Harlan's Admr. v. Brown

1 Ky. Op. 118, 1866 Ky. LEXIS 231
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 2, 1866
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Ky. Op. 118 (Harlan's Admr. v. Brown) 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
Harlan's Admr. v. Brown, 1 Ky. Op. 118, 1866 Ky. LEXIS 231 (Ky. Ct. App. 1866).

Opinion

Opinion oe the Court by

Judge Williams :

Brown sold to Harlan a house and lot in Frankfort, April 1, 1844, at $5,500, to be paid at five years’ date, to bear interest from -date, to be paid yearly, a deed of conveyance to be made on the payment of the purchase price.

[119]*119Numerous payments were made by Harlan, when Batchelor, then a clerk and bookkeeper in the Farmers’ Bank, was requested to state the account and strike the balance from data furnished by Harlan, which he did, showing the remainder due September 1, 1859, to be $3,246.80. Twelve days thereafter Harlan made his note, with Brown as his only surety, to the Farmers’5 Bank for $2,993.75, which the hank discounted, and Harlan gave Brown a check for the proceeds, $2,933.90.

June 7, 1860, Harlan wrote a note to Brown in response to a request to raise some money for him, in which he says, I have made no calculation of the balance due you lately; my recollection is between $200 and $300.”

Harlan died in 1863, the title never having been conveyed. His administrator filed this bill suggesting a deficiency of assets to pay his debts, as he had become largely indebted as surety for parties who had proved insolvent, make his widow and heirs and creditors and said Brown parties, alleged that decedent had paid Brown for the house and lot, and that he be compelled to convey. Brown answered, denying the payment of the purchase price, set out that he had gone Harlan’s surety in the note to the Farmers’ Bank for $2,993.75, had gotten the proceeds but it was not received as a payment, no credit therefor was entered, and being bound himself for the return of the money to the bank he held the title as security, that Harlan had renewed said debt with him still as surety until his death, and $2,400 of the principal still remained due the bank; by a subsequent amendment he exhibits Harlan’s letter of June 7, 1860, and asserts that a balance of over $300 remains still due him when the hank debt is paid; he asks that a prior lien be adjudged him for the amount of the bank debt and this remainder, and makes his answer a cross-petition i against the administrator, who replied and protested against any judgment in Brown’s favor.

The court adjudged that a final settlement was had, and that the amount of the proceeds of the note to the Farmers’ Bank was the sum.due from Harlan, and that Brown still held the title as surety for the payment of this bank debt, but as the bank was no party to Brown’s pleadings the submission was set aside with leave to amend; subsequently at the request of both parties a final judgment was pronounced upon the pleadings without amendment, when the court dismissed the suit against Brown so far as it sought the title and dismissed his cross-petition so far as it sought [120]*120a judgment over for any balance due him and affirmed the previous-interlocutory judgment; all'these dismissals were, however, without prejudice, and from which both parties have appealed.

There are two main questions in the case. 1. Is there any remainder over and above the bank debt due on the purchase price ?' 2. Has Brown’s lien been discharged or displaced by his reception of' the proceeds of the bank debt ? Or does he still hold the title for its payment ?

It is most evident from Batchelor’s statement that there was due Brown, September 1, 1859, after allowing all the credits claimed by Harlan, $3,246.80, which would leave due to Brown, $312.90, after deducting $2,933.90, the proceeds of the bank debt, and Harlan doubtless referred to this balance in his letter of June. 1, 1860.

The court, therefore, erred in not allowing Brown this $312.90, with annual interest from September 1, 1859.

There might be various reasons why the bank note was made for odd dollars and cents, and though, in the absence of all proof, this might raise the presumption that it was made for such exact sum that its proceeds would be equivalent to the balance due, yet certainly this is not sufficient to overbalance a deliberately stated account showing the debts and credits with the balance stated, and subsequent acknowledgment of a still outstanding remainder-due, especially when one of the alternate amounts, so acknowledged, so nearly corresponds with the balance as shown by this-stated account, and this too made from dates furnished by Harlan.

The value of Mrs. Harlan’s dower interest will be greatly enhanced by the displacement of Brown’s lien, as to the bank debt, and the other creditors pro rata increased also, all, however, to the-injury of Brown, as Harlan’s estate is largely insolvent. Brown, therefore, must lose whatever his estate'cannot pay of this bank, debt, unless he be allowed a prior lien.

- There is no direct proof of any special understanding between-Brown and Harlan as to whether the former was to retain the-title until the bank debt was paid, but we are left to determine as-to this from the circumstances.

The indulgence of more than ten years after the purchase price-had become due, before this note in bank was given, evidences the very kind and intimate personal relations which must have existed between the parties, and all the correspondence attests the same, [121]*121as well as that Harlan was then hard run and perhaps embarrassed. Brown’s necessities, together with his long forbearance, and the loose state of the accounts seem to have made Harlan anxious to-get a proper statement of his indebtedness, and to arrange the remainder to suit Brown’s condition.

Having ascertained this remainder, doubtless the expedient of' a borrow from the bank was the most convenient, if, indeed, not. the only available means of raising the money.

The still permitting the title to remain in Brown and so continuing although Harlan lived for about four years afterward is a significant fact. It may be said the remaining $300 and odd dollars still due upon the purchase price was a sufficient reason for-Harlan’s not asking or for Brown’s not conveying the title, but if” Brown was willing to indorse for Harlan to the amount of near-$3,000 and not retain a lien therefor how much less would he-retain the title to secure only $300.

Brown still held Harlan’s obligation for the purchase price; this-was neither surrendered nor credited; if Brown was not to retain the lien until this bank debt was made a deed would most likely-have been made even if a lien for the 300 odd dollars of the remaining purchase money not paid hy the proceeds of the bank debt-had been reserved therein, especially when the parties had so nearly-settled this transaction of more than fifteen years’ standing.

Had this note been made payable to the order of Brown instead' of the bank, though he might have indorsed it to the bank and' gotten its proceeds, this would not have extinguished his lien, as-it would not in reality have been a payment until the note should' be fully discharged. Brown was the sole indorser, and his liability to the bank was precisely the same as if the note had been payable to him and he had indorsed it, and Harlan’s liability was ■ likewise precisely the same.

As the legal responsibilities of both Brown and Harlan were-precisely the same to the bank, what principle of equity will, relieve Harlan from a responsibility on the mere form of the note, and deprive Brown of so important a right ?

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Bluebook (online)
1 Ky. Op. 118, 1866 Ky. LEXIS 231, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harlans-admr-v-brown-kyctapp-1866.