Davis v. Hall

20 Ky. 23, 4 T.B. Mon. 23, 1826 Ky. LEXIS 107
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 12, 1826
StatusPublished

This text of 20 Ky. 23 (Davis v. Hall) 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
Davis v. Hall, 20 Ky. 23, 4 T.B. Mon. 23, 1826 Ky. LEXIS 107 (Ky. Ct. App. 1826).

Opinion

[23]*23Opinion of the Court by

Judge Mills.

[Absent Chief Justice Bibb.]

On the 14th November, 1811, Lamach Davis, the plaintiff in error, sold to Robert Hall, the defendant, a tract of land containing about two hundred acres, with some improvements thereon, and entered into an article of agreement setting out the contract, wherein it was stipulated, that Davis should deliver the possession of the farm to Hall, on the first day of March, 1812, except two portions, which he had previously leased to others, whose terms had not expired, and these were reserved to Davis; and to make a conveyance by deed, with general warranty, when the purchase money was paid, at which time, or before, the full possession was to be delivered.

Hall agreed to pay Davis a negro man slave in hand, at the price of five hundred dollars; also, two hundred and fifty dollars worth of property, one horse, part thereof, to be paid between the date of the article, and the next ensuing Christmas, and the residue of the two hundred and fifty dollars to be paid in horses, at their value,against the 25th day of December, 1812. And the residue of the whole price, to-wit, $1,750, might be discharged in good young negroes by the 1st day of March, 1816.

It was then further stipulated by Hall, “that if he should fail to pay the said $1,750, punctually, at the time mentioned, he was to forfeit the price of the aforesaid slave, and was to surrender, the possession of said land on the said 1st day of March, 1816, to the said Davis, who was then to re pay said Hall the two hundred and fifty dollars worth of horses, at their value.”

Hail paid the slave, and further paid ten dollars in money, and a horse at fifty-three dollars and fifty cents, making $63 50, towards the next payment,

Davis after expiration of the term, sells the land to others. Hall brings his bill for recision—Allegaions of the bill.

and got the possession of the premises as stipulated. He immediately leased the farm to a certain Robert Parkes and George Hardwick, by article of agreement, from the said 1st of March, 1812, till the 1st of March, 1816, at a rent of one hundred dollars per annum, which they agreed to pay, and in that article is a stipulation, that they might pay the rent to Lamach Davis, from whom Hall had purchased, and if they did so, Hall was to allow them a credit, therefor. Parkes and Hardwick, some time afterwards, seem to have leased the same farm to Peter Amyx, but whether by a written or verbal lease does not appear. Amyx afterwards, by articles of agreement, leased the said farm to Eli Williams and the said Lamach Davis, from the 1st day of March, 1818, until the said 1st of March, 1816, reserving some cabbins, and a garden lot, and binding himself to pay one third of all reasonable expenses incurred in cultivating the farm; and Williams and Davis agreed to give Amyx one third of the grain, privileges and advantages, arising from the farm, and to pay two thirds of the rent, and according to the lease from Hall to Parkes and Hardwick, which it is stated Amyx was bound to pay.

After the 1st of March, 1816 arrived, which period terminated all these leases, as well as the original contract between Hall and Davis, Hall failed to pay up the balance of $250, in horses, due long before, and also failed to pay the $1,750, the last payment which might be paid in young slaves, Davis being then in possession of the place as lessee of Amyx, who was the lessee of Parkes and Hardwick, who were lessees of Hall, kept the farm, and afterwards sold it to others,

After all this, Hall filed this bill against Davis, setting out the foregoing contracts, and alleging that he had the horses ready to pay to Davis for the residue of the $250, and would have delivered them to him at the time, but Davis never gave him the opportunity of doing so; and that he would have paid the last payment of $1,750, had Davis not got possession of the land, and avowed his intention to [25]*25keep it, and had fraudulently procured it to be sold under executions against himself.

Demurrer overruled-answer of Davis. Interrogatings put to Hall by Davis in his answer——Unanswered. Decree of the circuit court.

In addition to the foregoing payments, he alleges that Parkes and Hardwick, to whom he had leased the land, paid up to Davis, or caused Peter Amyx to pay to him, $400, the full rent thereof, for the four years, and that he had accordingly given them credit therefor, on the lease or article which he held upon them, which Davis refused to refund. He prays the contract may be rescinded; that Davis may be compelled to restore him the negro, or pay his price; that he may be compelled to restore the $10, the $53 50, and the $400 which he had received from Parkes or Hardwick or Amyx for them.

Davis first demurred to the bill, and on the demurrer being overruled, put in an answer, insisting that the contract was set aside by its own terms; that he was entitled to keep the negro and the $63 50, by the bontract; denies that he ever received any payment of $400 from Parkes and Hardwick, through Peter Amyx, and asserts that any receipt to that effect was fraudulent. He insists that Hall wholly failed to pay up the contract; that he tendered him a conveyance, and demanded the slaves when they became due, and that Hall declared himself unable to fulfil the contract; that he then tendered to Hall the horse back, or another horse of the value of $53 50, and Hall refused to receive him; that the $10 was an extra charge that Hall made for the slave, when he delivered him, after the contract was made, before he would make a title to him.

And to the truth of these last allegations he requires Hall to answer upon oath, under the Act of Assembly permitting interrogatories in the answer of a defendant. To these interrogatories Hall was silent.

On a final hearing, the court below decreed, that the contract was terminated by its own terms, after the 1st of March, 1816, on Hall’s failure to pay the $1,750, and that Davis was entitled to retain the price of the slave, as stipulated damages for Hall's [26]*26failure, and as rent for the land during the four years.—That the proof shewed that Davis had received four hundred dollars from Amyx, as the rent, and that he ought to restore it as well as the $68 50, with interest, and decreed accordingly. To reverse this decree this writ of error is prosecuted.

Contract held to have been terminated by its own provisions; and hence the interposition of the chancellor to rescind it unnecessary. In such case the part of the consideration paid which was not forfeited, may be recovered at law.

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Bluebook (online)
20 Ky. 23, 4 T.B. Mon. 23, 1826 Ky. LEXIS 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-hall-kyctapp-1826.