Dunn v. Salter

62 Ky. 342, 1 Duv. 342, 1864 Ky. LEXIS 84
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedFebruary 16, 1864
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 62 Ky. 342 (Dunn v. Salter) 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
Dunn v. Salter, 62 Ky. 342, 1 Duv. 342, 1864 Ky. LEXIS 84 (Ky. Ct. App. 1864).

Opinion

¿TUDSE PETERS

behveeed the opinion of the'Coihot:

The appellee, Gabriel J. Salter, being the owner of a very valuable real and personal estate in the county of Garrard, where he resided, Left his residence in the month of September,. 1861.

At the time of his departure he was indebted, in the aggregate, in a very Large amount to various persons. Within two •months after he Left a number of his creditors instituted proceedings, by attachments against his estate, nearly all of which, were in quick succession levied upon the same property, which constituted very nearly the whole, if not the entire estate owned by him, and which has proved to be .insufficient to pay his. -debts; in consequence of which, a controversy has arisen among the creditors concerning the validity of the proceedings and the priority of liens created by said attachments.

31 .dor .to the 24tb. of February, 1864, the attached property [344]*344had been sold by commissioners; under orders of the Garrard circuit court, the several cases having been previously consolidated; but the rights of the creditors, and the manner of distributing the funds arising from,, these sales, had not been settled.

On that day the court below, after overruling the motions of many of the creditors to be permitted to file additional affidavits, setting.forth otlier and additional grounds for attachments, adjudged that no grounds “had been made out by the proof for suing, out any of the attachments prior to December, 1861;. the attachments issued prior to that time having been based upon the allegations that the defendant,, Gabriel J. Salter, had been concealing himself, and absconding to avoid the service of process on him;, and the proof showing that his absence was for an entirely different purpose, and that he did not conceal himself at all.” The court was also “of opinion that the attachments sued out, and placed in the hands of the sheriff under the thirty days’ law of December 23, 1861, have precedence in the succession in which they were sued out, and? placed in the hands of the- sheriff under that law'and thereupon adjudged that the debts of Tribble, Pigg, those- due to>, the banks for which Hall Anderson was bound to Hughes, Craig, and Engleman, and to Thos. M. Johnson, should be - paid, as here enumerated, out o.f the proceeds of said Salter’s property; and appointed George W. Dunlap a receiver to collect the money due from the purchasers-;, and,.after paying some commissions and costs to the persons named, and retaining $1,060 for his services, he was directed to pay the creditor® aforesaid their debts. Of that judgment appellants complain.

The attachments of appellants, it is conceded, were sued-out and levied prior to those of appellees, and the grounds for suing them out are, that Gabriel J. Salter so conceals himself and absconds that a summons cannot be served upon him;, being, substantially the same as that stated im sub-div. 5 of sec. 221, Civil Code.

Whether the conclusion of the court below, that no ground® had been made out by the proof for suing out any of the at-, tachments prior to December, 1861, be correct,, is- the firsfe important question to be decided..

[345]*345The concealment which will authorize and sustain an attachment under sub-div. 5, supra, involves the intention on the part of the debtor to delay or to prevent his creditors from enforcing their demands in the ordinary modes prescribed by law, by avoiding the service of their summons, which he may accomplish by secreting himself in his own house, or upon his own premises, or by departing secretly from his place of abode to a more secu»e spot, either in or out of the county of his residence where he can more certainly effectuate his purpose.

Such intentions are rarely avowed, and seldom susceptible of direct proof; consequently, their existence must often be established by the conduct of the debtor and other attendant facts.

Pettis proves that on the 18th of September, 1861, Salter told him he intended to leave home, and assigned as a reason for it that he was afraid he would be killed if he remained; but he did not tell him where he intended to go; and on that day, or the day after, he did leave. There is no proof that he was in any danger at home; that any hostile demonstrations had been made towards him in Garrard county, or that there had at any time even been a threat made against him; and, besides, he did not tell Pettis where he was going, or the probable length of his absence. The statement of his fears to remain at home is not worthy of credence.

It does not appear that Salter made this communication to any one else except Pettis, and Pettis does not seem to have told any one of Salter’s intention to leave. It certainly was not known by his neighbors, and it is not shown that appellants had any information to that effect.

Where he went, or where he was from the time he left until a few days before the battle of Wild Cat, which was fought on the 21st of October, 1861 (as Miller proves), we are not informed. Shortly before that battle he wrote a letter to his wife from Prestonsburg, which Yantes saw, and in which he stated he expected soon to return home; but his place of sojourn, and his pursuits between those periods, are not explained.

Hardin proves he saw Salter for the last time on the day [346]*346after the battle of Wild Cat — perhaps in the county of Laurel; he was then with Zollicoffer’s forces. Whether he continued with them is not certainly known ; but the most rational conclusion is that he did, and was with them when appellants sued out their attachments. This course he would very naturally adopt, as being the most effectual means of concealing himself, and preventing the service of services upon him, as it was not at all probable that officers would seek him in such a place to execute process upon him.

We cannot concur with counsel for appellees that the concealment, to authorize an attachment, must be in the county of the residence of the debtor. The language of the section supra will not admit of such a construction.

Bills for large amounts, and for which Salter was bound as principal, were maturing about the time of his departure. He was heavily indebted otherwise, and is not shown to have been prepared with the means to meet these embarrassing demands. He was, doubtless, anxious to delay, and, if possible, to avert the financial ruin with which he was threatened; and in order to consummate that purpose, he determined to prevent the service of process upon him by secretly leaving home, and' going to a place of concealment where he would be beyond the reach of disappointment. He only told Pettis he intended to leave; but did not tell him where he was going, and no one knew.

The foregoing facts proved by appellants, in our opinion, fully sustained their original grounds for their attachments, and the court below erred to their prejudice in adjudging against them. This conclusion renders it unnecessary to express any opinion upon the propriety of the action of the court below in overruling appellant’s motions to file additional affidavits, as the judgment is reversed for the reasons stated.

Upon the subject of the mental condition of Thomas Salter, at the date of the bills of exchange, it is not proper for us to express any opinion, as there has been no adjudication of that question by the court below.

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

Related

Jennings v. Jennings
1 Ky. Op. 611 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1867)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 Ky. 342, 1 Duv. 342, 1864 Ky. LEXIS 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunn-v-salter-kyctapp-1864.