Hawes v. Orr

73 Ky. 431, 10 Bush 431, 1874 Ky. LEXIS 70
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedNovember 20, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 73 Ky. 431 (Hawes v. Orr) 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
Hawes v. Orr, 73 Ky. 431, 10 Bush 431, 1874 Ky. LEXIS 70 (Ky. Ct. App. 1874).

Opinion

JUDGE COFER

delivered the opinion op the court.

Á suit was commenced in the Gallatin Circuit Court in November, 1825, by one portion of the heirs at law of George Nicholas against another portion of said heirs for the partition of a large tract of land owned by them. In 1838 the county of Carroll was established, and included within its boundary the whole of the land which the heirs of Nicholas sought to partition. In 1839, and before partition had been made, and before a decree for that purpose, three fi. fas. for cost were issued against Nicholas’s heirs and placed in the hands of the sheriff of Carroll County, who levied them on seven or eight hundred acres of the land sought to be partitioned by the suit in Gallatin. The land levied on was sold, and John C. Lindsey became the purchaser and received the sheriff’s deed. In 1846, the Gallatin suit being still pending, the complainants amended their bill, and set up the levy upon and sale of the land and its purchase by Lindsey, and sought to vacate the sale and conveyance to him, and to eject Craig, O’Neal, and others, who had entered thereon under purchases from Lindsey, on the ground that the levy and sale were collusive and fraudulent.

To this amended bill, Walton Craig, William O’Neal, John Scott,-Mayland, and John C. Lindsey were made defendants. In 1865 judgment was rendered by the Gallatin court in this branch of the case, declaring the sale under the [434]*434executions to be fraudulent and void, and canceling the deed from the sheriff to Lindsey, and awarding a writ habere facias for the land. From that judgment an appeal was prosecuted to this court by Craig, the heirs of William O’Neal, and John C. Lindsey and others, and the judgment as to Craig and O’Neal’s heirs was reversed, but was affirmed as to the other appellants.

Writs of possession were then sued out, and all persons in possession of any part of the land embraced by the sheriff’s deed to Lindsey were turned out of possession, except Craig and O’Neal. Soon thereafter these suits were instituted in the Carroll Circuit Court by tenants, who claimed as remote vendees of John C. Lindsey to be restored to the possession from which they had been turned out by the sheriff, acting under the writ of habere facias from the Gallatin Circuit Court.

The plaintiffs in each of the cases sought relief on the ground that, although the sale by the sheriff under the fi. fas. against Nicholas’s heirs was fraudulent and therefore invalid as to the participants in the fraud, it was not void except for fraud; and that as they had purchased in good faith for fair prices, and had paid for the land claimed by them respectively without notice of the fraud in the sale, the sale was valid as to them; that, although they had been dispossessed under the writ from Gallatin, they were not parties to that suit, and had no notice of its pendency, and could not be bound by any judgment rendered therein. They also alleged that the Gallatin court had no jurisdiction as to them.

To these suits various defenses were set up, only three of which are now relied upon, viz.: 1. That the levy and sale were absolutely void; 2. That the levy and sale having been made while the suit for partition was pending in Gallatin, the purchases by Lindsey and his vendees were made pendente lite, and that they therefore held subject to such judgment as might [435]*435be rendered in the Gallatin court; 3. That the rights of the parties had been adjudicated in the suit in Gallatin, that judgment having been affirmed as to all except Craig and O’Neal, and that the plaintiffs below were either parties to that litigation or privies to those who were, and are bound by that judgment.

It appears that the sheriff of Carroll sold the land in June, 1839, and made a deed to John C. Lindsey, the purchaser, in July of the same year.

In order to a correct understanding of the facts it will be necessary to state the derivation of title claimed by plaintiffs in each of the three cases separately.

In case No. 1, of R. Hawes, &c. v. John J. Orr, &c., it appears that John C. Lindsey, on the 1st of February, 1840, sold and conveyed two hundred acres of the land conveyed to him by the sheriff to Richard C. Lindsey for the recited consideration of one dollar. On the 15th day of November, 1842, R. C. Lindsey sold and conveyed tbe same tract to John Scott and John B. Orr in consideration of one thousand dollars cash. The tenants in possession who were turned out of the land in contest in this case entered and held under Scott and Orr.

In the case of Hawes, &c. v. Rice, &e., it appears that John C. Lindsey, on the 25th of March, 1841, in consideration of one dollar, sold and conveyed a part of the land embraced by the sheriff’s deed to him to Lewis Smith, who on the 16th of February, 1843, sold and conveyed twenty-nine acres three roods and thirty-five poles thereof to John G. Stevens for the same consideration. On the 25th of November, 1841, by deed signed but not acknowledged or recorded, Smith sold and conveyed to John Montgomery ninety-three acres of his purchase from John C. Lindsey for seven hundred and twenty dollars, all of which has been paid; and in 1843 Montgomery sold and conveyed forty-two and a half acres of his purchase [436]*436to I). L. Rice for five hundred dollars in hand paid; and on the 9th of April, 1845, Montgomery sold and conveyed the residue of his purchase to James H. Rice for three hundred and seventy-five dollars in hand paid. The tenants in possession, and who were turned out by the writ from Gallatin, held and claimed under this title.

In Hawes, &c. v. Green, &c., the tenants turned out claimed under the following conveyances, viz.: The deed of March 25, 1841, from John C. Lindsey to Lewis Smith, before referred to, and a deed from the sheriff of Carroll County to Stratton, dated March 25, 1843, and made in pursuance of a levy and sale of one hundred and five acres of said land under an execution against Lewis Smith; and a deed from Stratton to Bennett Green, dated 27th day of September, 1844, and made in consideration of five hundred and twenty-seven dollars and fifty cents in hand paid.

The claimants under these several deeds seem to have entered into possession soon after the deeds were made, and to have held and claimed the land as their own until dispossessed as before stated. The circuit court restored them to possession, and the heirs of Nicholas prosecute these appeals from those judgments.

1. The first question presented is whether the execution, sale, and purchase by John C. Lindsey were void. This question was presented in the appeal of Walton Craig, &c. v. Richard Hawes, &c. (MS. Opinion, May 27, 1868), and it was then held that the sale was not ipso facto, et constructions legis void, and this adjudication is conclusive upon this point, which need not therefore be further noticed.

2. Was there such a lispendsns as will affect the appellees? It will have been observed that the land now in contest passed out of the hands of all the parties supposed to have had any connection with the alleged frauds committed in the levy, sale, and purchase under the fi. fas. into the hands of the appellees [437]

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Bluebook (online)
73 Ky. 431, 10 Bush 431, 1874 Ky. LEXIS 70, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hawes-v-orr-kyctapp-1874.