James v. Smith

265 S.W. 822, 205 Ky. 331, 1924 Ky. LEXIS 118
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 31, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 265 S.W. 822 (James v. Smith) 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
James v. Smith, 265 S.W. 822, 205 Ky. 331, 1924 Ky. LEXIS 118 (Ky. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Thomas

Reversing, the judgment on the original appeal and dismissing without prejudice the cross-appeal of appellee, W. R. Marsee.’

Some time in 1907 John E. Golden procured to be executed to himself individually a number of written op[332]*332tions or title bond's by which he agreed to purchase or was given the right to purchase the lands of the owners who executed the writings and which in the aggregate was something near 24,000 acres and lying and being in various counties of eastern Kentucky, including Letcher county. The exact nature of those writings or their purport is unknown to us since none of them was introduced at the trial nor are they or any of them copied in the record, though it appears that they were all acknowledged- and recorded in the respective counties where the land, which was the subject matter of the contract, was situated.

On January 2, 1909, Golden executed a writing signed by himself alone which he styled an “article and agreement,” in which he is described as the first party and appellee, W. R. Hughes, as the second party, and in which he recited that Hughes was an equally interested party in the various contracts taken by him with himself and that Hughes had advanced the larger part, if not all, of the money that was expended in procuring them and in making payments thereon; and agreed therein that Hughes was a jointly interested party with him. Another paragraph purported, to mortgage or place in lien Golden’s half interest in the contracts to Hughes in order to secure the latter for such advancements. That writing was acknowledged September 23, 1913, and recorded October 16 the same year. It is also claimed by appellee, Marsee, that he purchased from Golden all of the latter’s contracts on March 11,1911, which he says was evidenced by a writing of that date and recorded on July 25, 1913. However, he does not introduce and make a part of this record that contract, though by a supplemental record there was brought to this court a purported written assignment by Golden and wife to Marsee of ‘ ‘ all. and singular my rights in and title to the lands embraced by said title bonds, investing him with all the benefits I have under and to same and which lie in Letcher county, Kentucky, to-wit. ’ ’ Then follows a list of thirteen title bonds with the acreage covered by them, but the assignment includes no description of any of the referred to contracts. That writing from Golden and wife to Marsee was executed in March, 1913, and recorded on September 26 of the same year.

On the 27th day of May, 1912, Golden and wife, in consideration of $700.00 cash then paid, sold to appellants and plaintiffs below, F. P. James and J. R. Curry, a one-[333]*333third undivided interest in certain of the bonds therein named and specified and which contract was duly acknowledged on the same day and recorded in the Letcher county clerk’s office on June 20 of the same year. On the 9th day of July, 1912, in consideration of $1,250.00 cash paid Golden, and wife sold a one-sixth undivided interest in and to the same bonds covered by the James and Curry contract to Howard Curry, and that contract or deed was acknowledged on the next day after its execution and recorded on the 21st day of September, the same year. But we do not find as included in the list of bonds sold by the execution of either of the last two mentioned writings or deeds, any land of Dixon Smith or of J. J. Lewis, both of whose contracts were and are for lands located in Letcher county. So that, whatever interest, as between the conflicting claimants, James and his co-partners the two Currys, obtained by the last two mentioned writings, it is manifest that neither of them covers or includes the Dixon Smith contract or the J. J. Lewis contract.

James and the two Currys, as joint owners, filed this and a number of other equity actions in the Letcher circuit court against the owners of the various tracts of land covered by the bonds which they claimed to have purchased, and against Marsee 'and Hughes seeking to establish plaintiffs’ rights as superior to the claims of either Hughes or Marsee, and to enforce specific performance of the bonds as against the owners of the various tracts of land. The court on final submission, after proof taken, reserved the question as to the right to enforce specific performance against the owners of the land and by consent of parties adjudged only the islsues as between the conflicting claimants, the plaintiffs as to a one-half undivided interest in the land claimed by them, Marsee and Hughes, and held that plaintiffs at the time of their purchasing and obtaining the deeds or writings evidencing their title, had actual notice of the alleged contract between Golden and Marsee made and executed as claimed by the latter in 1911, although not recorded for more than a year after plaintiffs obtained their interest. It was further adjudged that the writing executed to Hughes in 1909 only purported to acknowledge him as the owner of a one-half interest in the title bonds of Golden and in addition gave him a mortgage on the latter’s half interest to secure him in his advancements made to Golden, and that Hughes was thereby the owner of a one-half undivided interest in the lands involved, and since [334]*334plaintiffs, as the court found, purchased their interest with notice of Marsee’s alleged interest, they obtained nothing as against him and he was adjudged the other half interest with Hughes in and to the land in controversy. Prom that judgment plaintiffs prosecute this appeal, and Marsee has obtained in this court a cross-appeal, which under numerous opinions of this court does not lie against Hughes, a co-appellee with Marsee, and can be effective only to review an adverse judgment in favor of a part or all of the appellants. Miller’s Appellate Practice, sec. 114; Smith v. Northern Bank, 1 Met. 575; Gaar v. Louisville Banking Co., 11 Bush 180; McKay v. Mayes, 17 Ky. L. R. 827, 32 S. W. 606; Marion Nat. Bank v. Phillips, 18 Ky. L. R. 159, 35 S. W. 910; Asher v. Helton, 31 Ky. L. R. 9, 101 S. W. 350; Matney v. Edmonds, 179 Ky. 243, 200 S. W. 365, and City of Henderson v. Redman, 185 Ky. 146.

If, therefore, Marsee was dissatisfied with the judgment in so far as it gave to Hughes a one-half undivided interest in the land with himself, he Should .prosecute an original appeal in order to correct that judgment, since, under the authorities, supra, he cannot obtain that relief by his cross-appeal in this action against his co-appellee, Hughes. The only question, therefore, presented is whether the court correctly found that plaintiffs had notice of Marsee’s alleged purchase in 1911 and of which they did not have constructive notice of record until July, 1913, a year or more after they made their purchases in 1912.

Marsee does not claim that he gave James or either of the other plaintiffs notice of his purchase at any time until long after the transactions were completed, when he wrote a letter, or some letters, to James and others informing them of his purchase in 1911. It is testified to, however, by two witnesses, Stamper and Davis, that they heard some kind of conversation between J. E. Golden and one of the Currys, in which something was said about a transaction between Golden and Marsee, but those witnesses are indefinite as to the time of that conversation and likewise indefinite as to its exact terms or even the substance of it, although they said that Golden said therein that he had sold either his interest or a part of it to Marsee.

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Bluebook (online)
265 S.W. 822, 205 Ky. 331, 1924 Ky. LEXIS 118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/james-v-smith-kyctapp-1924.