Davis v. Carico

102 S.W.2d 8, 267 Ky. 334, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 308
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJanuary 19, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 102 S.W.2d 8 (Davis v. Carico) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davis v. Carico, 102 S.W.2d 8, 267 Ky. 334, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 308 (Ky. 1937).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court bv

Oreal, Commissioner’—

Affirming.'

W. E. Davis, a resident of Daviess county, died *335 testate in December, 1929. At tbe time of Ms death he owned in fee simple two lots in the city of Owensboro, one improved with valuable business property and the other with an apartment house. Under his will Mr. Davis gave all his personal property to his two daughters and Ms real estate to his wife for life, but the personal property was not sufficient to pay indebtedness of the estate, and E. A. Wilson, son-in-law of testator, who was executor under the will, collected and applied rents from the real estate to the payment of testator’s indebtedness.

The widow instituted this action, alleging that under the will she was entitled to the income from the real estate which had been applied to the payment of debts and asked for judgment for the sums so paid, and alleged that it would be necessary to sell one of the pieces of real estate to pay the indebtedness. She made the executor and the other beneficiaries under the will parties defendant and also made the Southern Trust Company and Lily Carico defendants, alleging that the Southern Trust Company had a mortgage on one of the pieces of real estate and that Lily Carico held a vendor’s lien note of $1,000 against the other real estate.

By answer and cross-petition Lily Carico alleged that she had two vendor’s lien notes of $1,000 each against one of the lots described in the petition. She did not file the notes with her pleading, but alleged that without fault on her part they had been lost. It appears from the record that Lily Carico and Ida Carico, her mother, conveyed one of the lots to Mr. Davis, and as a part of the consideration he executed ten notes for sums aggregating $12,000, due from one to ten years after date, respectively, the first six notes being for $1,300 each, the seventh for $1,200, and the eighth, ninth, and tenth for $1,000 each. The first four notes were paid as they fell due, and a release of the liens as to each of them was made on the margin of the deed when they were paid. On August 3, 1929, the following release was made on the margin of the deed: •

“The fifth, sixth, seventh and eighth notes mentioned herein for $1,30Q $1,300, $1,200 and $1,000 respectively having been paid and satisfied in full together with all interest thereon the lien retained to secure same is hereby released to that extent.”

*336 Before the action was instituted, Mrs. Ida Carico died, and it is alleged in the pleading of Lily Carico that she, as the only heir at law of her mother, became the sole owner of the notes. When the executor qualified, he found the fourth, sixth, seventh, eighth, and ninth notes in testator’s bank box, but the fifth note was in the possession of Lily Carico.

In an amended answer and cross-petition, Lily Carico alleged that the statement in the original answer and cross-petition that notes 9 and 10 were lost or burned was a mistake, and that only note 10 was burned, and that note 9, referred to and set out in the deed from Ida Carico and Lily Carico, to W. E. Davis, was by mistake' delivered to W. E. Davis at the time he made the last payment whereby he paid four notes aggregating $6,056, and that she delivered to W. E. Davis note 9 by mistake, when she should have delivered to him note 5, and that she did not know that note 9 had been delivered instead of note 5 until after the institution of this action, but had since discovered the mistake and had delivered to the attorney for plaintiff note 5.

On final hearing it was adjudged among other things that Lily Carico recover the sum of $2,000, “being notes No. 9 and 10 mentioned in the pleading and evidence,” with interest, etc., and it is from that portion of the judgment that the executor and the beneficiaries under the will are prosecuting this appeal.

The deposition of the executor was taken on interrogatories as if on cross-examination. He testified that note No. 9 was in Mr. Davis’’ papers at the time of his death, and to the best of his knowledge this note was transferred to John Trunnell and the principal and interest paid to him. He based his opinion on a canceled check which Mr. Davis had given to Mr. Trunnell for something over $1,000 in 1929. He further testified that Miss Carico in 1930 notified him that the interest was due on a $1,000 note remaining unpaid; that when he went to see her she told him all the notes had been paid except one; and that he owed one year’s interest on that note. He further testified that W. E. Davis before his death .told him he had paid all the Carico notes except one for $1,000. Miss Carico testified that note 5 was in her safety deposit box and, knowing it had been *337 paid, she took it to Mrs. Davis, who had it delivered to her attorney; that the tenth note was accidentally destroyed hy her mother in her presence. She testified that she never had any transaction with Mr. Trunnell in connection with the Davis notes or otherwise. She denied that she told the executor that only one of the notes remained unpaid.

The court properly sustained exceptions to all of Miss Carico’s evidence concerning her dealings or transactions with Mr. Davis, and we therefore refrain from detailing any of that evidence. Mr. Trunnell testified that he was a brother-in-law of W. E. Davis and a partner in business with him at one time; that be never saw or had in his possession a note for $1,000 or for any other amount executed by W. E. Davis to Ida Carico or Lily Carico, and that he did not know either of them. He testified that he had at one time loaned Davis $1,000 but could not recollect lending him any other sum.

Appellee took Mrs. Davis’ deposition in which, among other things, the witness stated that a few weeks before his death Mr. Davis told her he owed Miss Carico $2,000, but the court sustained exceptions to this portion of the deposition. In the appraisement of the estate of Ida Carico only one note of $1,000 against the estate of W. E. Davis was listed. Mr. Wilson, the executor, also testified that he found in the safety box of testator a writing or memorandum signed by testator to the effect that all of the Carico notes except one had been paid, but that one of the notes had not been released of record. Appellee filed exception to a portion of the deposition of R. A. Wilson, but for some reason the court failed to pass on her exception.

As grounds for reversal it is first argued in substance (1) that the presumption of law is that a note in the hands of the maker has been paid, and in support of this contention Callahan v. Bank of Kentucky, 82 Ky. 231, 233; Callahan v. First National Bank, 78 Ky. 604, 39 Am. Rep. 262, and Endicott v. Stump (Ky.) 128 S. W. 76 are cited. In the second case cited among other things it is said:

“The note upon its face imported an indebtedness of the makers to Callahan, but being in the *338 makers’ hands it did not import an obligation at all. Callahan’s indorsement on the back of the note showed that it had been in his hands, but how or for what purpose it came again into the hands of the makers did not appear. The most reasonable conclusion is, we admit, that he indorsed it for their accommodation.

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Bluebook (online)
102 S.W.2d 8, 267 Ky. 334, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 308, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-carico-kyctapphigh-1937.