Garrard v. Kinder

18 S.W.2d 1013, 230 Ky. 176, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 65
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 21, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 18 S.W.2d 1013 (Garrard v. Kinder) 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. Kinder, 18 S.W.2d 1013, 230 Ky. 176, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 65 (Ky. 1929).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

J udge Dietzman

— Revers-

This suit was brought to enforce apportionments for the improvement of Manchester street in the city of Barbourville against a number of lots abutting on that street, among which was a lot owned by the appellees. In the petition it was averred among other things that, in the event any one or more of the lots involved, including the improvements, was not of sufficient value as that one-half thereof would pay the apportionment levied and assessed against it, then and in that event the contractor was entitled to recover the difference between one-half the value of such lot or lots, including the improvements, and the amount of the apportionment against the same, from the city of Barbourville, which was made a party defendant. •

Section' 3563 of the Kentucky Statutes, governing cities of the fourth class, so far as pertinent, reads: *177 “Any assessment for any street improvement as provided in this section which exceeds one-half of the valne of the lots or parcels of real estate upon which the assessment is made shall be void as to such excess, but the improvement shall be taken into consideration in fixing the value of such real estate and the board of council shall provide for the payment of any such excess out of the general fund.”

In the prayer of the petition the court was asked to decree a sale of each of the lots involved for the purpose of paying the apportionment levied and assessed against such lot, and for judgment against the city of Barbourville in the event any one or more of such lots, with the improvements, did hot produce sufficient funds as that one-half the value thereof would pay the apportionment against the same. As to the appellees, certain other specific relief was asked, which is not involved in the present appeal.-. So far as the appellees’ lot is concerned, they defended the action solely on the ground that the appellee, Granville Kinder, had the right to convey a part of the lot in question to his wife, the appellee Mrs. Granville Kinder, so as to require an apportionment to be levied against each of the lots as thus formed from the lot he originally owned, instead of the apportionment against the lot as a whole, which was levied. On this the court adjudged against them. By the judgment the court decreed that the contractor was the owner of the apportionment in question, amounting to $1,270.12, and that the lot as a whole, and not as split by the Kinders, was in lien to pay a part of this apportionment. He ordered the property sold, and of the proceeds he directed that one-half thereof be paid to the appellees as owners of the lot and the other half to be paid to the contractor.

It is thus evident that the court assumed that the apportionment far exceeded one-half the value of the lot, including the improvements, although we are unable to find any proof in the record-prior to the entry of this judgment to that effect. The parties, however, are not complaining here of that judgment, and never prosecuted any appeal from it. Indeed, they have acquiesced at leash in so much of the judgment as held that the apportionment exceeded one-half of the value of the lot, including the improvements. After the entry of the judgment, the lot, including the improvements, was appraised in the sum of $350, and later sold at a commissioner’s *178 sale when W. T. Garrard, who was one of- the partners of the contracting firm which had constructed the street, bid it in at its appraised value. At a term of court subsequent to the one when the judgment was entered the sale was reported by the commissioner, whereupon the appellees filed exceptions to the report of sale, and also over objection an amended answer, the substance of both of which was that they had never been able to discharge the apportionment lien against their property up to that time, since the value of the property had never been fixed, and now that it had been fixed by the sale they wished to pay into court, and did pay into court, the amount for which it had been sold at the commissioner’s sale. They asked that the sale be set aside, that it be adjudged that the lien against the property was discharged by the payment they thus made into court, and that this payment be divided, by paying one-half to them and one-half to the contractor as the judgment provided. Over the objections of the purchaser this was done, and from this order this appeal is prosecuted.

Pending the appeal W. T. Garrard has died, but the appeal has been revived by consent in the name of his sole legatee and real representative. It will be noted that the judgment under which the property here in question was sold did not order the lot sold for the purpose of ascertaining its value, to the end that the appellees could, after such ascertainment, pay to the contractors their share of such value and so discharge the apportionment. On the contrary, the judgment ordered the property sold for the purpose of a division of the proceeds. The appellees, although they made a vigorous defense along other lines to this suit to enforce the apportionment against their lot, never presented the question of spoliation, nor did they ask that the court fix in advance of the sale the value of their lot, including the improvements, so that they could discharge the apportionment lien by paying that amount for which their lot was properly in lien. This they should have done, and when they failed to do that, and acquiesced as they did in the judgment of the court, at least in so far as it provided for a division of the proceeds of the sale price, they cannot now, after the sale has taken place, have that sale set aside by paying into court the sale price on the terms set up in their exceptions to the report of sale. That the proper procedure, if the appellees wished to discharge the lien against their lot, was to have the court fix the value of this lot, *179 including the improvements, in its judgment, is settled by the two recent cases of E. J. Knepple Sons v. City of Clifton (Ky.) — S. W. (2d). —, and Thompson et al. v. City of Williamsburg, 229 Ky. 81, 16 S. W. (2d) 772.

In the former case, the appellants, who had constructed certain streets in the city of Clifton, a city of the fourth class, brought suit to enforce their apportionments, and some of the property owners defended on the ground of spoliation. The applicable statute was section 3563 of the Statutes, which we have quoted above. The court heard evidence on the value of the lots, including the improvements, and then fixed it at certain figures. It then gave the contractors an apportionment lien for one-half of the value as so fixed, and, a judgment against the city for the difference between the apportionment as originally made and the apportionment lien against the lots as fixed by the court. A sale was ordered of the lots to satisfy the hens fixed by the court. At the sale, the lots did not bring the values fixed by the court, and the appellants asked an additional judgment against the city for the deficiency arising out of the difference between the values of the lots as fixed by the court and the'values as ascertained by the sale. In denying the appellants such relief we said:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 S.W.2d 1013, 230 Ky. 176, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garrard-v-kinder-kyctapphigh-1929.