Hunt v. Picklesimer

162 S.W.2d 27, 290 Ky. 573, 1942 Ky. LEXIS 453
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 8, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 162 S.W.2d 27 (Hunt v. Picklesimer) 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
Hunt v. Picklesimer, 162 S.W.2d 27, 290 Ky. 573, 1942 Ky. LEXIS 453 (Ky. 1942).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Tilford

— Affirming.

The appellee, E. J. Picklesimer, hereinafter referred to as “tbe appellee,” is a member of tbe Pike County Bar. Tbe appellant, G-eorge Henry Hunt, is a resident *574 of that county, and the brother and heir at law of T. M. Hunt, deceased, whose landed estate appellant recovered as the result of litigation decided by this Court on December 3, 1929, reported under the caption, Hunt v. McCloud, in 231 Ky. page 801, 22 S. W. (2d) 285. The appellee represented appellant in this and other litigation, and by the terms of a written contract dated May 18, 1929, was to receive for his “work performed by the party of the first part in numerous cases hereinbefore and for services to be rendered in the case of George H. Hunt, plaintiff, against Lennie Hunt McCloud, in prosecuting this case to the Court of Appeals of Kentucky, * * * an amount equal to one-half of the property gained if any for his past services in this and other cases, and the services to be yet performed in the future in this case.” The contract was signed by appellant and appellee and also by O. A. Stump, who was not named in the contract but whose part in the litigation is referred to in the Court’s opinion in the case cited and also in the case of Commonwealth ex rel. Pike County Bar Ass’n v. Stump, 247 Ky. 589, 57 S. W. (2d) 524. Immediately thereafter, appellee, by indorsement on the back, assigned to Stump a one-half interest “in this contract” after first deducting from the proceeds $1,000 which was to be paid to Picklesimer & Steele “for past services.”

On January 11, 1931, appellant signed an order directing the Master Commissioner of the Pike Circuit Court to pay to Stump $4,000 of the proceeds of a recovery of $16,000 in condemnation proceedings for a railroad right-of-way over a portion of the T. M. Hunt lands; and on February 25, 1931, signed a similar order directing the payment to Stump of an additional $2,000. Stump’s connection with the condemnation proceedings is not clearly disclosed, but it would seem that under his assignment from Picklesimer he was entitled to approximately $4,000 of the proceeds as a fee. Be this as it may, it is established by the testimony of Stump and the Master Commissioner who testified for the appellant, and by the appellant’s own testimony, that the consideration for appellant’s signing of the above mentioned orders through which Stump obtained $6,000, was Stump’s agreement to relinquish to appellant Stump’s interest in the contract between appellant and Picklesimer, by which the latter was to receive an amount equal to one-half of the recovery from the T. M. Hunt estate which had been appraised at $74,000. Stump says that he executed a *575 writing to this effect, which, apparently, has been lost. The important point in this testimony is that it establishes beyond a doubt' that appellant before May 4, 1932, knew of appellee’s assignment to Stump and that appellee was no longer entitled to one-half of the T. M. Hunt property. Notwithstanding this knowledge, appellant and his wife, on May 4, 1932, executed and delivered to appellee a deed conveying to the latter an undivided one-half interest in five parcels of land constituting the T. M. Hunt property, the first four parcels of which contained approximately six hundred acres. The fifth parcel was composed of two building lots in Pikeville improved by a residence and formerly jointly owned by T. M. Hunt and his wife. This property is known in this record as the Hoskins property, and at the time of the conveyance referred to the parties were ignorant of the widow’s-joint ownership. On August 8, 1932, appellant and appellee divided the acreage between them each conveying to the other the tract which he had agreed to accept as representing one-half of the lands composing the T. M. Hunt estate.

Appellant instituted this action on February 27, 1939, to obtain the cancellation of these conveyances, alleging his contract with appellee, the latter’s assignment to Stump of a one-half interest therein, the acquisition by appellant of Stump’s interest, and charging that he was ‘ ‘ * * * an elderly man with little or no education or business experience; that the defendant, E. J. Picklesimer, procured the plaintiff to execute said deeds by fraudulently and falsely representing and stating to the plaintiff that said O. A. Stump had no interest whatsoever in the T. M. Hunt estate, and that the money paid to said O. A. Stump by the plaintiff for his said interest in the said estate was a_ fraud perpetrated upon the plaintiff by the said 0. A. Stump. That the defendant was the plaintiff’s attorney and counsellor in the settlement and distribution of his brother’s estates, and that he relied upon said representations of the defendant and was misled and deceived, did execute and deliver said deeds to the defendant as and for and believing that said O. A. Stump had no interest in the estate of T. M. Hunt; that the defendant falsely and fraudulently abused his trust and procured the plaintiff to convey one-half (%) of his interest in said estate when in fact he well knew, at the time, he was entitled to only one-fourth (%) interest-therein, and that he had previously assigned one-half *576 (%) of his contract fee in said estate to O. A. Stump; that the plaintiff has only recently learned of the extent of the estate embraced in the deeds aforesaid.”

In an amended petition filed on May 25, 1939, appellant alleged appellee’s subsequent acquisition, for a consideration of $40 or $50, of appellant’s interest in the Hoskins property by falsely representing to him that the property was of little value. He also alleged that appellee had thereafter collected rents from the property and sold the interest which he had thus acquired at a large profit. The amendment further set forth that prior to the conveyance by appellant to appellee of a one-half interest in the T. M. Hunt property, judgments had been obtained by T. M. Hunt’s creditors aggregating $4,000, and that executions on these judgments had been subsequently levied, at appellee’s direction, on appellant’s one-half of the acreage, which had been sold in satisfaction thereof; that appellee had promised to recover the land for appellant, but had failed to do so; and that without appellant’s knowledge, appellee, through an assignment of bid and a commissioner’s deed, had become part owner of that acreage, whereas, appellant had lost all of the land recovered from his brother’s estate which he valued at from $40,000 to $60,000. Additional relief appropriate to the allegations of the petition was sought.

The appellee, after unsuccessfully demurring to the petition, answered, denying the fraud and misrepresentations charged, and alleging, among other things, that he was entitled to one-fourth of the $16,000 recovered for the right-of-way; that he had previously rendered other legal services to appellant worth $5,000 ; and that appellant had “* * * by one way and another permitted the money in the hands of the Court to get away from him before distribution could Be made and this defendant paid his portion thereof, after which it was agreed by and between the plaintiff and this defendant that they would settle all the differences of attorneys fees by conveying to defendant a portion of the lands inherited by the plaintiff, George Henry Hunt from T. M.

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Bluebook (online)
162 S.W.2d 27, 290 Ky. 573, 1942 Ky. LEXIS 453, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hunt-v-picklesimer-kyctapphigh-1942.