Floyd v. Mackey

66 S.W. 518, 112 Ky. 646, 1902 Ky. LEXIS 207
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedFebruary 5, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 66 S.W. 518 (Floyd v. Mackey) 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
Floyd v. Mackey, 66 S.W. 518, 112 Ky. 646, 1902 Ky. LEXIS 207 (Ky. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

Opinion of the court

by JUDGE BURNAM —

Reversing.

This action was instituted by appellants against appellee to recover a tract of 129.3 acres of land situated in McLean county, and rents thereon from 1885, which they alleged that the defendant wrongfully detained from them. The defendant denied the alleged wrongful' possession, and said that he had purchased the land sued for from the plaintiff, through her duly-authorized agent, L. W. Gates on the 25th day of April, 1885, for the sum of $1,200, and was put in. possession by him; that, whilst the negotiations for the purchase were made with L. W. Gates as- agent of plaintiff, he authorized his son G. W. Gates to conclude the transaction, and that G. W. Gates wrote the notes and executed the bond, binding plaintiff to convey the land, and that the cash was. paid to G. W. Gates for his father, L. AY. Gates, and that the notes were delivered to G. W. Gates, who paid the money collected by him, and delivered the notes to L. W. Gates, plaintiff’s agent, who, in turn, paid the $200 and delivered the notes to plaintiffs, which they accepted; that subsequently plaintiffs redelivered the notes for collection to L. W. Gates, who placed them in the hands'of G. W. Gates, with authority to collect them, and that G. W. [651]*651Gates did in fact collect the whole .of said notes, except $163 and interest on the last note; that in 1898 he wrote to the plaintiffs, offering to pay this balance, and requesting them to make him a deed to the land; that his letter was answered by Lucy B. Floyd, who requested him to send her a copy of his bond, and promised to make him a deed to the land; and that subsequently, on the 3d of September, 1898, she again agreed to make him a deed, — and pleaded that by these acts and transactions of plaintiff she was es-topped from maintaining this suit. He also pleaded that, after he took possession of the land under his purchase, he expended $2,025 in permanent and lasting improvements, and prayed either for a specific enforcement of his contract with L. W. Gates as agent, or that he be given a judgment for the purchase money paid by him, with interest, and for various sums of money alleged to have been expended in improvements, — the whole amounting to $3,100.. Plaintiffs demurred generally to the answer, which was overruled. They thereupon filed a reply, in which they denied all the statements of the defendant as to moneys expended by him for improvements placed upon the land. They also denied that L. W. Gates had either written or verbal authority from either of them to sell the land to the defendant, or that he had in fact sold it to him, or that the defendant had paid to him $200 in cash, or delivered to him the four promissory notes set out in the answer. They also deny that L. W. Gates had, as their agent, or at all, authorized his son G. W. Gates to sell the land to the defendant, or to execute the bond set up in the answer, binding them to convey the land, or that he had power or authority, to do so. They also deny that L. W. Gates had paid to them $200 upon the purchase price, or had delivered to them the notes executed by defendant therefor. They say that they [652]*652were in entire ignorance of this transaction until the receipt by them in 1898 of the note from defendant requesting that a deed be made to him for the land; that, upon receipt of the defendant’s letter, in order to obtain further information as to his claim, they requested that he should send in the bond, so that they could examine it, with a view of determining its authenticity, and also to identify whait part of the tract of land it referred to; that they never at any time agreed to execute a deed to him therefor. The pleadings were made up by rejoinder and sur-rejoinder.

It appears from the record that Plaintiff Lucy B. Floyd inherited from her father a large tract of unimproved land in McLean county about the year 1859, which she never saw, ■and which .she managed through agents residing in McLean county. The greater part of this land had been sold or disposed of -prior to 1885. For several years preceding the transaction 'with the defendant, Lloyd W. Gates, who resided in McLean county, acted as her agent in looking after her unsold lands, and as such paid the taxes thereon, rented them out, and sold a part Of the land to a man named Ray, executing therefor a bond for a title, signed by him as' agent. In 1883 or' 1884 L. W. Gates moved from McLean county to Jefferson county, about 12 miles from Louisville, where he resided until his death, in 1890. After his removal to Jefferson county it appears that he made several trips back to McLean county, looking after unfinished business. In April, 1884, the appellee, J. H. Mackey, wrote to the appellant Mrs. L. W. Floyd, proposing to buy about twenty-nine acres of land in the tract of land in controversy. Mrs. Floyd inclosed this letter to L. W. Gates, and addressed to him the following communication: “Louisville, Ky., April 9. Mr. Gates: Inclosed find letter from Mr. Mackey, which we can not answer only through your judgment. Please [653]*653do what you consider best, or write your advice in the matter, and oblige, yours very respectfully, Lucy B. Floyd.” Plaintiff testifies that she never received any communication from L. W. Gates in response to this note. On the 23d of April, more than twelve months afterwards, G. W. Gates a son of L. W. Gates, who resided in Owensboro, Ky., wrote and signed the following bond for a title: “For and in consideration of the sum of $1,200,00, — $200.00 cash in hand paid, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, and the further sum of $1,000.00, to be paid as follows* $250.00 first of May, 1886.; $250.00 first of May, 1887; $250.00 first of May, 1888; $250.00 first of May, 1889, — for which J. H. Mackey has executed to me his four promissory notes, bearing date of the 23d of April, 1883, bearing six per cent, interest from date,. I have this day sold to him a tract of land in McLean county, known as Lucy B. Floyd land, bounded as follows: ... I bind myself, as agent for Mrs. Lucy B. Floyd, to execute to the said J. H. Mackey, or his heirs and assigns, a good and valid deed-to the said land before the last-named note is paid by him; a lien being retained on the land for the payment of said note. This April 23d, 1885. G. W. Gates, Agent for Mrs. Lucy B. Floyd.” G. W. Gates, the son of L. W. Gates, testifies that he prepared and executed this bond and took the notes of the defendant for the unpaid purchase money as the agent of L. W. Gates, who he thinks, was present at the time.; that he had no authority to represent Mrs. Floyd; that he had a general impression that the cash payment was made to his father, and that the notes were left by his father with him for collection; that when they became due he sent them to Frank Wright, a constable who resided in McLean county, for collection; that Wright collected the greater part of the notes from Mackey, and transmitted the [654]*654money to him, and that he thinks he paid the money over to his father before his death, in 1890, at his residence, in Jefferson county; that the payments were usually in cash, or by check upon a bank. He says, however, that he has no receipts or other evidence of these various payments to his father, and that he kept no books or memoranda of the transaction which would enable him to speak definitely as to the date or amount of such alleged payments; and no checks to his father are filed with, or made a part of his deposition. The defendant, Mackey, also testified as to transactions with L. W. Gates as agent of plaintiff Mrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
66 S.W. 518, 112 Ky. 646, 1902 Ky. LEXIS 207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/floyd-v-mackey-kyctapp-1902.