Craig v. Wiley's Administrator

218 S.W. 450, 186 Ky. 752, 1920 Ky. LEXIS 45
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 16, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 218 S.W. 450 (Craig v. Wiley's Administrator) 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. Wiley's Administrator, 218 S.W. 450, 186 Ky. 752, 1920 Ky. LEXIS 45 (Ky. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

William Rogers Clay, Commissioner —

Reversing.

On May 8, 1895, E. O. Reid & Son sold to H. L. Wiley a stock of merchandise at Arlington for the sum of $7,994.22. For the purchase price Wiley executed to Reid & Son four promissory notes, one for $1,920.81 due September 1, 1895, one for $1,920.81 due December 1, 1895, one for $2,074.47 due in one year, and the last for $2,228.13 due in two years. The four notes were secured [753]*753by a mortgage on the stock of goods and also on several houses and lots. The first two notes were paid and cancelled. In order to secure the last two notes Wiley, on January 6, 1896, executed another mortgage on a lot of land, the mortgage stating that there was then due on the last two notes the sum of $3,183.85. E. O. Reid died in September, 1899. Wiley died in 1911. On May 1, 1912, E. E. Reid, the surviving member of E. O. Reid & Son, brought suit against H. L. Wiley’s administrator and others to recover the balance due on the $2,074.47 and the $2,228.13 notes and to enforce the mortgage lien by which the notes were secured. The defendants pleaded payment, limitation and other defenses. During the pendency of the action E. E.. Reid died, and the action was revived in the name of Daisy Ellen Reid Craig, the executrix and sole devisee of E. E. Reid. The case was referred to a special commissioner, who reported that the notes sued on had been paid and that there was a balance due from Reid & Son to Wiley. On final submission the exceptions to the commissioner’s report were overruled and judgment rendered dismissing the petition. Plaintiff appeals.

The principal parties to the transactions involved in the action died without testifying and the evidence consists of account books, letters, receipts and other documents found in the possession of the parties. In addition to a written agreement by Wiley to keep the merchandise insured for the sum of $4,000.00, and an inventory showing the value of the goods to be $7,911.21, the material exhibits are as follows:

“For and in consideration of the note of Geo. E. Petty, for the sum of $775.00 at 8 per cent interest from date due and payable twelve months after date executed this day to E. O. Reid and the further consideration of the following lands, to-wit: (Here follows description of the various tracts of land) making a sum total of $1,280.13 figured at $2,985.00 all of which land said Geo. E. Petty agrees to convey to E. O. Reid with covenants of general warranty and in consideration of the above I have, this day sold unto' Geo. E. Petty an undivided one-half interest in a stock of merchandise consisting of fixtures, dry goods, notions, gents’ furnishing, coats, hats, caps, boots and shoes and all goods of any kind and character belonging to the stock now being run in the storehouse of H. L. Wiley in the town of Arlington, [754]*754Kentucky, said stock is to be controlled and run by E. O. Reid until the deeds to said land are received and after which time said stock is to be moved by said E. O. Reid and Geo'. E. Petty to Searcy, Arkansas, and run by them with a view to selling out the entire stock by mutual agreement on said sale and not run nor put up in Searcy with a view to continuing or keeping’ up a partnership business unless by further agreement.
“Arlington, Kentucky, this December 15th, 1896.
(Signed) E. O. Reid,
Geo. E. Petty/-’
“Deed from Geo. E. Petty and son, C. Petty .to the above described lands received dated December 17, —96, before Geo. T. Petty, J. P.
“E. O. R.”

On “stock and cash book” from October 26, 1896, kept by H, L. Wiley, appears the following item:

“Feb. 13/97. By note of date May 8/95, due May 8/97, to be delivered to Wiley as of May 8/9-7, $2,228.13.”
“March 5, 1897.
“E. O. Reid, Clinton, Ky.
‘ ‘ Sir :—
“Your letter got in this ev. will come over tomorrow or Sunday, but can see no use of me coming over there, as we will have to do whatever is done here, or by mail, proximating the note we owe to Earnest and the money you have advanced on debts of H. L. Wiley & Co. at 6,150.00 and letting the Pettie matter but 3,760.00 and putting out goods enough to make 2,000.00 additional credit on those two items would leave 300.00 or thereabouts, and. about 1,500.00 in goods to put in Car-man hands on commission, out of which the above bal. could be paid, and for your assistance, if any assistance it be, we could give note for that balance and fix it so we could meet it and you could use it making it in 2 or three installments. The Flege note & co. oh the small mortgage note, and then we have the note 2,228.00, not yet due to contend with. Figuring that the notes and acts will pay the Cairo and Mayfield notes, and if we can arrange the matters in this way and succeed in procuring credit in the market will soon pay you out. If you will let us have the shoes, % the hats and % the dry goods and dry goods notions on something after the [755]*755above plan, we can pnt yonr goods for tbe present in the back room, and keep them in showing shape or pack them in boxes after we get some new goods in to get boxes. If you are favorable to this idea write me, so that can see Gfus. What do you think of making stile of firm, Carman & Wiley, as to better than a new name entirely. We can arrange for about 500.00 cash to put in new stuff. Write me.
“Yours,
■ “H. L. Wiley.”
“This is to certify that in the transactions of H. L. Wiley and E. O. Reid under the firm name of H. L. Wiley & Co., that H. L. Wiley received all benefits from said concern and was to settle all debts, said E. O. Reid having no further interest than to get his money back and interest, and it now appears that there is one note left and due Alexander County National Bank for $400.00 due on or about January 11th, ’98, signed by H. L. Wiley & Co., which it is my duty to pay off, and if there are any other debts due by said firm of H. L. Wiley & Co., it is my duty to pay off same out of my own effects, further, in 1896, E. O. Reid took in trust the stock of goods of H. L. Wiley & Co., to further settlement and close np said business, and said E. O. Reid has disposed of said stock of merchandise and settled with me in full satisfaction for all merchandise, notes and accounts, etc., turned over to him by me, the whole of it being under my supervision all the while, the last transaction being the goods moved to Clinton, and the purchase of safe now in my storehouse at Arlington which is fully settled for and paid, Jan’y/98.
“H. L. Wiley"
“Clinton, Ky., April 11, 1899.
“H. L. Wiley.
“Dear Sir: — Enclosed find your note, which please write the word from, before the words date until paid so as to leave it clear to bear interest from date until paid. I have credited it on.the note of yours, dated May 8th, ’95, $2,074.47 dollar note, which likes about 30 dollars I reckon of paying it off. I credited stating with same liens reserved that the old note holds.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Probst v. Wigginton
281 S.W. 834 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1926)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
218 S.W. 450, 186 Ky. 752, 1920 Ky. LEXIS 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/craig-v-wileys-administrator-kyctapp-1920.