Ewing v. Burns' Adm'r

6 Ky. Op. 647, 1873 Ky. LEXIS 328
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 11, 1873
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Ky. Op. 647 (Ewing v. Burns' Adm'r) 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
Ewing v. Burns' Adm'r, 6 Ky. Op. 647, 1873 Ky. LEXIS 328 (Ky. Ct. App. 1873).

Opinion

Opinion by

Judge Pryor :

The cases of Burns v. Smith and Ewing v. Burns’ Adm'r, were argued as one case, have a direct connection with each other, and will be considered together.

Ewing, under a decree of the Louisville Chancery Court, purchased some real estate, the proceeds of which, after the payment of certain debts, belonged to the Burnses, who are the appellants in One case, and Burns’ administrator, the appellee in the other. Thomas P. Smith at the time of the sale was the commissioner and receiver of the Louisville Chancery Court, and whilst acting as such, on the 1st of October, 1864, Ewing, the purchaser, paid to him the sum of [648]*648$3,013.85 in full, of the last note executed by him1 for the purchase money. No portion of the money seems ever to have been paid over to the Burnses by th'e receiver, and the administrator with the will annexed of the devisor Burns, through whom, the present appellants in the case of Burns v. Smith derive their right to. the money, by rule in the chancery court against Ewing, the purchaser, obtained an order requiring the latter to pay the money to him. Ewing insists that he cannot be compelled to pay this money a second time, as he has rightfully paid it to the receiver, and the chancery court had taken possession of it, and applied it to the payment of other judgments. The sureties of Smith, who are the appellees in the suit of Burns v. Smith, say that they are not liable, for the reason that there was no order of court authorizing the receiver to collect this money, or Ewing to pay it, and the court below taking this view of the case held Ewing responsible and released the sureties.

The duties of commissioner and receiver of the Louisville Chancery Court are somewhat different from' that of other similar offices throughout the state, by reason of the rules and regulations of that court, adopted in accordance with the provisions of the code of practice, and the amendments thereto, organizing and regulating its jurisdiction. On the 14th of April, 1854, the following order was made by that court:

“It is held that a commissioner and receiver of this court be appointed, who is to be a deputy clerk off this court, but to attend only to the duties herein devolved, who shall receive and deposit in the bank of Kentucky (or such other place as the court may order), all moneys that are paid into court unless immediately ordered out. Said money should be placed in said bank (or rather depository) to the credit of the court by the commissioner, and said commissioner shall keep a plain account, showing what money is paid, what is deposited, and what is paid out otherwise. This account. must also show, what money belongs to each case, what every person is entitled to, when it has been adjudged, and in all respects, shall have his accounts so complete and obvious that the amount and disposition of the money which shall have been paid in can be seen in a few minutes, and where money has heretofore been paid into court, and money is yet to be paid in on the same cause, he shall make an account of the money already paid, to be kept in connection with that which is to be paid. All money shall be withdrawn from the de[649]*649pository, as the code of practice provides, by order of the court copied and his, the commissioner’s, ch‘eck issued. In the margin of the check, to be left in a check book, shall be stated the name of the cause in which it is drawn, the amount of money and also the date of the order in pursuance of which it is drawn and date of check. Said commissioner shall also take duplicate receipts for checks drawn or money paid out, and keep one in a book and the other shall be filed in the papers of the cause. He shall also return quarterly statements to be entered of record.

“Before he enters upon the duties of his office he shall enter into bond in the sum of $50,000.00, payable to the clerk of the Louisville Chancery Court for the benefit of all persons interested, to be subject to the order of,the court, with good surety, and with condition to discharge faithfully and corfiectly the duties herein.

In pursuance of this rule Thomas P. Smith executed a bond with a portion of the appellees (in the case of Burns v. Smith) as his sureties on the 9th of September, 1862.

In the year 1868 Smith was reappointed commissioner, and executed a new bond with some of the appellees as his sureties thereon.

The object of this rule of 1854, the learned Chancellor in the court below, was to adopt a system' under which the court funds could be safely received, kept and paid out.

It is made the duty of the receiver to1 comply with this rule of the court, and upon his failure to. do so his sureties, as well as himself, are liable upon his bond. If the purchaser pays him money due upon notes executed at a decretal sale, without any order of court directing its payment, and the receiver converts it to his own use or fails to pay it into court, he (the purchaser) still remains liable for the money, nor can the latter look to the sureties on the official bond for indemnity, for the reason that the receiver had no legal right to receive it, and in doing so can only be regarded as the agent of the party paying it over to him. A receiver is not authorized to collect money due from' a purchaser at a decretal sale, without any order of court directing its payment to him, or the receiver to collect it, and we are not prepared to adjudge that under the rules and regulations pertaining to the duties of receiver of the Louisville Chancery Court, that the official, even when the money is paid into court, has the power to withdraw it, or take charge of it without an order of court directing him to do so. This court will never sanction [650]*650a custom that is conceded to- exist in that court, by which the receiver is permitted without an order of court to collect and receive from the purchasers at decretal sale the money whenever due, or whenever the purchaser sees proper to pay it over.

The money in this case was, however, in effect paid into court, when placed at the disposal of the Chancellor by the receiver. It is true that when it was paid by Ewing, the receiver had no right to collect it, and held it only as the agent of the former, but when this agent of Ewing, who was also receiver of the court, placed the money in the Louisville and Savings Institution, at that time the depository of the court, to the credit of the court, that tribunal alone had jurisdiction over it, and this money having been made a part of the courts fund, no one, not even the receiver .or Ewing had longer any power over it, or right to withdraw it, without an order directing this custodian of the court’s money to pay it over. After the Chancellor had acquired such control as this over the money and had in fact by the orders of the court, paid it out, it would, it seems to us, be a narrow view to take of the questions involved here, by adjudging that this money was.never in court. In the other chancery courts of the state there is no depository of this character and the money when paid into court is directed to be loaned out or held by the receiver or commissioner for purposes of distribution. When the money was placed in the court’s depository to the credit of the court, it became the money of the court, as much so, as if it had been paid, and placed upon the clerk’s desk in the presence of the Chancellor during the session of court. Ewing had no- right to withdraw it. The receiver had no power over it, and the court alone could direct its payment.

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Bluebook (online)
6 Ky. Op. 647, 1873 Ky. LEXIS 328, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ewing-v-burns-admr-kyctapp-1873.