Clay v. Clay

60 Ky. 548, 3 Met. 548, 1861 Ky. LEXIS 43
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 27, 1861
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 60 Ky. 548 (Clay v. Clay) 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
Clay v. Clay, 60 Ky. 548, 3 Met. 548, 1861 Ky. LEXIS 43 (Ky. Ct. App. 1861).

Opinion

JUDGE DUVALL

delivered the opinion op the court:

. Sidney P. Clay died in the year 1834, leaving a will containing the following provisions :

“I appoint my wife, Isabella, personal guardian of all.my children in conjunction with Brutus J. Clay, or, in case of his-refusal, some other fit person to be appointed by the court, who shall manage the pecuniary affairs of their estate, and shall pay over to my wife, Isabella, according to her order, the profits of each one’s estate, to be laid out by her at her discretion, for the support and education of each one respectively, and no part of each child’s estate shall be paid to her or him without my wife’s consent, until they arrive at the age of twenty-one, provided she remains my widow ; but should she marry again, then all the powers vested in her by this clause of my will shall cease, and the guardian of the pecuniary interest of my children shall exercise all the powers vested in her.” By a subsequent clause, the testator appointed his wife, Isabella, and Brutus J. Clay executrix and executor, who were not tobe required to give security.

[550]*550The will was admitted to record by the Bourbon county court in September, 1834; and although both the executrix and executor qualified, it appears from the record that the chief, if not the exclusive, control and management of the estate was assumed by the latter, as executor and testamentary guardian —the widow having married prior to the year 1838. The precise date of her marriage is not shown.

Green Clay, one of the children of Sidney P. Clay, arrived at the age of twenty-one years in December, 1854, and on the 5th of January following, upon a final settlement with B. J. Clay, as his guardian, executed to the latter a receipt for $6,-209, in full of all claims, dues and demands against his said guardian.

He afterwards brought this action, setting out, in his original petition, the foregoing facts, and alleging that he made the settlement with his guardian in ignorance of his rights ; that the defendant, in the. settlement of his accounts as executor and as guardian, with the county commissioners, made in May, 18i8, had been allowed a credit for $1,500 which had been loaned to A. C. Scott in April, 1836, by the defendant, and which sum was lost by said Scott’s failure to pay. The credit complained of is for $2,286 25, being the aggregate amount of the loan and interest up to the date of the settlement. It is furthermore alleged, that this money was loaned at a usurious interest of ten or twelve per cent.; that no security was taken for the debt; that the defendant took the note of Scott payable to himself in his individual right, and not as a fiduciary; that the original note was several times renewed, and each time in the same way; that the plaintiff was very young at the time of the settlement and allowance complained of, and that he had no knowledge of this improper credit until after his final settlement, and the execution of his receipt to his guardian.

In an amended petition the several settlements made by the guardian are assailed upon the ground: First. That he was charged with current interest only, on the funds in his hands, from the year 1836, up to the 1st January, 1845, instead of being charged with interest compounded every two years ; and, [551]*551Secondly. That the allowance to the guardian for his services was exorbitant.

The defendant, in his answer, admits that in one of the numerous settlements of his accounts as executor and guardian he was allowed a credit on account of the debt due from Scott, and which he had been unable to collect. He says that he sold to Scott a lot of cattle belonging to himself, and having at the time some money in his hands as executor of S. P. Clay, he loaned $1,500 of it to Scott, and took two several notes for the two debts thus created, but does not recollect whether the note for the loaned money was executed to him as executor, “though he is inclined to believe it.” That he did not require security for either debt, relying on the large property of Scott, and his high character at the time for solvency and punctuality; that afterwards Scott paid the defendant a part of his own debt, and for the residue of it, together with the debt for the loaned money, he took Scott’s note without security, payable to himself personally, and not as executor ; that “there was no usury in this last or in the previous notes ;” and that some time afterwards Scott failed in business, became insolvent, and left the country, in consequence of which the debt was lost. He also relies upon the receipt executed by the plaintiff, and denies that the latter was at the time ignorant of the facts and circumstances attending the credit which had been allowed on account of the Scott debt.

On the final hearing the court below dismissed the petition, and the plaintiff has appealed.

The questions presented by the record are:

1. What effect is to be given to the receipt relied on by the appellee ?

2. Has the appellee so discharged the duties of his trust as to render himself liable to the appellant ?

3. If so, to what extent is he liable ?

First. The receipt appears to have been executed by the appellant within less than a month after he had attained full age. He was the nephew of his guardian, and, as we are authorized to infer, reposed the utmost confidence in his integrity and judgment. He had resided with his mother in a distant coun[552]*552ty, and in his answer to the interrogatories propounded by the appellee, which answer has, by law, the effect of a deposition, he says he had never heard of the transaction with Scott, or of the loss resulting from it, until after his final settlement with, and receipt to, his guardian. The truth of this statement is confirmed by the testimony of his. brother.

Courts of equity will never give to a receipt executed under such circumstances the effect of a conclusive bar to a re-examination of the accounts of a trustee.

If a receipt between parties standing in no relation of trust or confidence may be explained, varied, or contradicted by parol evidence, there is an obvious reason for giving even less effect to a receipt executed by a ward to his guardian, and especially in a case Where the minority of the ward has but recently ceased, and where, for that reason, the relation wall be considered as still having an undue influence on the mind of the ward. This is the well settled doctrine.

It is therefore clear that the execution of the receipt in question, under the circumstances stated, constituted no obstacle to the relief sought in the action.

2. The liability of the appellee for the fifteen hundred dollars is, we think, very clearly maintainable, upon two grounds: In the first place the facts in the record present a case of the intermingling of the trust fund, by the trustee, with his own funds in the prosecution of his own business. This is evident, even on the face of the pleadings, the substance of which has been already stated. The appellee is unwilling to say positively that the original note of Scott for the $1,500 was made payable to him in his fiduciary character. “He is inclined to believe” that it was.

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Bluebook (online)
60 Ky. 548, 3 Met. 548, 1861 Ky. LEXIS 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clay-v-clay-kyctapp-1861.