Jackson Baptist Church v. Combs' Exr.

113 S.W. 119, 130 Ky. 255, 1908 Ky. LEXIS 264
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedNovember 10, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 113 S.W. 119 (Jackson Baptist Church v. Combs' Exr.) 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
Jackson Baptist Church v. Combs' Exr., 113 S.W. 119, 130 Ky. 255, 1908 Ky. LEXIS 264 (Ky. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Settle —

Reversing.

The appellee, Breek Comhs, executor of the will of Wm. M. Combs, deceased, by an action instituted in the Breathitt circuit court against appellant, the Jackson Baptist Church, its trustees and congrega[256]*256tion, sought to recover of the church a claim, of $150 owing by it to tbe estate of the testator secured by a lien upon the church lot and building, and the further sum of $2,204.05, alleged to be due upon account for moneys loaned appellant by the testator, and all of which was expended in the erection of the church building. Judgment was asked against the church for both debts, and also for the enforcement of the lien upon the lot and church in satisfaction of the demand of $150. Shortly after the institution of the action appellant paid and satisfied the lien of $150, and thereupon filed an answer denying liability upon the account of $2,204.05, and averring that the whole thereof was a gift' or contribution from Wm. M. Combs to appellant for the erection of the church building. Depositions were taken by the parties, and the ease otherwise prepared for trial in all respects as an action in equity, although the payment by appellant of the $150 lien debt eliminated from the case the only matter of equitable jurisdiction. Upon the hearing the circuit court gave appellee judgment against appellant for $1,712.29, with 6 per cent, interest from August 8, 1903, until paid, and costs, thereby in effect deciding that the difference between that sum and the amount of the account sued on had been donated by Wm. Combs to the church. Appellant complains of so much of the judgment as requires it to pay $1,712.29, interest, and costs; hence this appeal.

It appears from the record that the Baptists of the city of Jackson who were prior to the summer of 1902 without a house of worship then undertook the work of erecting a suitable brick church. Not being people of wealth, they found it necessary to yield to the very proper custom of accepting financial assist[257]*257anee from members eof other churches and persons not' connected with any church. Among those rendering such assistance was Wm. M. Combs, an aged and wealthy resident of Jackson, who, though not then a member, was a strong believer in the doctrines of the Baptist Church and a generous contributor to its various enterprises, particularly church erection. Mr. Combs became quite active in urging the building of the Jackson Baptist Church. At the beginuing he, by deed, conveyed the church a lot for its house of worship value at $300, donating to it one-half of this sum and retaining in the deed a lien upon the lot for $150. He was elected a member of the building committee, and, as the work of building the church progressed, dictated the policy of the committee, and practically controlled-the arrangement of the building, its material, and cost. At such times as the committee was without funds he would pay the bills out of his private means, often telling them he intended the amounts thus paid as donations to the church. Before the building was fully completed, a series of revival meetings were held in it, following which the old man was received by baptism into the church, and his name enrolled as a member of the congregation. At one time he paid to a Cincinnati firm a bill of $30.0 for pews supplied the church, and at the same time also' paid the cost of putting in the building two extra windows near the pulpit. Combs kept an itemized account of his expenditures on and for the church, interest being calculated on each item; and this account he delivered after the completion of the building to J. S. Head, cashier of the Jackson Deposit Bank, also a member of the building committee, without explanation of his purpose in so doing, or any direction as to the disposition to be made of [258]*258it. The statement remained in the possession of Head for more than a year after the death of Wm. M. Combs, and until it was taken in possession by his son and executor, the appellee, Breck Combs, who brought suit upon it as previously stated.

The question for decision is: Were the various expenditures made by Wm. M. Combs upon .the church building contained in the statement referred to donations or gifts to the Jackson Baptist Church, or merely loans it was expected to repay? We must, of course, look to the evidence for an answer to this question. The only competent evidence furnished by the record strongly conduced to prove that all the expenditures made by Wm. M. Combs upon the church building in question were intended by him as donations or gifts to the Jackson Baptist Church. Several witnesses testified that he more than once, in substance, declared during the work of erection that the expenditures were gifts from him. Some of these declarations accompanied payments of money expended by him on the building, while others did not; but practically all were made while the building was under way and in conversations with respect to such matters as the cost of it, where the money was to be obtained to complete it, or how much had been or would be contributed by him. A notable instance of such declaration of a gift was made by the donor when he paid for the pews and, extra windows. His attorney of years’ standing, McGuire, in his deposition admits this payment was a gift.' Besides, several of appellant’s witnesses, who were present when the pews were paid for, so testified. Indeed, the circuit court refused to give appellee judgment against appellant for the amounts expended by Combs upon the pews and extra windows upon the ground [259]*259that they were gifts. Yet we find these items with ail other expenditures made hy Comhs to the church charged upon the statement left by him with Head. If the sums expended upon the pews and extra windows, appearing as charges on the account against appellant, were nevertheless, as proved and admitted, gifts, what reason is there for concluding that the other items of charge contained' in the account were not also gifts?

In addition to the evidence referred to, such witnesses as Eevs. J. B. Bow, A. S. Patry, and G. W. Argabright, all ministers of high standing in the Baptist Church, testified that in conversation with Mr. Combs shortly before and just after the completion of the church he, in substance, told them that what he had expended thereon had been donated, or that the church would not be called on to pay it. To Mr. Argabright he explained that he had' to make Ms children believe he had loaned the church the money he expended on the building, but that he was in fact giving it to the church. With Dr. Bow, his intimate friend Bailey, who served with him upon the building committee, and his nephew, G. P. Combs, a deacon of the Jackson Baptist Church, Wm. M. Combs agreed that he would make a gift to the church of what he had expended and would expend upon it, if they would erect a marble slab upon its wall containing the words: “Wm. M. Combs Baptist Church.” They promised' to do this, and did in fact afterwards place the marble slab in the wall containing the indicated inscription. To W. H. Whittaker, a barber into whose shop Wm. M. Combs went with a bundle of papers in his hand, he said he had just been to the bank to discount some notes that were outstanding against the Baptist Church; that the people were [260]*260afraid they were going to lose the church, but that they need not'be afraid, (for) he intended giving it to them; that he built one small meetinghouse in the country named for him, and wanted a larger one in town.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
113 S.W. 119, 130 Ky. 255, 1908 Ky. LEXIS 264, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jackson-baptist-church-v-combs-exr-kyctapp-1908.