Garrard v. Heidrick

87 S.W.2d 954, 261 Ky. 393, 1935 Ky. LEXIS 664
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedNovember 22, 1935
StatusPublished

This text of 87 S.W.2d 954 (Garrard v. Heidrick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Garrard v. Heidrick, 87 S.W.2d 954, 261 Ky. 393, 1935 Ky. LEXIS 664 (Ky. 1935).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas

Affirming’-

This equity action was commenced on J uly 13, 1931, by appellants and plaintiffs below filing their petition in the Clay circuit court against appellees and defendants below, wherein they sought to recover of defendants a judgment for the sum of $6,000 with interest and costs. Their cause of action was based upon an alleged right growing out of a certain contract executed on September 11, 1926, by C. C. Smith and W. B. Riley, members composing the firm of Smith & Riley, wherein they purported to assign, transfer, and pledge to plaintiff E. G. Garrard and his brother, W. T. Garrard, their interest, to the extent of $6,000, in an alleged trust fund which plaintiffs averred was then in the hands of defendants and long past due, but that payment thereof *394 to them was refused, although it had been many times demanded. At the time of the filing of the petition W. T. Garrard was .dead and his only heir and devisee under his will joined E. T. Garrard as plaintiff, but before the cause was submitted she died and by a revivor her personal representative became a joint plaintiff. That writing for convenience and the want of a better name will hereafter be referred to as “the pledge contract.” It sprang from and grew out of another written contract of date December 20, 1917, and which for the same reasons we will hereafter refer to as “the ■construction contract. ’ ’ It was executed between Charles P. Heidrick of the first part; C. C. Smith and W. B. Riley, W. T. and E. G. Garrard, and John C. White, parties of the second part; and L. L. Richardson, party of the third part, and was an agreement growing out •of these facts:

Some time prior to its execution (December 20, 1917), Heidrick had embarked in the execution of a project to construct a railroad from a point near Barbourville, Ky. (which was thereafter named Heidrick), to Manchester, Ky., the county seat of Clay county, ■covering a total distance of some twenty-odd miles, and it was then generally known that the road when constructed would be designated as Cumberland & Manchester Railroad and would be owned and operated by a company, either then or thereafter to be formed under the name of “Cumberland & Manchester Railroad Company.” At a point on the line of that railroad it crossed a stream known as “Horse creek,” and at which a station was contemplated to be known as “Garrard.” Up Horse creek from the contemplated railroad track to its source was about 2% miles where three ■smaller streams or branches came together and formed Horse creek. ' Those branches were named Pawpaw branch, Gregory branch, and Crawfish branch. The three distinct units of parties of the second part to the ■construction contract owned separately at the head of those respective branches coal lands which they contemplated developing, and which were (omitting fractions) 713 acres owned by Smith and Riley at the head of Pawpaw branch; 369 acres owned by the Garrards at the head of Gregory branch; and 302 acres owned by John C. White at the head of Crawfish branch. The contract to construct the Cumberland & Manchester Railroad, as well as its Horse creek branch running *395 from Garrard to the head of that branch, had been already let to L. L. Richardson, party of the third part in the construction contract, and the parties of the second part therein agreed to jointly contribute, in proportion to their respective acreages of land, $15,000 towards the cost of constructing the Horse creek branch, railroad of 2% miles; they further agreed to construct from the terminus thereof branches or spurs of track-age running up each of the three branches mentioned to the point of their contemplated coal operations.

In consideration of such agreements by parties of the second part, Heidrick as party of the first part, by section 14 of the construction contract, agreed to superimpose an arbitrary freight rate on designated shipments over the Horse creek branch (not to exceed a. named maximum rate) in order to cre'ate a fund with, which to reimburse parties of the second part for the amounts they contributed toward the $15,000 agreed to be paid by them on the cost of construction of Horse creek branch, as well as to reimburse them for the cost, that the spur or switch tracks that they might respectively construct from the head of Horse creek (the end of that railroad) to their contemplated coal operations on their respective lands. Soon after entering into that contract, the Garrards, one of the units of parties of the second part to the construction contract, sold to Smith and Riley, another unit of the ■ second parties to the same contract, their coal lands and all their interest in and to the construction contract, a part of which was the placing of the Horse creek branch line in lien to secure the obligations of Heidrick created by its section 14.

Smith and Riley, and also White, then executed leases on the coal lands they held at the head of the named three branches and their lessee® formed operating corporations which built the respective spur tracks referred to, and also contributed and discharged their proportionate parts of the $15,000 toward constructing the Horse creek branch. It was expressly agreed in the construction contract, and so alleged in the petition in this case, that the arbitary rates agreed to be imposed therein by Heidrick, as party of the first part, for the purpose mentioned, should at no time exceed an amount permitted by either the Interstate Commerce Commission or the State Railroad Commission, and that if such *396 permitted imposed arbitrary rates failed to create a sufficient fund to discharge the obligations to the parties of the second part in that contract, then neither Heidrick nor any of his heirs or assigns should ever be held personally liable for any deficit. In other words, the construction contract gave the right to the parties of the second part therein only to require Heidrick to impose such an arbitrary rate as therein agreed upon and no more, since it expressly provided, as stated, that no personal obligation for any deficit in the created fund was assumed by him.

After the sale of their lands by the Garrards to 'Smith and Riley in 1918, matter's ran along, with them out of the picture, until the execution to them of the pledge contract, supra. In the meantime, and on July 31, 1923, an equity action was filed in the Knox circuit court by Smith and Riley, the two Garrards (plaintiffs herein), John C. White, and two mining companies that had taken over some of the lands of some of the parties of the second part in the construction contract, against Heidrick, and three other corporations which had likewise acquired interest in some of such lands. In the petition plaintiffs in that action alleged facts showing their right to an accounting by Heidrick and Ms associates of the trust fund created by the construction contract, and also an adjustment of the respective proportions of the accumulated fund among the interested parties therein according to the rights created by the construction contract, but which had become diversified or split up by subsequently accruing ones to the various lessees and operators of the lands first owned by parties -of the second part to that contract.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
87 S.W.2d 954, 261 Ky. 393, 1935 Ky. LEXIS 664, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garrard-v-heidrick-kyctapphigh-1935.