' property, in trust for the benefit of their creditors. The assignees accepted the trust, and brought suit to the February term of the Clark county Common Pleas. Court, for the purpose of settling the said estate, and distributing the proceeds among the creditors of the assignors. At said term of court the appellant was appointed receiver to collect all accounts, notes and choses in action due the firm of Williams & Stevenson. On the 7th of March, 1883, the appellant, as receiver, brought suit in the Montgomery Circuit Court against the appellee, in which he sought to recover judgment on the above mentioned notes.

[531]*531The appellee contested the appellant’s right to recover on the note of §590 upon the ground of a failure of consideration, which consisted in the fact that, at the time of the purchase of said mules, harness, etc., the sheriff of Montgomery county held in his hands an execution, which was alive and in full force, in favor of R. C. Robinson and against the firm of Williams & Stevenson, which execution created a lien on said mules, harness, etc., they being at the time in Montgomery county, prior and superior to the right of appellee as purchaser of said property ; and that said prior and superior lien, by virtue of said execution, was enforced by the levy, seizure and sale of said property to satisfy said execution lien.

The execution, having been issued.from a circuit court, created a lien, as soon as it came to the hands of the sheriff of Montgomery county, upon all of the property subject to execution in said county belonging to Williams & Stevenson, which lien was superior to the appellee’s after acquired right to said property by purchase from Williams & Stevenson. The proof is clear that, at the time of appellant’s purchase of property, it was in Montgomery county, and that said execution was in the hands of said sheriff, alive and in full force, and that the property was, after the purchase, levied on and sold to satisfy said execution. The lower court, therefore, sustained the plea of a failure of consideration, and relieved the appellee from the payment of said note. In this the court did right.

The appellee pleaded a set-off of six thousand dollars against the other notes sued on by appellant. Issue was joined on this plea.

[532]*532The proof shows that the firm of Williams & Stevenson, as a firm, entered into partnership with appellee under the firm name of J. Gr. Williams & Co., for the purpose of buying walnut lumber, the firm of Williams & Stevenson representing one-lialf interest and the appellee the other half interest; that they purchased a large lot of walnut lumber from one Davis; that, for the purpose of taking the notes which they had executed for the price of said lumber, they, on the 5th of October, 1882, executed to the Clark County National Bank a note, due and payable four months after date, for $12,353.75, which note was signed by the firm of Williams & Stevenson, by J. Gf. Williams, and the appellee ; that on the 24th of February, 1883, the appellee, with his own money, paid off said note in full, and took an assignment of it from the bank to himself. The foregoing facts are clearly established by the proof as it appears in the record before us. The sum pleaded as a set-off by appellee consists of one-half of the amount he paid in taking up said note.

The note, at the time of the assignment by Williams & Stevenson, was not due, nor was it paid off by appel: lee until after said assignment and the acceptance of the trust by the assignees, but was paid off before the appellant, as receiver, instituted suit against appellee on the notes executed by him to Williams & Stevenson. The appellant contends that, as Williams & Stevenson, at the time of their assignment for the benefit of creditors, were not indebted to appellee on account of their joint liability with him. on said note to the bank as co-principals, his subsequent payment of said liability in full, and with his own money, was not an available set-[533]*533off, either at law or in equity, of one-half of the amount so paid, against the notes sued on by appellant, because said Williams & Stevenson only became indebted to appellee for one-half of said liability from the time he paid it to the bank; and at the time of said payment, the title to said notes had passed to their assignees in trust for the benefit of their creditors.

The appellant, in support of this view, cites several cases, among which is Walker v. McKay, 2 Met., 294. The facts of that case were, that Caroline Walker held a note on J. B. Walker, which, being due, she assigned to McKay for value. J. B. Walker was immediately notified of the assignment. He was subsequently compelled to pay a note on which he was bound as the surety of Caroline Walker. She was insolvent not only at the time of the assignment, but also at the periods when both notes were executed. J. B.' Walker pleaded the sum so paid as a set-off against the note assigned by Caroline Walker to McKay. The question actually decided by the court in that case was, that as McKay was an assignee of the note on J. B. Walker for value, and as J. B. Walker had notice thereof, and had not paid the note on which he was bound as the surety of Caroline Walker at the time of the assignment and notice, he could not plead the amount subsequently paid in discharge of said note as a set-off against the note given by him to Caroline Walker in the hands of her assignee for value. The other cases cited by counsel for appellant decide the same principle. The arguments adduced in' support of the principle, it is true, mean something more, but by them we are not bound. But these cases [534]*534do not meet the question here. The question here is, where one insolvent co-obligor makes an assignment of his property and assets for the benefit of his creditors, and among the assets assigned is a note on his co-obligor, can that co-obligor who, after the assignment, has paid a debt for which, as between themselves, they were equally bound as co-obligors before the assignment, plead his co-obligor’s aliquot part of said debt as an offset against his individual debt in the hands of the assignee?

To determine the question it is important to ascertain the relation in which co-obligors stand to each other.

We understand that co-obligors at law are liable to each other for contribution upon' the principle of implied contract; that is, as soon as they enter into a joint undertaking, the law implies a promise of each to each that he will do what he is bound in natural justice and equity to do; that is, pay to the other any sum that he may pay on account of the joint undertaking over and above his proportion.

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Bluebook (online)
2 S.W. 160, 84 Ky. 528, 1886 Ky. LEXIS 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chenault-v-bush-kyctapp-1886.