Daniels v. Goff

232 S.W. 66, 192 Ky. 15, 1921 Ky. LEXIS 11
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJune 14, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 232 S.W. 66 (Daniels v. Goff) 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
Daniels v. Goff, 232 S.W. 66, 192 Ky. 15, 1921 Ky. LEXIS 11 (Ky. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Turner, Commissioner—

Affirming’ oil original and cross appeals.

These two appeals involve practically identical questions and were consolidated and heard together in the lower court, although separate judgments were entered, and they will be heard together here.

Appellant Mary Daniels is the wife of J. P. Daniels, and appellant David Daniels is the son of J. P. and Mary Daniels.-

In August, 1918, appellee Goff recovered in the Pike circuit court a judgment for costs against J. P. Daniels in an action which Daniels had instituted in October, 1916, contesting the right of Goff to the- office -of school trustee.

The execution was levied on two tracts of land in Pike county as the property of J. P. Daniels, and they were sold under the 'execution and Goff became the purchaser.

These are two equitable actions, one by Mary Daniels against Goff and the sheriff, seeking to set aside the sale and to enjoin the sheriff from making’ a deed to Goff thereunder, upon the ground that she- and not J. P. Daniels was the owner of one of the tracts of land in question at the time of the levy and sale.

[17]*17The action of David Daniels seeks similar relief against the same parties for the same reason as to the other tract of land levied on and sold.

The answer and counterclaim of Goff asserted title under the execution sale to each tract, and attacked as fraudulent, voluntary and without consideration the conveyances under which each of the plaintiffs claimed title from J. P. Daniels.

Upon a trial in the circuit court the chancellor set aside the sheriff’s execution sale as to each of the tracts of land involved, hut adjudged to Goff a lien on each of them for the amount of his said execution, and adjudged an enforcement of the same. To that judgment the plaintiffs each excepted and prayed an appeal, and the defendant Goff likewise excepted and prayed an appeal, and the appellants having filed their transcript in this court, appellee Goff has prayed and been granted a cross appeal.

On the 9th of February, 1898, Chaney and wife and others conveyed to J. P. Daniels and Mary Daniels, his wife, jointly a tract of land on the waters of Upper Cloe creek in Pike county, which is the tract of land involved on the Mary Daniels appeal. The title to this property so remained in them jointly until the third day of January, 1916, at which time J. P. Daniels is alleged to have conveyed his interest in the same to appellant Mary Daniels, his wife, in consideration of her interest in her father’s estate and her interest in the Gilmore Justice tract of land. That instrument bears date the third day of January, 1916, and the certificate of acknowledgment bears the same date. But the acknowledgment was taken by G. C. Daniels, another son of J. P. and Mary Daniels, the said G. C. at the time being a deputy county court clerk; but the said deed was not lodged for record until the first day of October, 1917.

As to the tract claimed by David Daniels, it appears that on the 14th of May, 1917, Nannie Hunter and her husband conveyed the same to J. P. Daniels in consideration of $150 cash in hand paid, and thereafter on the first day of June, 1917, J. P. Daniels and his wife conveyed the same tract of land to David Daniels, then an infant, in consideration of the sum of $150 cash in hand paid; and this latter deed was lodged for record on the 27th of September, 1917'.

The'facts out of which the judgment for costs against Daniels grew were these: at the August election, 1916, Goff and Daniels were opposing candidates for school [18]*18trustee in a sub-district in Pike county; Goff appeared the winner on the face of the returns and received the certificate. Daniels, however, in October, 1916, filed his action contesting the election of Goff, and after full preparation that action iwas tried in the Pike circuit court in March, 1917, and it was therein adjudged that the whole election was invalid because of fraud, intimidation and violence, and each party was adjudged, to pay his own costs. Prom that judgment Goff prosecuted an appeal to this court, and in June, 1918, that judgment was reversed, with directions to enter a judgment adjudging Goff to have been elected (Goff v. Daniels, 181 Ky. 18), and upon a return to the Pike circuit court it. was so adjudged.

So that it will be seen that long before his conveyance to David Daniels on the first of June, 1917, and the lodging of the same for record on the 27th of September, 1917, and long before his deed to his wife, dated January 3, 1916, was lodged for record on the first of October, 1917, J. P. Daniels had instituted his contest suit against Goff and had thereby become liable to Goff in the event of the latter’s success for such costs as he might therein incur; in other words, when he instituted his action he was the title holder on the record of a one-half, undivided interest in the tract of land conveyed to him and his wife jointly, and during the pendency of his action he became the title holder of the other tract of land, which during its pendency he conveyed to his son David.

There is no contention by either of the plaintiffs that at the time of the two conveyances to them separately by J. P. Daniels they actually paid any consideration for the land conveyed except as hereinafter stated.

As to the Mary Daniels conveyance, the claim is that it was made to secure to her an interest in another tract of land which had been given her by her father years before.

As to the David Daniels tract, the claim is that his father in .the first place bought the land for him, although he was at the time an infant, and paid the whole purchase price of $150 with the understanding that a cow which he, David, owned should be taken into the deal as a $50 cash payment, and that his father would convey the land to him upon the payment to him of the remaining $100.

The cow appears to have been raised on J. P. Daniels’ farm and claimed by the infant David, but there is no satisfactory evidence that in truth and in fact the title to the [19]*19cow was in David; and so far as the $100 subsequent payment claimed to have been made by David to his father is concerned his evidence is that he paid it in timber which came off of the land in controversy. That is to say, he paid his father for his father’s land by money received from the sale of his father’s timber.

It is sufficient to say of each of these claims .that the evidence that J. P. Daniels in either instance was holding the tract of land in trust falls far short of being satisfactory, and is most convincing that they were each voluntary conveyances by him and made without consideration.

Ky. Stats., section 1907, provides: “Every gift, conveyance, assignment, transfer or charge made by a debtor of or upon any of his estate, without valuable consideration therefor, shall be void as to all his then existing liabilities. . . ”

And it is provided in section 496, Ky. Stats., that no deed or deed of trust or mortgage conveying title to real estate shall be valid as against creditors “until such deeds shall be acknowledged or proved according to law, and lodged for record.”

It will be seen, therefore, that at the time these two deeds were lodged for record the contest suit instituted by J. P.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
232 S.W. 66, 192 Ky. 15, 1921 Ky. LEXIS 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daniels-v-goff-kyctapp-1921.