Helton v. Hubbs

129 S.W.2d 116, 278 Ky. 621, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 464
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 26, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 129 S.W.2d 116 (Helton v. Hubbs) 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
Helton v. Hubbs, 129 S.W.2d 116, 278 Ky. 621, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 464 (Ky. 1939).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Thomas

Beversing.

In 1931 the appellant and plaintiff below, John Helton, was the owner, in possession of and resided upon a tract of land in Knox County, Kentucky, containing fifty acres, more or less. In November of that year he executed a deed whereby he conveyed his- land to Richard Lawson and wife, Ruby Lawson, in consideration of them agreeing to support him the remainder of his life, retaining the right in him to occupy a portion of the premises of the residence thereon, and other specified considerations. Some months thereafter plaintiff abandoned the occupancy of his old home and lived v'ith neighboring friends and relatives until March 24, 1932, when he was adjudged by appropriate proceedings to be of unsound mind and was confined in one of the eleemosynary institutions of the commonwealth for insane persons. In the interim between his departure from his old home and the inquest referred to, he consulted two of the defendants, J. M. Robsion and GL M. Manning *623 (attorneys), about filing an action against the Lawsons to cancel the deed he had executed to them; but no definite conclusion was reached and no petition then filed. Upon the adjudication in the inquest proceedings, J. F. Perkins was appointed and qualified as committee for appellant and plaintiff below. On April 19th, following his appointment as such committee, he filed an action by his selected counsel — the defendants, Eobsion and Manning — in the Knox Circuit Court against the two Lawsons as vendees in the deed referred to, seeking’ its cancellation for various reasons set out in that petition. The action was contested by the Lawsons and we gather from the record and from briefs of counsel that considerable proof was taken in the preparation of the case, which will hereinafter be referred to as the “cancellation suit or action.”

On February 18, 1933, judgment was rendered therein cancelling the deed executed by plaintiff to the Lawsons whereby the title was reinvested in plaintiff; but in the same judgment — and apparently without ony notice to plaintiff’s committee who was the sole plaintiff therein as a part of it: “It is further ordered and adjudged by the court that the committee’s attorneys are entitled to a reasonable fee for their services herein, and said attorneys, J. M. Eobsion and Gr. M. Manning, are allowed $50.00 to be taxed as cost herein and which is now adjudged a lien against said property, and that the plaintiff recover of defendants his cost herein. ’ ’

The judgment then and there enforced the declared lien by ordering the tract of land sold by the court’s commissioner to satisfy the costs and the allowed attorneys’ fee. The sale was made pursuant to the order of the court on April 24, 1933; but before that date, and on March 6, 1933 (24 days after the rendition of the judgment), plaintiff, by a proper proceeding, was restored to the rights of a sane person by the verdict of a jury impaneled to inquire into his mental condition. Its verdict was followed on the same day by a judgment of restoration. No steps whatever were thereafter taken in the action manifesting such fact of restoration, and of the termination (except for settlement purposes) of the power and authority of the committee resulting therefrom. Nevertheless the sale was made as and at the time stated, and the commissioner’s appraisers valued the land at $300. The defendant, Manning, became the purchaser of the land at that sale at the price of $50, *624 the amount of the allowed attorneys’ fee. The sale was reported at the succeeding term of the court and confirmed, followed by the almost immediate execution of a deed from the commissioner to Maiming, the purchaser, notwithstanding the latter’s bid was only one-sixth of the appraised value of the land sold, and the time for redemption had not expired.

Manning later conveyed the land to another defendant, Alameda Hubbs, for a monetary consideration of about $200 according to the proof — the deed not reciting it. But, strange to say the commissioner’s deed to Manning did not purport to convey to him any interest whatever owned and possessed therein by plaintiff, John Helton; but only conveyed the interest owned and possessed therein by Richard Lawson and Ruby Lawson, the unsuccessful defendants in the cancellation suit, and in which, as we have seen, the judgment of sale was rendered. That judgment, ipso facto, divested the two Lawsons of all interest in the land, and as a consequence they possessed none therein for the Master Commissioner to either sell or convey, even if the court had so directed him. No other conveying instrument was ever executed by the commissioner to the défendant, Manning, and, therefore, he never procured by his deed any interest whatever that plaintiff may have had in the land before the sale was made. Because of his_ emptiness of title he neither could nor did convey any interest in _the land to his vendee, Alameda Hubbs. Therefore, neither the commissioner’s conveyance of the land to Manning, nor the latter’s conveyance to Hubbs, had any effect to divest plaintiff of any interest^ he had in the land at the time of the sale or at the time of the execution of the master commissioner’s deed, or at any time.

On October 24,1935, plaintiff filed the instant action in the Knox circuit court against Robsion, Manning, the commissioner who made the sale, his former committee, Perkins, and Alameda Hubbs, in which he attacked— upon various grounds set out in Sections 518 et seq. of our Civil Code of Practice — the parts of the judgment rendered in the cancellation action referred to, insofar as it allowed a fee to attorneys employed by the committee therein and declared a lien on the land to secure it, as well as the order therein directing the land to be sold, and also all other orders following the entries of the judgment, because — as he claimed — they were illegal *625 and void, and he prayed in his petition that all of such attacked orders be set aside and that both deeds referred to be cancelled. No defendant answered in the case, except the attorneys and one of them (J. M. Robsion) disclaimed any interest in the case upon the ground that his services were rendered by him to plaintiff gratis and without any intention or expectation of reward. The other attorney (Manning) denied the various allegations of the petition and insisted on the validity of each and all of the attacked proceedings and orders. _ Subsequent pleadings formed the issues and upon submission after proof taken the court dismissed plaintiff’s petition, to reverse which he prosecutes this appeal.

The petition attempts to raise a number of questions founded _ up on the various grounds set out in Section 518 of the Civil Code of Practice under which the action was br'ought, but it is doubtful whether any of them is available for the purpose, ■ except the one relying upon the entire invalidity of the attacked orders supra of the court. Whether or not that contention is true is dependent upon the further inquiry as to whether the court at the time of entering each of them possessed jurisdiction of the subject matter , and of the person of plaintiff herein as party thereto. When a court has jurisdiction of the subject matter was decided by us in the very recent case of Covington Trust Company v. H. H. Owens et al., 278 Ky. 695, 129 S. W. (2d) 186, decided May 19, 1939.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
129 S.W.2d 116, 278 Ky. 621, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 464, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/helton-v-hubbs-kyctapphigh-1939.