Hargis v. Hargis

151 S.W.2d 417, 287 Ky. 72, 1941 Ky. LEXIS 481
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 16, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 151 S.W.2d 417 (Hargis v. Hargis) 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
Hargis v. Hargis, 151 S.W.2d 417, 287 Ky. 72, 1941 Ky. LEXIS 481 (Ky. 1941).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas

— Affirming.

The appellee and plaintiff below, Joanna E. Hargis, recovered a judgment in the Fayette circuit court against the appellant and defendant below, A. H. Hargis, whereby she was granted an absolute divorce, and by agreement she was adjudged alimony in the sum of $250 per month. Only about $600 was paid her by her divorced husband in satisfaction of her allowed alimony, and from time to time she filed separate actions against him in the Fayette circuit court to reduce to judgment the accumulated and unpaid amounts. Some three or four of such actions were successively filed, none of which was defended, and judgments went in her favor in each of them. Executions issued on them which were sent to the sheriff of Breathitt county, where defendant resided and where his property, if he possessed any, was supposed to be located. He had outwardly owned, prior thereto, some real estate consisting* of four lots moon which buildings had been erected in the city of Jackson, and, perhaps, also some parcels located outside of that city; and on one of the four of such parcels (being a lot located in the city) there was erected a costly business house in which a bank institution known as the “Hargis Bank” conducted its business, whilst another was defendant’s costly residence. The record as made out and brought here is not clear as to whether any of the executions referred to was actually levied by the *74 sheriff of Breathitt county on any of the property to which we have alluded, but it is clear that at least some of them were not levied but were endorsed by the sheriff “no property found,” and so returned to the clerk of the Fayette circuit court. In each instance, as the return was made, following the recovery of the respective judgments, the plaintiff therein, and herein, filed lis pendens notices with the county court clerk of Breathitt county setting out the facts whereby constructive notice was given in order to protect her thereby acquired rights. It was then known, or thereafter discovered, that other claims against the property by other creditors of appellant were being litigated in actions pending in the Breathitt circuit court and which were finally determined in the consolidated case of W. T. Congleton Company v. Hargis, and which was affirmed by us in the case of Hargis v. W. T. Congleton Company, 252 Ky. 192, 66 S. W. (2d) 98, in which opinion legal questions as well as the facts litigated are stated.

In the same volume of the Kentucky Reports on page 198 under the style of Hargis v. Hargis we affirmed the judgment of divorce referred to, including the alimony allowance to plaintiff. The determinations of issues in those two cases, both factual and legal,- thereby became adjudicated as between the parties to those actions and rendered them no longer available in subsequent litigation between the same parties. But notwithstanding, appellant, who practiced this case for himself, seeks to rely on many of such issues determined in the cases referred to.

With matters in the situation described Mrs. Joanna E. Hargis, who was not a party to the first action referred to, filed this equitable discovery action in the Fayette circuit court against her divorced husband, his brother, Elbert Hargis, one O. Gr. Maloney, and Commercial Securities Service Company, located in Lexington, Kentucky, pursuant to the provisions of Section 439 of our Civil Code of Practice, and a part of the provisions of Section 210 of Baldwin’s 1936 Revision of Carroll’s Kentucky Statutes, seeking to discover and reach property of her husband in satisfaction of her various alimony judgments supra. In her petition she set out in detail the facts hereinbefore related and obtained an attachment directed to the sheriff of Breathitt county who levied it on the four pieces of real property involved *75 in this action. Bnt because of the claimed rights of others to subject the property in satisfaction of their demands no sale was had under the levy of the attachment. Lis pendens notices were likewise filed with the county court clerk of Breathitt county of the levy of such attachments. The original petition herein averred, inter alia, that a mortgage had been executed by A. H. Hargis to the defendant Commercial Securities Service Company; that the'property had been fraudulently conveyed by defendant (plaintiff’s husband) to his brother, Elbert Hargis, and that Maloney claimed some interest or rights in and to the attached property, but each and all of which plaintiff averred was bogus and that A. H. Hargis was the actual owner of the property levied on as holder of either the legal or the equitable title thereto. The defendant, Commercial Securities Service Company, never answered to the merits,' and it was developed during the litigation and admitted by all parties that the alleged mortgage to it evidenced only a unilateral effort on the part of A. H. Hargis to cover up his property and put it beyond the reach of his divorced wife so as to prevent her from collecting her alimony judgment rendered against him, and that no such alleged mortgage, although one was actually executed by A. H. Hargis, was ever delivered to that Company, nor did it ever advance him one penny.

The answer and cross petition of Maloney disclosed that he had executed sale bonds for the property sold under the Congleton Company judgment at which A. H. Hargis was the purchaser, notwithstanding he had previously conveyed the property to his brother, Elbert Hargis, and that it was then agreed that when the purchase price was satisfied by A. H. Hargis he was to become the owner of the property. That agreement was later reduced to writing and executed by A. H. Hargis and Maloney. Elbert Hargis’ pretended title to the land vanished under the judgment rendered in the Congleton Company case and it developed in this case that he never possessed a sustainable title as against creditors of his vendor. After being summoned in Breathitt county in this action A. H. Hargis ana Elbert Hargis entered motion to quash the summons as well as the return thereon upon various alleged grounds, one of which was that none of the land sought to be reached by the action through the processes to which we have referred, was located in Fayette county where the judgments in favor *76 of plaintiff and which this action sought to enforce, were rendered. Later on special and general demurrers were filed to plaintiff’s petition, which pleading she amended from time to time, but none of such dilatory motions were acted on up to the time when defendant Hargis filed in the cause what he designated as a “Plea in Bar,” to the effect that since the rendition of the alimony judgment in favor of his wife he had procured a discharge in bankruptcy through a proceeding filed for that purpose instituted in the Federal District Court for the Eastern District of Kentucky, and that he was thereby relieved from obligation to pay either his wife’s alimony judgment, or any of the other claims of the different litigants referred to. One of the latter was that of W. T. Congleton and Company for street improvements in front of the properties whilst others were for taxes due the city of Jackson and the Board of Education of the same city and still others not necessary to mention.

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Related

Hargis v. Maloney
153 S.W.2d 944 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1941)

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Bluebook (online)
151 S.W.2d 417, 287 Ky. 72, 1941 Ky. LEXIS 481, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hargis-v-hargis-kyctapphigh-1941.