Duvall v. Parepoint

181 S.W. 653, 168 Ky. 11, 1916 Ky. LEXIS 503
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 20, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 181 S.W. 653 (Duvall v. Parepoint) 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
Duvall v. Parepoint, 181 S.W. 653, 168 Ky. 11, 1916 Ky. LEXIS 503 (Ky. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

Opinion of the Couet by

Judge CaReoll

— Affirming.

Some time prior to 1889 the father of John A. Iians-brongh died, leaving a large body of land in. Hardin county to his four children, subject to the widow’s dower. In April, 1889, Hansbrough executed to Ida Hansbrough a promissory note for two thousand dollars, due on May 1,1890, and to secure its payment executed to her a mortgage on his one-fourth, undivided interest in the land of his father. Ida Hansbrough, before May 1, 1890, married A. D. Efird, and in January, 1913, she assigned the note to the appellant, Duvall. During all the time between the' date of the marriage and the assignment of the note, she was a married woman, the wife of Efird.

[13]*13In November, 1890, Hansbrough executed notes and mortgages for about four thousand dollars to the Yager Brothers on his interest in the land that had been previously mortgaged to Ida Hansbrough. In 1891 a suit was brought in the Hardin Circuit Court by the heirs of Elijah Hansbrough for a sale of the land and a division of the proceeds, and in January, 1892, a judgment was entered ordering the sale of all the land except that part which was set aside to the widow as dower, and at this sale the appellees, Parepoint and Gardner, became the purchasers and took possession, which they have since retained.

In 1912 Lewis, the assignee of the notes and mortgages executed to the Yager Brothers, brought suit against Hansbrough for the sale of and subjection to the debt of his undivided interest in the land that had!' been allotted to the widow of Elijah Hansbrough, and procured a judgment of sale, and at the sale thereunder became the purchaser. In April, 1913, the appellant Duvall, to whom Ida Hansbrough had assigned the note,, brought suit in the Hardin Circuit Court asking for a judgment on the note against Hansbrough and the enforcement of the mortgage lien on the interest of Hans-brough in the land that had been mortgaged to secure the payment of the note. To this suit Parepoint, Gardner and Lewis were made parties.

Upon the ground that the right to subject the land to the payment of the mortgage debt had been barred by limitation, Parepoint, Gardner and Lewis resisted the enforcement of the lien, and the court having adjudged this defense good, and dismissed the petition of Duvall in so far as it sought to subject the land, Duvall appeals.

It is conceded by counsel for appellant that the only question in the case is whether the right to enforce the lien is barred by the fifteen year statute of limitation. Section 2514 of the Kentucky Statutes • provides that an action on a note like this must be brought within fifteen years after the cause of action accrued. Here the cause of action accrued on May 1,1890, more than twenty years before this action was brought; but it is said that as Ida Hansbrough married Efird before the note matured or the cause of action thereon accrued, and continued to be a married woman until after her assignment of the note in 1913 to Duvall, section 2525 of the Ken-' [14]*14tucky Statutes suspended during these .years the running of the statute, and therefore limitation did not bar-an action on the note; and this court has so held in Onions v. Covington & Cincinnati R. R. Co., 107 Ky., 154; Sturgill v. C. & O. Ry., 116 Ky., 659; Dukes v. Davis, 125 Ky., 313.

In these cases the identical question here was not involved, but the court held that in all this class of cases, where a woman was laboring under disability of cover-ture when her cause of action accrued, this disability suspended the running of the statute of'limitation; and so if there was no other principle of law that permitted the statute to run and bar this action* in so far as it sought to subject .the land, the statute of limitation would not be an obstacle in the way of recovery.

But we think the cases of Hargis v. Sewell’s Admr., 87 Ky., 63, and Mouser v. Nunn, 142 Ky., 656, lay down a rule that must be applied to this case and one that makes the fifteen year statute -available as a complete defense. In the Hargis case, briefly, the facts were these:. In 1855 Thomas Sewell, administered on the estate of William Sewell, and made a final settlement of his accounts in 1859, showing a large balance due to the widow and children of the intestate. In 1882 Thomas Sewell died, and in a suit to settle his estate, the widow of William Sewell and some of his children were made parties, and asserted a claim for the amount alleged to be due them as heirs of William Sewell from his administrator, Thomas Sewell, claiming the amount found due by Thomas Sewell in the settlement made by him as administrator in 1859. To this claim the estate of William Sewell interposed the plea , of limitation. It further appeared that the widow of William Sewell, before 1859, and before the date • of the settlement made by Thomas Sewell as administrator, married a man named Hargis, who was living at the time this claim was asserted ; and it was sought to avoid the plea of the statute, upon the ground that at the time the action accrued and. continuously since, the widow of William Sewell had been laboring under the disability of coverture. In. holding that the statute barred the action so far as the widow was concerned, the court said:

“Her second marriage, vith-John S. Hargis, her co-appellant, did not prevent the running 'of the statute, ' although that took place before the year Í859. The hus[15]*15"band in right of the wife, or in his own right, could have settled, receipted for, and collected this money at any time after the settlement. He was entitled to this fund by reason of the marriage, and the statute began to run as soon as this settlement took place. There is no reason, therefore', for holding that the coverture of the wife operated to prevent the running of the statute, when at no time during the twenty-five years'next preceding ‘the institution of this action were the parties precluded from suing, even at law, to recover of Thomas Sewell the widow’s distributable share of the estate.”

In the Mouser case it appears that one P. J. Nunn was appointed guardian of Nancy T. Landon, in February, 1869. As guardian he made four settlements, the last' in 1875. Nancy T. Landon married D. A. Mouser in 1873. In 1906 Nunn died, and in 1907 Nancy Mouser brought suit to recover the amount shown to be due her as ward by the settlement of P. J. Nunn made in 1875. In holding that the plea of limitation defeated the action, the court said:

“Her husband had a right of action against the guardian, and the limitation ran against him from the date of that settlement. This identical question was decided in Hargis v. Sewell’s Admr. * * * In that ■case, at the time the settlement took place, the beneficiary was married, and yet the court held that, inasmuch as her husband was entitled to this money, she could not avoid the effect of the plea of the statute of limitation by reason of her coverture.”

"We are unable to make any distinction between these cases and the one we have. In this case, when the note executed to Ida Hansbrough matured, she was a married woman. The cause of action accrued more than twenty years before this suit was brought, but her cover-ture during all this time did not suspend the running of the statute, because the right of action on the note was in her husband from the time of its maturity in 1890' until the Weissenger law went into effect in 1894, and thereafter the cause of action was in her.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
181 S.W. 653, 168 Ky. 11, 1916 Ky. LEXIS 503, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duvall-v-parepoint-kyctapp-1916.