Ferguson v. Worrall

101 S.W. 966, 125 Ky. 618, 1907 Ky. LEXIS 317
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 8, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 101 S.W. 966 (Ferguson v. Worrall) 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
Ferguson v. Worrall, 101 S.W. 966, 125 Ky. 618, 1907 Ky. LEXIS 317 (Ky. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

John D. Carroll. Commissioner

Affirming.

In 1881 E. W. Ferguson and the Fondas, being owners of adjacent lots on Main street in the city of Louisville, entered into a written agreement duly acknowledged and recorded in the clerk’s office of the Jefferson county court, by the terms of which the Fondas were to build a party wall on the boundary line between their respective lots; the contract further providing that “the party of the second part (Ferguson) is to pay to the party of the first part (Fonda) one-half the cost of said new party wall when the said new party wall is used in connection with any building or buildings to those at present existing on the lot of the party of the second part.” E. W. Ferguson died in 1893, leaving a will, in which he devised a portion of his property to appellants, bequeathing the bulk of it including the lot on Main street to Allen L. Ferguson. In 1902 Allen L. Ferguson died, having made a will giving all of his property [622]*622including this Plain street lot to the appellee, Belle Combs Worrall. The heirs of Allen L. Ferguson, contested his will, and in a settlement of the contest Mrs. Worrall conveyed with covenant of special warranty to the Columbia Finance & Trust Company, trustee for the contestants, certain property received by her under the will including this lot on Main street. It was further agreed that a judgment should be entered establishing the paper as the will of Ferguson, and that the Louisville Trust Company, executor of the will, should retain “sufficient amount to cover court costs of settlement suit, and any debts owing by the estate,” and deliver to the contestants the remainder of the personal property. Afterwards the trustee sold the Main street lot to one Stockhoff, who used the party wall by erecting a new building thereon. Thereupon the Fondas instituted an action against the appellants, as devisees under the will of R. W. Ferguson, to recover one-half the cost of the party wall. Conceiving they were liable because they had received assets from the estate of R. W. Ferguson, appellants paid to the Fondas the amount claimed and instituted this action to recover the same from appellee. From a judgment dismissing their petition, this appeal is prosecuted.

In support of the judgment it is insisted by counsel for appellee that by the settlement made in the will contest ease appellee was acquitted and discharged from the payment of any debts or liabilities that might be asserted against the estate of Alien L. Ferguson, as the settlement provided that the executor should retain sufficient funds to satisfy any debts against the estate, and the conveyance by her of the Main street lot was with covenant of special warranty, therefore only obligating her to protect the, [623]*623title against any person asserting claim or interest under her; second, that the agreement between R. W. Eerguson and the Fondas was a covenant running with tire land and only enforceable against the person who might own the land when the party wall was used, and that as the party wall was first used by Stockhoff he alone i's liable to the Fondas under the contract. For appellants it is said that the claim of the Fondas for one-half of the cost of the party wall had not accrued at the time the settlement of the will contest was made, and was not in the contemplation of the parties, and hence not embraced by the stipulation that the executor should retain sufficient funds to satisfy debts against the estate; that the agreement between the Fondas and Ferguson was not a covenant running with the land, but a personal obligation on the part of Ferguson by which he agreed to reimburse the Fondas when the party wall was used; and that, as appellants received assets from the estate of Ferguson as devisees, they are liable for debts due by him, and, having paid these debts, the Fondas are entitled to contribution from appellee who received a portion of his estate.

Section 2084 of the Kentucky Statutes of 1903 provides: “A devisee shall be liable for all debts and liabilities of the testator in the same manner as the heirs of the testator would have been liable if the property devised had descended to the heirs.” Section 2088 provides that “to the extent of assets received, the representative, heir and devisee of an heir or devisee shall be chargeable for the liabilities of their decedent or testator respectively to the creditors of the original decedent or testator.” Section 2073, that “when any estate, real or personal, which has or shall be devised, shall be taken from the de[624]*624visee for the payment of a debt of the testator, or one of the devisees shall pay such debt to save his devise, each of the other devisees shall contribute his proportion of the debt, interest and costs to the person so paying the same, according to the value received by him, except as hereinafter provided.” Under these sections, the devisee’or heir who receives by devise or descent property, is liable to the extent of the estate received for the debts and liabilities of the testator or intestate. And so to the extent of assets received, if the heir or devisee dies and the estate received by him from the testator passes to his devisee or heir, it will be liable the same as if in the hands of the original devisee or heir. Buford v. Pawling’s Ex’rs, 5 Dana, 283. And the heir or devisee who discharges the liability may have contribution from each of the others in proportion to the value of the estate received.

We do not deem it necessary that, before the right of contribution accrues, judgment shall be obtained against the heir or devisee by the creditor. If the debt or liability sought to be recovered is a rmlid and subsisting obligation, the heir or devisee may discharge it before judgment and seek contribution, but in doing so he takes the risk of it being finally adjudged that the debt or liability satisfied by him was one that he might legally be compelled to pay. If appellants were liable to the Fondas, they had the right to discharge the liability before judgment was obtained against them, and to seek contribution from appellee, who was a devisee of Allen L. Ferguson, provided she was not discharged from liability by the agreement entered into in settlement of the will contest. In the settlement she surrendered, and there was retained by the executor of Allen L. Ferguson’s [625]*625will, sufficient funds to satisfy all debts against his estate. This being true, we see no escape from the conclusion that appellee was by the settlement acquitted of the liability from the claim asserted by appellants. If this claim was not a debt due by the estate of Allen L. Ferguson growing out of the fact that he had received assets from R. W. Ferguson, thereby charging him with.the payment of R. W. Ferguson’s debts, it is clear that in no event could appellee as devisee be held liable, because she was only liable for debts due by the estate of Allen L. Ferguson. If this claim was a debt due by the estate of Allen L. Ferguson, she is also relieved from liability by the agreement made in the will contest exonerating her from the payment of the debts due by the estate of Ferguson. So that in no event could appellee be required to contribute to appellants.

In addition to this, we have reached the conclusion that the agreement between the Fondas and R. W. Ferguson was not the personal obligation of Ferguson, but a covenant running with the land. Hence the owner of the land when the party wail was used should pay to the Fondas one-half the cost of it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
101 S.W. 966, 125 Ky. 618, 1907 Ky. LEXIS 317, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ferguson-v-worrall-kyctapp-1907.