In re Cheatham

210 F. 370, 1914 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1168
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 19, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 210 F. 370 (In re Cheatham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Cheatham, 210 F. 370, 1914 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1168 (W.D. Ky. 1914).

Opinion

EVANS, District Judge.

This case comes before us upon two petitions for a review by the court: First, of an order of the referee entered on December 13, 1913, setting aside the sale made by the trustee on November 22, 1913, to Mrs. Zadia Cheatham, wife of ,the bankrupt, of 160% acres of land scheduled by him, and ordering the trustee again to sell not only the 160% acres but also 28 acres which had been set apart by the trustee to the bankrupt as a homestead; and, second, for the review by the court of the order of the referee made and entered on said date in effect setting aside and vacating the action of the trustee and the appraisers in the allotment to the bankrupt of the 28 acres. We will dispose of both petitions in this opinion.

The chief source of the troubles which have arisen has been the attempt to sell that part of the lands which was allotted by the trustee 'to the bankrupt as a homestead, and which is exempt from his debts under the law of Kentucky. Section 1702 of the Kentucky Statutes, [372]*372among other things, provides that there shall be exempt from sale for the debts of the owner so much of the land, including the dwelling house and appurtenances owned by the debtor, as shall not exceed in value $1,000; and section 1703 provides that the officer who is to sell the land of the bankrupt for the payment of any debt shall cause such part of the land, which may be selected by the defendant not to exceed in value $1,000, to be valued under oath and set apart to him.

The bankrupt in due form set up his claim to what is usually and compendiously called his homestead exemption in the lands described in his schedules in this proceeding. The trustee, with the assistance of three appraisers duly sworn, allotted and set apart to the bankrupt 28 acres of the land; the dwelling house being upon the land thus allotted. After this was done, 160% acres of the land remained to be sold. Instead of limiting his sale to the 160% acres, the trustee, doubtless in accordance with the referee’s order, in his advertisement stated that:

“Said property will be offered in two tracts and as a whole after first laying off the homestead of §1,000 in value, including the house and appurtenances, and, if the property does not bring a sufficient amount to pay the lien •debts, it will then be offered in two tracts, and then as a whole, including the homestead, and sold in the manner so as to realize the most money.”

This advertisement fixed the date of the sale on November 22, 1913. On the day. before, namely, on the 21st of November, the homestead had been set apart to the bankrupt by the trustee and the appraisers.

[1,2] Since the Supreme Court decided the case of Lockwood v. Exchange Bank, 190 U. S. 294, 23 Sup. Ct. 751, 47 L. Ed. 1061, there has been no doubt that a sale of a homestead by a trustee is rarely warranted. Generally speaking, all the trustee can do is to allot to the bankrupt the property exempt.under the state law. Of course the action of the trustee in doing this may be excepted to, and the propriety ■of his action, either as to whether the exemption was lawful or .whether too much or too little of the property of the bankrupt had been set apart, is open to final determination by the bankruptcy courts; but, after the property is set apart as exempt, neither the trustee nor the bankruptcy court has any further authority over it. So that here, while any controversy respecting the right to the homestead or as to whether too much or too little land was set apart as being worth more or less than $1,000 may be settled in this proceeding, in no event could the trustee sell the homestead unless in the one contingency provided for by section 1705 of the Kentucky Statutes, which will presently be considered. If certain creditors, as claimed, have a lawful lien upon the land to be allotted to the bankrupt as a homestead, they must enforce that lien, if enforceable at all, in the state court having jurisdiction ; and the latter part of the opinion in Lockwood v. Exchange Bank, above cited, points out the right, under appropriate conditions, to delay the bankrupt’s discharge for a reasonable time. So that, if the' 160% acres does not bring enough to pay the secured creditors, the homestead may be open to their assertion of a lien thereon in a state •court.

[373]*373[3, 4] Should the sale of the 160% acres have been set aside by the referee? is one of the questions to be considered. The court has very carefully examined this phase of the case, and as it appears to be clearly shown that confusion resulted from accepting at first the bid of $20 per acre therefor made by Tobin and afterwards accepting, another bid from the bankrupt’s wife, and as there was possibly even more confusion resulting from the advertisement of the trustee’s purpose, under certain conditions, to sell the homestead, we have concluded that those parts of the order of the referee which set aside the sale of the 160% acres made on November 22, 1913, should be affirmed, and it will fee so ordered. But those parts of the referee’s order of December 13, 1913, which direct “the trustee to resell this property on January 17, 1914, as a whole, it appearing that to lay off a homestead in kind would materially impair the vendible value of the land” being beyond his power, should be reversed and set aside, and any order for a sale of the bankrupt’s lands must altogether omit any provision for the sale of any part of the homestead as the same-may be finally allotted and assigned to the bankrupt.

2. It remains to be considered whether the referee’s order, which set aside the allotment to the bankrupt of the 28 acres as a homestead, was erroneous. In reaching his conclusion, "the referee did not act upon the idea that the testimony showed that the 28 acres exceeded in value the sum of $1,000, but he put his ruling upon the sole ground, as we have seen, that it appeared that to lay off a homestead in kind would materially impair the vendible value of the land.

Counsel for the opposing interests contends that the referee’s order should be upheld under section 1705 of the Kentucky Statutes, which is in this language:

“Where the defendant in the execution, attachment or action owns real estate which is levied on or sought to be subjected to the payment of any debt or liability, and the same, in the opinion of the appraisers, is of greater value than one thousand dollars, and not divisible without great diminution of its value, then the same shall be sold under the execution, attachment or judgment, and one thousand dollars, of tbe money arising from the sale shall be paid to the defendant to enable him to purchase .another homestead. But there shall be no sale if the land, when offered, does not bring more than one thousand dollars.”

And counsel cites Sansberry v. Simms, 79 Ky. 527, and Warren’s Adm’r. v. Warren, 126 Ky. 692, 104 S. W. 754, 1199. We have examined both of these cases and find that in each the property consisted of a house and lot. In neither case was the property divisible; its very nature precluding such treatment of it. We do not, therefore, find anything helpful in either of the cases just named, but in Duff v. Duff, 145 Ky. 376, 140 S. W. 540, the Court of Appeals dealt with a case where the property involved was 177 acres of land.

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Bluebook (online)
210 F. 370, 1914 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1168, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-cheatham-kywd-1914.