Cogar v. National Bank

152 S.W. 278, 151 Ky. 470, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 506
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 10, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 152 S.W. 278 (Cogar v. National Bank) 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
Cogar v. National Bank, 152 S.W. 278, 151 Ky. 470, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 506 (Ky. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Settle

Reversing.

Appellee being tbe holder of two matured unpaid motes, each for $500.00, against the appellant, George Cogar, a paralytic and person of unsound mind, brought this action March 30, 1910, in the court below, to subject ,to their payment two -certain parcels- of ground situated in the city of Danville, particularly described in the petition. The appellants, George Cogar, Chenault Huguely, his committee and Lydia Y. Cogar, wife of the former, were made defendants.

The title to the two parcels of ground mentioned is in the appellant, Lydia Y. Cogar. One of these lots is known as the Russell lot and was conveyed her by deed from E. B. Russell and wife executed October 1, 1894, for the recited consideration of $6,250.00; but only a small part -of the purchase price was then paid, a note being given by Mrs. Cogar for the remainder secured by a vendor’s lien. Of this note it is admitted $4,000.00 yet remains unpaid. The other lot, known as the Knott property, was by deed from J. Proctor Knott and wife conveyed Lydia Y. Cogar, April 21, 1902. The consideration expressed in the deed for this conveyance was $6,200.00 cas-h in hand paid. It was alleged in the petition that both the Russell and Knott lots were purchased by the appellant, George Cogar, and paid for by him, and that he caused them to be conveyed to his wife for the fraudulent purpose of cheating, hindering and delaying his creditors; that the two motes sued on were remnants of a debt of $10,000.00 for which George Cogar was liable •to appellee before the conveyance to his wife of either of the lots in question; and that after his wife to-ok the title to the Russell lot George C-ogar expended .of his own money in erecting buildings and making other improvements thereon n-ot less than $20,000.00, which enhanced the value to that amount; and that not less than $8,500.00 [472]*472of .the money thus applied was expended iby him on improvements made on the lot within five years of the institution of appellee’s action.

Separate answers to the petition were filed by Mrs. Cogar and the committee of George Cogar, which were later amended. The answers as amended traversed the averments of the petition, pleaded the Statute of Limitations and that of Mrs. Cogar, in addition, set up the further defense that, within five years next before the institution of appellee’s action, she, for the purpose of furnishing her husband $10,500.00 and to repay him what he had expended in improving the Russell lot, borrowed from Messrs. Farris, Quisenberry and Cheek and delivered to him, by means of a mortgage executed upon the lot, that amount, which sum was appropriated and used by the husband alone. Moreover, that, from the time of her purchase of the lot down to the institution of appellee’s action, her husband used and occupied the lot for the purpose of conducting his businessi of buying and selling hemp and grain, and that its rental value during that time was not less than $2,500.00 per year, no part of which was ever paid to or received by her; that if her lot should be charged with the value of any part of the improvements erected thereon by her husband, such charge should be credited and set off by the rental value of the Russell lot during his incumbency of it and that the rents so due her for his use of the lot exceeded in the aggregate the value of the improvements he placed thereon.

After the necessary responsive pleadings on the part of the appellee and the taking of proof in the case, the court rendered judgment dismissing the action in so far as it sought to subject to the payment of appellee’s debt the Knott lot, but holding that to the extent that George ■Cogar had enhanced the value of the Russell lot by improvements made thereon within five years next before the institution of appellee’s action, it should, by reason thereof, be subjected to the payment of appellee’s debt, which the judgment declared a lien upon the lot subject to the vendor’s lien of $4,000.00 mentioned, and the Farris, Quisenberry and 'Cheek mortgage lien of $10,500.00 and certain other liens', for the satisfaction of all of which judgment had previously been rendered in other •actions .pending in the same court.

From so much of the judgment as subjected the Russell lot to the payment of the appellee’s debt the appel[473]*473lants, Lydia V. Cogar and Iiuguely, committee of George Cogar, have appealed.

As appellee complains of the judgment of the circuit court dismissing the petition as- to the Knott lot, we deem it proper to say this, was authorized on two grounds; First, as the burden of proof was on the appellee to show that the Knott property was paid for with the money of the husband .instead of that of the wife, and there was no competent evidence tending to establish the fact, the presumption must be indulged that the purchase money for the lot was paid iby the wife as stated in the deed, and that there was no fraud in the conveyance.

In Guthrie v. Hill, 138 Ky., 181, 127 S. W. 767, we held that -since the enactment of the statute of 1894, known as the Weissinger act, the wife having the same right to own property and make money -as her husband, “It is no longer -necessary f-o-r the wife to allege affirmatively that the property which stands in her name is her separate property. The statute makes it so. All that the wife ha-s to do is to deny the allegations of the fraud. If the husband’s creditor fail to show the fraud he cannot .subject her property to the husband’s debt.” Aultman & Taylor Mch. Co. v. Walker, 124 S. W. 329. Second, -as more than five years elapsed between the date of the execution of the deed to Mrs. Cogar from Knott and wife, and that of the filing of appellee’s petition, the action was barred by the statute of limitations.

Appellee’s action is based on section 1907, Kentucky Statutes, but the action it allows is required by section 2515, Kentucky Statutes, to be brought within five years next after the cause of action accrues. It is true section 2519, Kentucky Statutes, declares that “In actions for relief for fraud or mistake, or damages for either, the cause of action shall not be deemed to have accrued until the discovery of the fraud or mistake;” but it also provides that: “No such action -shall be brought ten years after the time of making the contract or the perpetration of the fraud.”

It was neither alleged nor proved -by -appellee that it did not know of the fraud', if there was any, in the -conveyance of the Knott lot to Mrs. C-ogar at the time the deed was made or immediately following its execution.

The recording of the -deed was notice to appellee of her holding of the title-, and as that instrument acknowledged the payment by her of the consideration, if it had [474]*474any reason to ’douibt the (bona fides of the transaction, such notice, was .sufficient to put it upon inquiry as to the facts; No reason, therefore, i-s shown for appellee’s failure to bring the action within the five years next after the execution of the deed.

But aside from ,what has been said, as appellee has not taken a cross-appeal from that part of the judgment refusing to subject the Knott lot to. the payment of its debt, we are not required to review it.

The relation of the Russell lot to the case is, m some respects, upon a different footing. As appellee’s action was not brought for more than fifteen years after the execution of the deed conveying Mrs..

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Bluebook (online)
152 S.W. 278, 151 Ky. 470, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 506, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cogar-v-national-bank-kyctapp-1913.