Hill v. Mayes

79 S.W. 276, 117 Ky. 877, 1904 Ky. LEXIS 257
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMarch 16, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 79 S.W. 276 (Hill v. Mayes) 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
Hill v. Mayes, 79 S.W. 276, 117 Ky. 877, 1904 Ky. LEXIS 257 (Ky. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

Opinion or the court by

JUDGE NUNN

Affirming.

T. J. West died in Marion county, Ky., in the year 1805, and left a small amount of personal property and three tracts of land. On one of the tracts there was a lien in favor [879]*879of one Bricken, wlio had died, upon whose estate J. M. Knott had administered. One of the tracts was purchased by T. J. West of Adeline Mackin for the price of $700, for which he executed two notes; one for $300, the other for $400. This last note Mrs. Mackin, prior to 1895, sold and assigned to one Rosetta Johnson, testate of appellant herein. Mrs. Mackin, when she transferred this note to Rosetta Johnson, failed to note this fact on the margin of the deedbook as required by section 498a of the Kentucky Statutes .of 1903. 'The record stood as showing that she was still the holder of the lien notes. One Robert Parrott qualified, as the administrator of T. J. West, and on December 30, 1895, he instituted an action by virtue of section 428 of the Civil Code of Practice to settle decedent’s estate. He made as defendants the children of decedent West, and the creditors, "Adeline Mackin, J. M. Knott and J. M. Bricken, administrators of Alex. Bricken, Martin Horan and Catherine Horan.

He alleged in his petition that these were all the creditors of the decedent known to him. He also alleged that the decedent was the statutory guardian of his children, and as such was indebted to them, as shown by his fast settlement, which settlement was made part of his petition, in the sum of $973, with interest from the year 1890. It also appears that J. M. Knott some time in the month of February, 1896, was appointed by the county court as guardian for the children of the decedtent, West, who were made defendants in the action. But before he was summoned and made a party to the action as guardian, and on the 21st of February, 1896, the court rendered a judgment for the sale of the three tracts of land mentioned. The-court first directed the commissioner to offer the three tracts separately and then as a whole, accepting the bid or bids which result in the most [880]*880money to the estate, and' closed the judgment with these words: “All valid claims and liens against the land or either of said tracts shall attach to- the; proceeds thereof, and said lienholders shall not be prejudiced by the sale of this land as herein offered.”- The commissioner reported that he offered the three tracts separately. The hid offered for one was $822, another $162, and the other or the Mackin land $126. He then offered the whole, and John Horan bid the sum of $1,800, which bid was accepted, and the court confirmed this report. Horan paid all the purchase price, and the deed was made to him. The court, by an order made at its February term, by virtue of section 430 of the Civil Code of Practice, referred the action to the master commissioner to advertise, take proof, and report all claims against the estate. At the next term of the court he made his report, in which he reported a claim due Mrs. Mackin for something over $200, and reported it as a preferred claim on- the land sold by her to West; and reported the claim due the Bricken estate of $150 as a preferred lien on one of the other tracts ; and reported that the children of West had a preferred claim against their father’s 'estate of $1,242; that this money had been expended by their father in purchasing the two tracts of land other than the Mackin survey. He reported that he had advertised for claims as required by section •430 of the Civil Code of Practice and the order of court, and no claims were filed which were preferred claims other than those mentioned; that five or six persons holding general claims amounting in all to about $200 had proved and filed their claims, which were each set out in his report. This report was confirmed, and the court directed the cost of the action to be paid, and that the claims of Bricken, Mackin, -and the children be paid, and the balance of $87 be distri[881]*881buted pro rata among the general creditors. This was done and the oase stricken from the docket in the year 1897. It appears that Mrs. Rosetta Johnson did not personally know that she had any claim against the estate of West; that J. M. Kno it, who was the cashier of a bank, was her agent, .and transacted all her business, and actually made this transaction with Mrs. Mackin by which she received this note for $400, and. collected the interest for her for one or two years from West. It also appears that neither Parrott, the administrator of West, nor any of the other parties to that action other than Knott and Mrs. Mackin, had any knowledge nr information of the existence of this $400 note, or that Mrs. Rosetta Johnson held that claim, or any other claim, against the estate of T. J. West. There is not an intimation in the whole of the proceedings of Parrott to •settle that estate that she had any claim against it of any kind or character. In the year 1901, after the death of Rosetta Johnson, her executor, the appellant herein, filed his affidavit, and moved, the circuit' court that the action of Parrott to settle the estate be reinstated on the docket and for a rule against the guardian, Mayes, the appellee herein, requiring him to refund of the amount that the children had received enough to pay the $400 note, with its interest. Before this motion was heard by the court, appellant dismissed this proceeding without prejudice, and immediately instituted this action. In his petition he made John Horan, the purchaser of the land, and Mrs. Adeline Mackin, defendants. He made all the necessary allegations to enforce the lien on the tract of land sold by Mackin to .West. Horan alone answered. He referred to all the proceedings of Parrott to settle the estate óf West, and made the -same a part of his answer, and pleaded the judgment of the [882]*882court therein as a har to the prosecution of this action against him, and, made his answer a cross-action against the guardian, of the West children, and asked that in the event he be compelled to pay this $400 note to appellant, appellee, the guardian, be compelled to refund that amount to him. Appellee answered this cross-petition, and also referred to the Parrott settlement suit, and claimed that the judgments-rendered by the court therein were final judgments, and that these children received the fund due them, by reason, of these judgments of the court, and that they were final, and could not be collaterally attacked by this action, and asked that this proceeding be dismissed. The pleadings weré completed, issues made, proof heard, and the court adjudged that the petition of the appellant, Hill, and the cross-petition of Horan, in so far as they affected appellee, be dismissed,, and adjudged appellee his costs against appellant. The appellant asked a reversal of this judgment.

The appellant claims that Mrs. Rosetta Johnson is not bound by the judgment in the Parrott suit, for the reason that she was not a party thereto. He also contends, even admitting that Parrott and all the parties to that action, other than Knott and Mackin had no notice of the existence of the claim of Rosetta Johnson, yet as it was shown by the proof that T. J. West in his lifetime, knew Mrs. -Johnson held his note, and as these children and their guardian claimed through and under him, they wefie bound by his knowledge of the assignment to Mrs. Johnson, even if no one of them had been informed of it after his death. This last proposition is true, provided they had received the sum paid them as heirs, legatees, or devisees.

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Related

Johnson v. Dodd's Administrator
37 S.W.2d 26 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1931)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
79 S.W. 276, 117 Ky. 877, 1904 Ky. LEXIS 257, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hill-v-mayes-kyctapp-1904.