Fields v. Stamper

197 S.W. 919, 177 Ky. 323, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 602
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 23, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 197 S.W. 919 (Fields v. Stamper) 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
Fields v. Stamper, 197 S.W. 919, 177 Ky. 323, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 602 (Ky. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Clarke

— Reversing.

The appellee, Lincoln Stamper, filed this action in the Carter circuit court against J. S. Garvin, W. J. Fields, and others, alleging that, as devisee of his father, William Stamper, he was the owner of an undivided three-fourths interest in sixty acres of land in Carter county, subject to the life estate of his mother, Cynthia Stamper, in and to two-fourths thereof, and that the remaining one-fourth was owned jointly by W. J. Fields, George Ervin and Willie Ervin. He prayed that the land be divided among these alleged owners, according [324]*324to their stated interests therein; and, in addition, that a deed from Cynthia Stamper to J. S. Garvin and all deeds conveying this tract of land, since the probation of the will of William Stamper, be set aside and adjudged as naught, although the petition did not otherwise refer to, or describe, any such deeds, or set up any grounds for their cancellation.

Of the defendants, only J. S. Garvin and W. J. Fields answered. They denied that the plaintiff was the owner of any of the land or that his father, William Stamper, owned the same at the time of his death; and alleged that his will, in which he attempted to devise it, was therefore void. They also alleged that the defendant, W. J. Fields, was the owner of the land under the following chain of title: That many years ago the decedent, William Stamper, had executed a mortgage on the land to one Davis to secure a note; that Davis, assigned the note and mortgage to the Second National Bant of Ashland, Kentucky; that the bank sued on the note and mortgage and secured a judgment, under which the land was sold and conveyed to the bank; that thereafter, on ■March 12, 1901, the bank and William Stamper conveyed the fee simple title to the land to Eliza Armstrong; that in 1907 Eliza Armstrong conveyed it to Cynthia Stamper; that in 1911, for a valuable consideration, she conveyed it to J. S. Garvin, who, in turn, conveyed it to W. J. Fields. Plaintiff, by reply and amendments thereto, admitted the several conveyances constituting the chain of title of defendants, and alleged that the deed, absolute on its face, from the bank and William Stamper to Eliza Armstrong was, in fact, a mortgage to secure the payment of a loan made by her to William Stamper; that Stamper, in his lifetime and before the execution of the will, had fully satisfied the mortgage loan, to secure which the deed was executed, but had neglected to have Mrs. Armstrong reconvey the land to him, as she had verbally agreed to do upon repayment of the loan; that the deed from Mrs. Armstrong to Cynthia Stamper after the death of William Stamper, was in violation of this contract, without consideration, and, therefore, void. The allegations of the reply that the deed to Mrs. Armstrong was, in fact, a mortgage, and that the deed from her to Mrs. Stamper was without consideration and void, were traversed by subsequent pleadings of defendants, Garvin and Fields, in which they alleged that they were bona fide purchasers, for value, without notice of any [325]*325infirmity in any conveyance forming the chain of title under which they claim; and these affirmative allegations were traversed of record, by consent of the parties.

It is apparent, therefore, that the main issues of fact presented by these pleadings are: Whether or not the deed from the Second National Bank and William Stamper to Eliza Armstrong, absolute on its face, was, in fact, a mortgage; that it had been satisfied by William Stamper before the execution and probation of his will; and whether or not the defendants, or at least Garvin, had notice of these facts. .

Upon these issues, the burden of proof was upon plaintiff, for, without such proof, he could not recover.

Much proof was taken to show that the deed from Stamper and the bank to Mrs. Armstrong was, in fact, a mortgage,, and that the defendants had knowledge -of the execution and probation of the will of William Stamper before their purchases; but, strangely enough, there is not one word of evidence introduced by plaintiff as to whether or not the defendants, or either of them, had any knowledge that the deed to Mrs. Armstrong was, in fact, a mortgage, or other than what it purported to be, an absolute deed. This is really the one vital issue in the whole litigation, without proof of which it would seem plaintiff could not recover the land; for, even though the deed to Mrs. Armstrong was, as between . the original parties, in fact, a mortgage, that fact would be of no avail as against a bona fide purchaser for value and without notice, a rule too well established, it would seem, to need the citation of authorities. Smith v. Noble, 174 Ky. 15; Varney v. Diskens, 141 S. W. 411; 27 Cyc. 991. The chancellor, in his judgment, as shown by his written opinion, made a part of the record, overlooked entirely, as had the plaintiff, this vital question of whether or not the defendant, Garvin, had notice of this latent infirmity in the deed to Mrs. Armstrong, under' which, it is admitted, defendants derived title. Having admitted defendants’ title, for a valuable consideration, under conveyances in which there were no apparent defects, it seems to us that it was necesary, before plaintiff could recover the land from defendant, Fields, to prove not only the defects alleged in the deeds to Mrs. Armstrong and to Mrs. Stamper, but also that the defendant, Garvin, took his title under these conveyances with notice of these defects, although there is authority to the effect that one, pléading that he is a bona fide purchaser [326]*326without notice, must prove it, as well as to the contrary. 39 Cyc., p. 1780, section 6a, and notes.

It is satisfactorily shown that the deed from Stamper and the bank to Mrs. Armstrong was executed only for the purpose of securing to Mrs. Armstrong a loan she had made to Stamper, and that there was some kind of a verbal agreement between them by' which, upon repayment of the loan, Mrs. Armstrong was to reeonvey the land. But, whether this reconveyance was to be made to Stamper, as contended by plaintiff, or to his wife, as contended by defendants, there is no competent direct proof whatever; and the only circumstantial evidence upon this question is the fact that, although Stamper lived for nearly three years after his repayment of the loan, he did not secure a reconveyance to himself, although living but a short distance from Mrs. Armstrong, with ample opportunity to have had a reconveyance to him, if such were the agreement; and also the fact that at that time Stamper was in debt and in trouble for the alleged offense of selling liquor illegally; and the still more persuasive fact that Mrs. Armstrong did not reconvey to Stamper, but did convey to his wife. These facts are strong circumstantial evidence ■that the verbal agreement between Stamper and Mrs. Armstrong was that the land should be conveyed, upon payment of the debt, not to Stamper, but to his wife; that the conveyance was delayed on account of Stamper’s financial affairs; for, it is hard to believe that Mrs. Armstrong would have assumed the liability of conveying the land to another, if she was under an agreement to convey it to Stamper, and especially would this be true if she had knowledge of the existence of the will Stamper had executed, which had been probated some time before she made the conveyance to |drs. Stamper.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
197 S.W. 919, 177 Ky. 323, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 602, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fields-v-stamper-kyctapp-1917.