Fenwick v. Macey's Executors

31 Ky. 276, 1 Dana 276, 1833 Ky. LEXIS 78
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 10, 1833
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 31 Ky. 276 (Fenwick v. Macey's Executors) 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
Fenwick v. Macey's Executors, 31 Ky. 276, 1 Dana 276, 1833 Ky. LEXIS 78 (Ky. Ct. App. 1833).

Opinion

The Judges in this case delivered separate Opinions.

Judge Underwood :

— On the 10th of September, 1807, Alexander Macey, and Fenwick, the plaintiff in error, into a contract, from which it appears that Ma-cey advanced one thousand and twenty six dollars, twen-tv six cents to Fenwick, who thereupon conveyed three slaves (Ralph-, Ambrose and Ann) to Macey, who immediately hired them to Fenwick, at the rate of two hundred and fifty dollars per annum,

On the 1 st of May, 1807, it appears by a contract between the same parties, that Macey lent Fenwick eight hundred dollars, to secure the payment of which, Fen-wick assigned to Macey a lease on IÍ. Brock, upon which there was a rent reserved of two hundred dollars per an-num. It is agreed by this contract, that Macey is to receive the rent from Brock, and that if Fenwick does not return the eight hundred dollars within three years, then the whole lease and all its benefits shall be Macey’s. The lease of Brock expired on the 1st of January, 1819. Brock paid the rent to Macey j consequently, he received twenty four hundred dollars, in the course of about twelve years, for the eight hundred dollars lent.

On the 14th January, 1811, for the consideration of three hundred dollars, Fenwick made an absolute sale to. Macey, of a hundred and fifty, or a hundred and sixty acres of land, in which Fenwick held a term for eight years.

On the 17th September, 1813, for one hundred and twenty dollars, to be paid on demand, and in. consideration of covenants to keep in repair &c. Fenwick assigned and transferred to Macey, for the term of five years [277]*277and five months, all the residue of his land on Elkhorn, held under the lease from Cox to Edwards ; except the yard, garden, pasture, mill and timber yards, and the houses. This contract contains a stipulation, that whenever Fenwick pays the hundred and twenty dollars, the leased premises are to revert to him.

M. in 1803, takcspossession of one of the slaves. Bill, by F. filed in 1822, to redeem the slaves, which he alleges were, in reality, only mortgag ed, and for a settlement. Answer, by the ex’rs of Macey, (now deceased) relying on the lapse of time in bar of relief. The contracts of salo — having been intended originally only as securities— are to be treated as mortgages.

On the 5th of September, 1813, Fenwick, for two hundred dollars in hand paid, conveyed to Macey, three yoke of oxen, a waggon, three horses and thirty five head (first choice) of hogs, — reserving, however, the liberty to redeem at any time before Christmas thereafter.

The evidence warrants the belief, that the use of the land, mentioned in the contracts of 1811 and 1813, for one or two years, at most, was fully worth the amount advanced by Macey for these lands ; and that the hire of the slaves was charged to Fenwick as cash, and constituted at least a part of the consideration or advances made by Macey for the land.

Macey, a few years after the contract relative to the slaves had been made, took Ann into his possession, and thereafter, the negro men continued with Fenwick, at a hire of two hundred dollars per annum. Ann has had five children.

In June, 1822, Fenwick filed his bill, asserting a right to redeem the slaves, upon the ground that the contract between him and Macey should be regarded as a mortgage. He, moreover, claims a settlement of accounts . between him and Macey, and for general relief, &c.

The executors of Macey, he having died before service of process, denied all personal knowledge of the transactions set forth in the bill, and insisted upon lapse of time as a bar to the relief sought.

There can be no doubt, that all the contracts between Macey and Fenwick, except that dated the 14th of January, 1811, should be treated as mortgages. Their principal object seems to have been, to secure the sums advanced, with an interest at the rate of twenty five per cent per annum. . The important question is, what length of time should bar the right of the mortgagor to [278]*278redeem slaves, and a term for years, in the hands of the mortgagee?

Bill dismissed in the circuit ct. Statutes of limitation are rules of decision in chancery. A bill to asseit a right of more than 20 years standing, in favor of one laboring under no disability, will not, in general, be sustained.— But there are exceptions : instance, — in behalf of an occupant defending his freehold.

The circuit court dismissed Fenwick’s bill, upon the ground, that as five years adverse possession was a legal bar to the recovery of a slave in an action at law, the chancellor should adopt the same rule, and apply it to bar the mortgagor’s equity of redemption, after the mortgagee had beén in possession five years.

The statute of limitations does not in terms apply to suits in equity. Still its provisions have, in many cases, been adopted by the chancellor, and furnish the rule of decision in his court.

It is a general rule with the chancellor,' that he will not entertain a bill to set up a right, in favor of a person laboring under no disability, after a lapse of twenty years. He will tell the man who sleeps upon his rights for twenty-years, to sleep on. There are, however, exceptions to this rule. One exists in behalf of the occupant of a freehold, who asserts an equity of more than twenty years standing, in order to protect his possessions. Whether-this rule has been adopted in analogy to the statute of limitations, which bars the right of entry after twenty years adverse possession ; or whether it is more properly based upon a presumed dereliction of right, and the mischiefs likely to result from asserting a stale demand ; or whether its proper foundation is a satisfaction of the demand to be presumed after a lapse of twenty years, in the same manner that we presume a bond to "be paid after twenty years, without accounting for the delay, are inquiries which need not now be discussed at length. Perhaps it might be said with truth, that the rule is supported by all these considerations, and that no one singly would be sufficient to account for its origin and application to all the cases. It is clear that the chancellor, in applying the rule, has allowed those to escape its operation who were able to bring themselves under any of th<e disabilities provided for in the statute of limitations; and therefore it may have been thought, that the rule itself, depends for its existence, exclusively upon the analogy which it bears to the statute.

Mortgagor cannot maintain a bill to redeem after 20 years possession by the mortgagee, unless the latter has made some acknowl-edgement of the right within that time. Post 381. See, also the opinion of the Ch. Jus. in this case. The mortgagor srccana right to redeem, been assumed ^ee^andcontóo" ued’fbr 5 years Nor after twen_ ty ye„rs, (in Jheirthe holding adverse, not'

It is agreed on all sides, that the chancellor will not ■entertain a bill in behalf a mortgagor against the mortgagee, to redeem the estate after it has been held twenty-years by the mortgagee, unless some acknowledgment of the mortgagor’s right in the mean timé, can be satisfactorily shewn.

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Bluebook (online)
31 Ky. 276, 1 Dana 276, 1833 Ky. LEXIS 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fenwick-v-maceys-executors-kyctapp-1833.