Duhme & Co. v. Young

66 Ky. 343, 3 Bush 343, 1867 Ky. LEXIS 190
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 25, 1867
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 66 Ky. 343 (Duhme & Co. v. Young) 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
Duhme & Co. v. Young, 66 Ky. 343, 3 Bush 343, 1867 Ky. LEXIS 190 (Ky. Ct. App. 1867).

Opinion

■.CHIEF JUSTICE PETERS

delivered the opinion oe the court:

Prior to the 12th of Aughst, 1850, Bushnell Willey died intestate, in the county of Bourbon, but was a resident of the county of Harrison. On the day above named, administration on his estate was granted .by the Harrison .county court to Susan Willey, his widow.

In less than- one year after the grant of administration to Mrs. Willey, she intermarried with W. S. Young, and it seems they proceeded to administer the estate until 1855, when they had a settlement of the administration with the presiding judge of the Harrison county court, by which it appears that the administratrix had paid off debts of decedent two hundred and seventy-five dollars and thirteen cents more than she had received assets.

That settlement was, in proper time, confirmed by the jHarrison county court, and its correctness not questioned nor impeached .until the 28th of November, 1859, when an action was brought by appellants against Young and [345]*345wife, her surviving surety, and the personal representative of the deceased surety in her administration bond, on quite a number of debts alleged to have been owing bj Willey in his lifetime to them, and to coerce payment thereof from the defendants in the action; and in May, 1860, recovered judgment against Young and wife for the amounts of their several demands, to be levied of assets unadministered.

After the recovery of the judgment just named, they instituted another action against the same defendants, alleging that.Young and wife had not accounted for the whole of the personal estate of their intestate; that they had in their possession a valuable negro woman and children of the estate of said intestate, worth between four thousand dollars and five thousand dollars, and of value sufficient to pay their debts; make their former' judgment an exhibit; charge that Young and wife had wasted and failed to account for four thousand dollars of estate which belonged to intestate, and' finally recovered judgment against the defendants for that sum, with interest from the 12th of November, 1860, the date of their judgment.

On appeals prosecuted by the defendants to said actions, both of said judgments were reversed by this court in June, 1863.

Upon the return of the cause to the court below; appellants filed an amended petition, alleging that Young and wife had failed to account for all the assets; that they had converted some slaves of intestate, of value sufficiént to pay their debts, and sought a judgment for the value of said slaves.

In an amended petition, they allege that Willey, at his death, was the owner of two hundred acres of valuable land in Harrison county, purchased of Sail, his wife’s [346]*346father, at fifty dollars per acre, and then worth eighty dollars per acre; that Sail had executed to Willey a title bond for said land, the purchase money having been all paid by Willey; that before his death, and in his absence, Sail had conveyed the land to his daughter, Mrs. Willey, without the knowledge or consent of her husband, in fraud of his rights, and with the fraudulent intent to cheat, hinder, and delay creditors of Willey; that he ■ never was in the county after it was executed, and had no knowledge of its existence. They allege that Young and wife have b.een in possession of the land ever since the death of Willey, using it, and taking the profits, which have been very valuable; and to the extent of the value of the use and occupation of the land, seek to make them responsible; and also ask for a sale of as much of the land as may be necessary to. pay their debts.

In July, 1863, administration de bonis non was granted, by the Harrison county court, to Joseph B. McClintock, on the estate of said Willey, who was made a defendant by the amended petition, and the cause transferred to the equity docket.

On the hearing, the court below rendered judgment against McClintock, administrator de bonis non, for four thousand nine hundred and twenty-seven dollars and fifty-one cents, with interest from the 21st of October, 1859, till paid, and costs, to be levied of assets in his hands unadministered; and as to the other defendants, dismissed the plaintiff’s petition without prejudice at their costs; and that judgment they now seek to reverse.

It is shown by the settlement of the administration accounts of Mrs. Young, and of herself and husband, .that she sold the perishable property, and a part of the slaves of decedent, sufficient to pay his debts, so far [347]*347as she had any knowledge of outstanding claims. It is alleged in the original petition that she had notice of appellant’s debts ; but she denies any knowledge of .them, and the allegation of notice is not proved; and the nonexistence of notice is made very probable from the facts developed by appellants themselves. As early as 1851, they instituted proceedings in the State of Illinois, to enforce the .collection of their debts; an administrator on the estate of intestate was apppointed in that State, and suit brought to subject various tracts of land belonging to intestate, in different counties in said State, to the satisfaction of these demands. This litigation was continued until October, 1857, when the credit seems to have been entered for the proceeds of the lands sold, or for a part of the proceeds; and from the quantity of land named, it would seem there was enough to have satisfied the demands of appellants ; and the apparent sufficiency of that part of intestate’s estate to pay this indebtedness, when no other creditor seems to have been looking to said lands, and may not have had any knowledge of them, would indicate that the appellants were not taking any interest in the manner the estate was administered in Kentucky, and gave themselves no concern on the subject.

Neither Mrs. Young, before her marriage with Young, nor herself and husband since then, sold any more of the slaves of intestate than were necessary to pay debts of which they had notice. Upon her marriage, her authority as administratrix ceased, as this court decided; no admintrator de bonis non was appointed until July, 1863 ; no one either sought or was authorized to take.the slaves from her custody up to that time; and if no debts required it, they were rightfully in her possession; she supposing, doubtless, in the absence of any knowledge of appel[348]*348lants’ claims — and there is no allegation that there are any others against the estate — that she was entitled to dower in them, and the others belonged to the two children of inestate, both of whom were infants, and, as we must presume, lived with her. She and her husband retained them where they could have been easily found, and subjected to any judgment that appellants’ might have recovered against the proper representative of intestate, until they were emancipated by the amendment to the Constitution of December, 1865, without any particular fault of Young and wife, and before appellants were prepared to enforce the collection of their claims by a valid judgment and execution; and there is no evidence that they had any other assets of intestate in their hands unaccounted for. The negroes were a breeding woman and her children, some of whom ^ were born after the death of intestate, and it is not alleged, or. proved, that their services were worth more than the cost of raising the children.

If, after administration de bonis non

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Bluebook (online)
66 Ky. 343, 3 Bush 343, 1867 Ky. LEXIS 190, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duhme-co-v-young-kyctapp-1867.