Griffith's Adm'x v. Miller

149 S.W.2d 11, 285 Ky. 675, 1941 Ky. LEXIS 454
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMarch 11, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 149 S.W.2d 11 (Griffith's Adm'x v. Miller) 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
Griffith's Adm'x v. Miller, 149 S.W.2d 11, 285 Ky. 675, 1941 Ky. LEXIS 454 (Ky. 1941).

Opinion

*676 Opinion op the Court by

Judge Ratlipp

Reversing.

The appellants, who were plaintiffs below, brought this action in the Boone circuit court against appellees D. W. Miller and Fannie Smith Miller, his wife, and three infant children of D. W. Miller, seeking to recover of them on a note for $4,300 and to subject certain real estate to the payment of the note. The basic facts out of which this litigation arose are, in substance, these:

Lizzie E. Miller died testate in January, 1933, a resident of Boone County, Kentucky. By the terms of her will testatrix devised to the defendant, D. W. Miller, who • was a son of the testatrix, certain real estate, and it was provided in the will that he was not to sell the real estate during his lifetime, it being the object of the testatrix to insure him of a home during his lifetime and after his death if, for the best insurance of his family, if he should be married and have children, the land could be sold and the proceeds invested for the children until they reached legal age. We are not called upon to construe -the will with respect to the exact interest each devisee or class of devisees took. However, D. W. Miller and his children were invested by the will with some sort of a joint interest in the land.

About one year after the death of Lizzie E. Miller, J. 0. Griffith, husband of plaintiff Mattie M. Griffith, died intestate, and Mattie M. Griffith qualified as administratrix of his estate. Mattie M. Griffith was a daughter of Lizzie E. Miller, deceased, and had qualified as executrix of her estate and thus became the representative of both estates — that of her deceased mother, Lizzie E. Miller, and of her deceased husband, J. 0. Griffith.

In 1936 Mattie M. Griffith, suing individually and as administratrix of the estate of J. 0. Griffith, deceased, and in behalf of her infant son, J. 0. Griffith, Jr., filed their petition in equity, alleging that on November 12, 1932, Lizzie E. Miller and J). W. Miller executed and delivered to J. 0. Griffith their joint promissory note for the sum of $4,300 payable to the order of J. 0. Griffith, six months from date with interest at six per cent per annum. Plaintiff further pleaded her qualification as administratrix of the estate of her deceased husband, and that the note or any part thereof had not been paid *677 and was a jnst demand and that there was no set-off; or discount against the same or any usury therein.

Plaintiff further alleged that she qualified as executrix of the will of Lizzie E. Miller, deceased, and that she had settled that estate and that the personal property was insufficient to pay funeral expenses and administration of the estate, leaving no personal property or other assets with which- to pay the note sued on.

Plaintiffs further set out in their petition the devise of the real estate by the will of Lizzie E. Miller, deceased, to the defendants, and prayed judgment against them for the amount of the note with interest and that the land devised to the defendants be sold and the proceeds, or a sufficient amount thereof, be applied to the 'payment of the note, interest and cost of the action.

Defendants filed special and general demurrers to the_ petition and after same were overruled they filed their answer admitting that D. W. Miller signed the note as surety of his mother, Lizzie E. Miller, but denied that the note was executed or delivered on November 12, 1933, and denied the plaintiffs were the owners of the note or that it was a just claim, and denied certain other allegations to the petition.

In paragraph two, defendants alleged that sometime prior to the execution and delivery of the note, Mattie M. Griffith and her husband, J. 0. Griffith, bought and sold corporate stock and other commodities on the stock market on margins and without any intention of paying the full value or receiving delivery of any of the stocks dealt in by them; that prior to the execution of the note Mattie M. Griffith and her husband induced Lizzie E. Miller to permit them to make certain stock deals for her, promising her large profits and returns from such deals. They further alleged that Lizzie E. Miller was the owner of certain stock of the Cincinnati, Newport and Covington Street Bailway Company of value of approximately $800, and Mattie M. Griffith and her husband induced Lizzie E. Miller to transfer and deliver to them all of said stock which they sold and kept' and used the proceeds thereof; that thereafter Mattie M. Griffith and her husband demanded of Lizzie E. Miller the sum of $5,000 claimed by them to be due and owing by Lizzie E. Miller to the stockbrokers by reason of losses in the stock deals made for her, but no part of same was paid *678 by Lizzie E. Miller at that time, but at the time of the execution of the note sued on, Lizzie E. Miller, believing that she was obliged to pay the $5,000, then paid to Mattie M. Griffith and her husband the sum of $700 in cash, and, together with the defendant, D. W. Miller as her surety, executed the note sued on for $4,300 payable to J. O. Griffith. They further alleged that there was no consideration for the note and same was contrary to the public policy of this state and is denounced by Sections 1955,1956 and 1957 of the Kentucky Statutes and therefore null and void and of no binding force or effect between the parties thereto, or otherwise.

They further pleaded as “set-off” the Cincinnati, Newport and Covington Street Railway stock mentioned above, alleging same to be worth $800, and also the $700 which Lizzie E. Miller paid to them mentioned above. They further alleged that the plaintiff, Mattie M. Griffith, as executrix of the estate of Lizzie E. Miller, deceased, failed to inventory or otherwise list the note sued on as a liability of the estate of Lizzie E. Miller, deceased, and likewise failed to list or include same in her settlement as administratrix of the estate of J. O. Griffith as an asset thereof, and thereby failed and refused to recognize the validity or binding effect of the note in any respect and by her said acts and conduct she elected to treat the note as of no value whatever and waived all rights and benefits therein she might be entitled to as such personal representative, guardian, or individually. It is further alleged that the note sued on was not assessed for taxation and that no taxes of any kind have ever been paid on the note and pleaded and relied on such failure to list the note for taxation and the payment of taxes due thereon, as a bar to this action.

It was further alleged that the note sued on was executed and delivered to J. O. Griffith and accepted by him on the 13th day of November, 1933, which was on Sunday, and for that reason the note is unenforceable between the parties thereto.

Plaintiffs filed their reply to the answer and set-off, traversing the allegations thereof, and pleaded affirmatively that the note sued on was, in April, 1937, duly listed and assessed for taxation for the tax years 1934, 1935 and 1936, and the taxes paid.

Thereafter plaintiff filed an amended petition plead *679 ing more fully her appointment and qualification as administratrix of the estate of J. 0.

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Bluebook (online)
149 S.W.2d 11, 285 Ky. 675, 1941 Ky. LEXIS 454, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/griffiths-admx-v-miller-kyctapphigh-1941.