Goodloe v. Anderson

275 Ky. 460
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedNovember 18, 1938
StatusPublished

This text of 275 Ky. 460 (Goodloe v. Anderson) 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
Goodloe v. Anderson, 275 Ky. 460 (Ky. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Ratlipb

Affirming.

Appellee, A. M. Anderson, as Receiver for the Citizen’s National Bank of Richmond, Kentucky, brought this suit in the Madison circuit court in May, 1937, to recover of appellant on a note for $2,000 executed by J. D. G-oodloe, now deceased, as principal, with appellant as surety. The note was subject to a credit of. $742.79 paid out of the proceeds of the personal property of J. D. Gfoodloe, deceased, upon the settlement of his personal estate.

[462]*462Appellant filed his answer and counterclaim admitting the execution of the note as surety for J. D. Goodloe but pleaded as a defense to appellee’s right of recovery, that prior to the execution of the note by his brother, J. D. Goodloe, he and J. D. Goodboe were carrying their separate bank accounts with the Madison Southern National Bank and Trust Company of Richmond, and about a year prior to the execution of the-original note herein sued on, same having been executed in the year 1928, and while J. D. Goodloe was doing' business with the Madison Southern National Bank,, appellant signed and executed a note as surety for J. D.. Goodloe to the Madison Southern National Bank in the sum of $2,950, which was subject to certain credits reducing same to the sum of approximately $2,500 when, the estate of J. D. Goodloe, deceased, was settled; that the note sued on is a renewal note and that some time-before the execution of the original note in 1928, J. D.. Goodloe desired to transfer his banking business from the Madison Southern National Bank & Trust Company to the Citizens National Bank, appellee, but before making the transfer of his banking business to the appellee,, it, appellee, required J. D. Goodloe to pay any indebtedness he then owed to the Madison Southern National Bank, and in order to enable J. D. Goodloe to make the-desired change in his banking affairs, appellant paid the-$2,500 note which J. D. Goodloe owed the Madison Southern National Bank and on which appellant was-surety, all of which was at the request and with the-knowledge of appellee and immediately upon the payment of the note he notified appellee and its officials that he had paid the note and that J. D. Goodloe was then indebted to him in the sum of that note; that at the time he paid the note to the Madison Southern National Bank, J. D. Goodloe then owned real estate situated in Madison County, Kentucky, worth the sum of $30,000, subject to a Federal Land Bank mortgage of about $20,~ 000, and his land was well worth over the existing liabilities of J. D. Goodloe at that time; that soon after J. D. Goodloe transferred his business from the Madison Southern National Bank to appellee, he, J. D. Goodloe, was desirous of obtaining a loan of $2,000 from appellee and appellee informed appellant that it would loan J. D. Goodloe the sum of $2,000 if appellant would sign the note as surety; that he conversed with the officials of appellee bank concerning priority of the balance [463]*463of $2,500, owed him by J. D. Goodloe which appellant paid to the Madison Southern National Bank, and it was agreed between him and the officials of appellee at that time that in the event appellant signed the $2,000 note as surety for J. D. Goodloe, that appellant was to have a prior claim to appellee upon the real and personal estate of J. D. Goodloe for said sums and that as result of this agreement and relying upon the statements of the agents and officials of appellee he was induced and persuaded to sign as surety the $2,000 note sued on.

He further stated that shortly after he signed the $2,000 note as surety, in violation of the agreements and understanding he had with the officials and agents of appellee as stated above, appellee by its officials and agents, against the will and without the consent and knowledge of appellant and for the purpose of cheating and defrauding him, did wrongfully, fraudulently and secretly from time to time loan J. D. Goodloe various sums of money aggregating the sum of $9,047.48 and to secure the payment of which it procured J. D. Goodloe to execute to it a second mortgage upon his farm in Madison county, which farm at that time had a Federal Land Bank mortgage against it in the sum stated above; that appellee, contrary to its agreement and understanding with him, failed to protect him in any way or manner by failing to incorporate in said mortgage the amount owing this defendant by J. D. Goodloe or the $2,000 note which he signed as surety.

Appellant further stated in his answer that thereafter and on the 9th day of June, 1932, J. D. Goodloe died intestate and that at the time of his death his estate was solvent and sufficient to pay any and all of his liabilities; that shortly before the death of J. D. Goodloe and soon as appellant learned or was informed of the execution of the second mortgage to appellee, he immediately notified appellee that he would not further renew the $2,000 note or be responsible for same because of the violation of the agreement and understanding above set forth, and further notified appellee to immediately proceed against the property and estate of J. D. Goodloe, who was then living, for the collection of any demands which it had against J. D. Goodloe and especially upon the $2,000 note; that appellee failed and refused to take any action in the collection of its demands during the lifetime of J. D. Goodloe, and had it not been for its [464]*464negligence in failing to collect its obligations against J. D. Goodloe ont of Ms property during his lifetime, it would have collected the whole of its obligations including the $2,000 note signed by Mm as surety. He further stated that immediately after the death of J. D. Goodloe an action in equity (referred to in the record in the present action as action No. 2758) was filed in the Madison circuit court to settle the estate of J. D. Goodloe and while the settlement suit was pending, he, appellant, went to the appellee and offered to its officials and agents to bid the amount of the Federal Land Bank mortgage and note, the balance of the Madison Southern National Bank note paid by appellant for J. D. Goodloe, and the $2,000 note he had signed as surety, and take the real estate of J. D. Goodloe, deceased, in satisfaction of said sums; that at that time J. D. Goodloe’s real estate was advertised for sale in satisfaction of the Federal Land Bank note; that appellee refused his offer and thereafter at the time of the sale appellant together with the various other citizens of Madison county attended the sale and C. C. Wallace, who was attorney for appellee at that time, bid off said real estate of J. D. Goodloe, deceased, for the sum of the Federal Land Bank mortgage, plus $1, which was far less than the value of said land, and that the presence of Wallace, who was attorney for appellee, and bidding at said sale caused any bids that might have been made from being-made and as result thereof the sale was closed by C. C. Wallace, all of which was done secretly and fraudulently and for the purpose of cheating and defrauding- the estate of J. D. Goodloe and especially the appellant.

In paragraph 3 of the answer appellant pleaded the statute of limitations against appellee’s action on the note. But since other facts pleaded by appellant and undisputably disclosed by the record in action No. 2758, the suit to settle the estate of J. D.

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Bluebook (online)
275 Ky. 460, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goodloe-v-anderson-kyctapp-1938.