Craig v. Penick

26 Ky. 16, 3 J.J. Marsh. 16, 1829 Ky. LEXIS 163
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 16, 1829
StatusPublished

This text of 26 Ky. 16 (Craig v. Penick) 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
Craig v. Penick, 26 Ky. 16, 3 J.J. Marsh. 16, 1829 Ky. LEXIS 163 (Ky. Ct. App. 1829).

Opinion

Judge Umderwood

delivered the opinion of the'Court.

TheRE are, in this record of 360 pages, few questions of law. The facts* so far as necessary [17]*17io bo stilted, are these. Lewis Craig having contracted fora parcel of land, called Kennedy’s bounty,, and having procured, by compromise, an interest in an entry and grant in the name of Evans, covering, the same land under the conveyances made to him, regarded himself, and seems to have been regarded by some others, as possessed of the legal title; for deeds were accepted from him under that belief. It, however, turned out, that owing to defects in the conveyances, this was not the case. Bagby, &c. hieing possessed of u part of the land claimed bv Craig, and holding, in virtue of an elder, adverse patent; Craig instituted a suit in 'chancery against them, for the purpose of asserting a superior equitable right, and to compel them to relinquish the legal title.

During the progress of this suit, John and Whitfield, sons of Lewis Craig, petitioned- and were admitted as parties and co-complainants with their father. The reasons stated for this proceeding were, that said John and Whitfield, as sureties for said Lewis, to secure the payment of the purchase money for the land called Kennedy’s bounty, had been compelled to pay “the same, or a great .portion;''’ that Lewis Craig, while he believed he held the legal title, had conveyed the land to them, to “make them safe as to such securityship, and various other moneys paid by them for him;” that discovering his, L. Craig’s title to be defective, he had caused others to convey to his sons, with a view to perfect the title in them, and therefore, said John and Whitfield were made parties, to take the title in case it should be recovered of the defendants.

The complainants in this suit did succeed, and by it, John and Whitfield Craig recovered from the defendants 723 acres, by a decree of the Nicholas circuit court, rendered in June, 1813. On the 5th of January, 1807, before Lewis Craig had made any conveyance of his title to his sons, he and Vincent Calvin executed an obligation to William Penick, the complainant in the circuit court, for the conveyance of 50 acres of land. On the 17th July, 1815, John Craig sold to William Penick his undivided moiety ‘ [18]*18of the lf\nd recovered by him and Whitfield Craigs by the decree of the Nicholas circuit court, at twelve dollars per acre. It was, however, stipulated that the quantity of Penick’s purchase from John Craig, should not exceed 228 acres. The amount to be paid lor the SO acres, sold by Calvin and Lewis Craig, to Penick, was six dollars per acre or $>300, of which ‡100 had been paid to said Lewis, $100 to John Craig,and ‡100 remained unpaid; and this, by an agreement filed, signed by John Craig, Whitfield Craig and Wrn. Penick, was stated to be “coming to Whitfield Craig.?’ The agreement bears date 22d. February, 1826, and is made evidence in the causes

By an agreement of the same date, between John Craig and Penick, it is admitted that Penick had paid $1,986, on account of his purchase from John Craig.

In 1819, Penick filed his bill against the Craigs, fbr the purpose of procuring a title for the 50 acres Sold him by Lewis Craig and Calvin, and for the tnoiety sold him by John Craig, and also to have a division of the land between himself, as John Craig’s vendee, and Whitfield Craig, the owner of the other inoiety. Whitfield Craig resisted a conveyance of the 50 acres, upon the ground that the equity which he had and derived from his father, was older and paramount to that relied on by the complainant. In support of the equity thus asserted, he exhibits a contract of his father’s, dated 5th November, 1804, stipulating to convey 3930 acres, (Kennedy’s bounty) to his sureties, Tureman, Chiles and his sons John and Whitfield Craig, in case he failed to pay the pur-5 chase money, and they had to pay it. The purchase amounted to £1,000, and the evidence conduces to uhow that it was all paid by the sureties, and that Tureman and Chiles were indemnified by John and 'Whitfield Craig.' Other sums are spoken of as having been paid by John and Whitfield Craig, for their father, but how much, and for what, does not appear.

Supposing Whitfield paid half the £1,000 and interest, ana John paid the other half, we do not hesitate, from the testimony, to say that they were amply indemnified by the land conveyed to them, without tdkingthe 50 actfes sold by their father and [19]*19Calvin to Penick, for that purpose. The pvoof is, that the land, as far back as 1808,. was wo'rth from six to ten dollars per acre, taking the whole 3,930 acres, estimating the title to be good; and that in 1822, it was worth from fifteen to twenty dollar's per acre; The title must be taken to be good, at least to the extent of the 723 acres recovered, and from the fact that Craig’s claim succeeded against an elder patent, we think it fair to presume that much of the land/not litigated in that'controversy, will be secured. But if it should not be, the indemnity is still* ample, for we cannot regard any sums which John and Whitfield-, Craig may have paid for their father, except the á¿l,0Ó0 above, no other appearing to have been paid-by the proof. It satisfactorily results, from these facts, that Penick should be protected in his right to the 50 acres, the object of Lewis Craig’s contract of 1804, in behalf of his sureties, being fulfilled, without requiring this 50 acres to do it, and the sale of this 50 acres having been made to Penick, before John and Whitfield Craig had any title. We perceive no error, therefore, in the decree of the circuit court, in directing a conveyance of these 50 acres to the complainant, Penick.'

Person entitled to money and resisting reception thereof, has no right to interest thereon.

Nor is there any error in the decree, in respect to the responsibility to be imposed on Whitfield Craig, by the conveyance required of him, or in the failure to decree interest on the $100 directed to be paid said Whitfield. By the agreement already noticed, Whitfield Craig assented to receive the remaining $100 due for this 50 acres. We presume it was understood that this part of the agreement depended upon whether the court should decree a conveyance of the title by John and Whitfield Craig, to the complainant. The court having so decreed, it was proper to direct the payment of the $100 to Whitfield Craig, and that the conveyance should be made on the payment of the money, without interest, for it would seem that $100, at the date , of the'agreement in 1826, was all that was claimed, ahd the court pro:-perly remark in their decree, as a reason for not allowing interest,, that Whitfield Craig resisted the reception of the money. Whitfield Craig, having assented to receive the $100-in case the decree di[20]*20reeled him to conve3r, for the stipulation in the agree-nient, that it was “corning to him,” surely means he will take it also, and having so far placed himself in his father’s shoes, ought, likewise, to return the monejr in case the land was lost, or taken by a paramount claim. Coming in under his father, to get the money', he ought not to be let in to receive, without taking Upon himself the same obligation to return it, which his father was under. The decree imposes no more,, upon him, than a liability to refund at the rate of six dollars per acre, to the amount of §100, and he is not liable for more than the §100, in case all the 50 acres should be taken by a paramount claim.

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Bluebook (online)
26 Ky. 16, 3 J.J. Marsh. 16, 1829 Ky. LEXIS 163, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/craig-v-penick-kyctapp-1829.