Grimes v. Langevin

138 S.W.2d 353, 282 Ky. 302, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 46
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedNovember 24, 1939
StatusPublished

This text of 138 S.W.2d 353 (Grimes v. Langevin) 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
Grimes v. Langevin, 138 S.W.2d 353, 282 Ky. 302, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 46 (Ky. 1939).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Morris, Commissioner

Reversing.

On March 12, 1936, Grimes sued Langevin seeking to recover $2,000 with interest, on. a negotiable note alleged to have been executed and delivered to one F. E. Bradley by Langevin on November 13, 1930, due in twelve months from date, and on June 3, 1931, prior to maturity, assigned to Grimes. Concurrent with the making of the note, defendant delivered to Bradley a. mortgage on certain described oil leases located in Allen County, Kentucky.- Plaintiff plead failure of payment, and facts which made his petition sufficient in form and substance, and asked judgment for his debt, and the enforcement of his alleged lien.

Answering, Langevin admitted the execution and delivery of the note, but alleged that it was without consideration, and that he received no benefit by reason of its execution. He denies that same was transferred by Bradley to plaintiff for value received. He also denied. *304 the execution or delivery of the mortgage, and that ■plaintiff at the time of suit was the “absolute” owner of the note or entitled to any enforcement of lien on the alleged mortgaged property.

After proof had been taken by depositions, and before submission of the case, defendant, without objection by plaintiff, was permitted to file an amended answer, which he also made a counterclaim against plaintiff. In this pleading he alleged in substance that at the time of the execution of the note to Bradley it was not intended by either party that the note should constitute •or be considered as a legal obligation of the maker to pay the same or any part thereof, but was executed by defendant in the good faith belief, formed on the promises and declarations on the part of Bradley, that the note was to be used only as a basis of credit, and to enable Bradley to raise a sum of money so as he could embark in a new business enterprise, and that defendant would not be expected to pay any part of said note; that the alleged mortgage was merely a memorandum confirming the execution of the note, and was never intended to create a lien on the lease embraced therein.

He also alleges that the purported mortgage was not executed by him; was not read by him at the time he •signed it, and he had no actual knowledge of the mortgage placing a lien on his properties, until long after the plaintiff claimed to be the owner of it and the note; that as soon as he received such knowledge he repudiated "both the note and mortgage.

Defendant alleged affirmatively that plaintiff is not the owner of the note or mortgage for valuable or any •consideration, but that either P. E. Bradley or T. P. Bradley, or both, with the connivance and understanding of plaintiff, transferred the note for the purpose of •defrauding and cheating defendant, and to pass the note and alleged mortgage without consideration, and hence ■plaintiff is not an innocent purchaser in good faith, without notice. On this plea defendant asked for dismissal of plaintiff’s petition, and on his counterclaim judgment cancelling the note and mortgage.

There were no demurrers or other dilatory pleas filed, nor did plaintiff make reply to the original or ^amended answers, but all affirmative matter in “any *305 pleading not specifically pleaded to is, in all things, controverted of record. ’ ’ So, as it appears, the issues were-completed and upon submission on pleadings and depositions, the court denied recovery and dismissed the petition.

A determination of the matter before us requires a. statement of the proof adduced. Appellant urges that the proof introduced by appellant (his testimony alone) sufficiently shows that there was no consideration for the execution of the $2,000 note; that it was in truth executed as an accommodation to one Frank Bradley, who in a very questionable and collusive manner transferred it to Grimes.

Prior to August 1928 Langevin was approached by Frank Bradley, who represented to him that he owned some oil leases in Allen County and desired to sell out. It appears that Bradley merely had options on two> leases, known throughout the record as the Allen and. Satterfield leases. Langevin went to Scottsville and made some inquiries and found that in order to obtain the leases desired he would have to deal with C. A. Gilliam, since he was also interested in a Hill lease, and. agreed to purchase the first two named, if he could procure the latter, and succeeded, though the Hill lease appears to have been purchased from Frank Tapp. When, these leases were transferred to Langevin he paid $9,000 in cash and was to pay the balance in 90 days, all of' which he says he paid, save $500.

About the time of the purchase Langevin sold a half-interest in his leases to Frank Bradley for $6,000. By the terms of this lease Langevin was to make a dear-title to the interest when the $6,000 note executed to Mm by Bradley was discharged. It was stipulated in the contract that Bradley was to make monthly payments of $100 upon receipt of checks from the oil purchasing company for his, Bradley’s, one-half the oil runs, after deduction of operating expenses.

Several days prior to November 14, 1930, Bradley approached Langevin and wanted to borrow $2,000, saying he was “going to put oil in bottles, and put them in chain stores where motorists would buy them. He-said it was a new scheme, and he wanted me to let him use this $2,000 for a year. I told Mm I didn’t have» *306 this $2,000. The following day I received a letter from Morehead in which he said he had found a man who would let him have the money if I would sign a note for him.” A letter substantially to that effect was exhibited.

Bradley turned up in Louisville on November 14, 1930, and called Langevin, and the two went to a hotel and there met a man named Noe, a friend of Bradley’s, and Mr. Noe said:

“I will let Frank have the money, and then he was gone. Mr. Noe didn’t ask for my note. Then Frank took me over to a lawyer’s office, * * * the lawyer pulled out these papers that had already been prepared. The note, mortgage and contract. I had nothing to do with the writing of them in any way. I read them naturally before I signed them. I don’t know anything about papers of that kind, and the only thing I understand was that I was accommodating Frank Bradley with a loan of $2,000, and that he was to pay back this $2,000 in a year, with interest. I was never in law before in my life.”

The note exhibited is endorsed on the back: “F. E. Bradley, and without recourse.” The certificate of chattel mortgage is endorsed, “I hereby transfer my interest in the within mortgage to C. M. Grimes without recourse. F. E. Bradley.” Langevin says that he at no time acknowledged the mortgage, but that on the next •day it was discovered that there had been no acknowledgment, and Langevin went to the Kentucky Hotel where a notary added a jurat.

On the original of this mortgage appears the following endorsement:

“For value received, I hereby assign and transfer the notes mentioned in the foregoing mortgage to C. M. Grimes, of the City of Anderson, County of -, Indiana, this 3d day of June 1931. F. E. Bradley.”

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Bluebook (online)
138 S.W.2d 353, 282 Ky. 302, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grimes-v-langevin-kyctapphigh-1939.