Leach v. Gill

122 S.W.2d 789, 276 Ky. 97, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 513
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedOctober 14, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 122 S.W.2d 789 (Leach v. Gill) 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
Leach v. Gill, 122 S.W.2d 789, 276 Ky. 97, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 513 (Ky. 1938).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Thomas

Affirming.

*98 The appellee and one of the defendants below, Richard H. Grill, Jr.,'was a second consin of Eugene Gill, Sr., now deceased, and is such relative (but with one degree removed) of the heirs of Eugene Grill, Sr., who are the plaintiffs in this action with the widow of Eugene* Sr., as an additional plaintiff. The action is one brought in the Todd Circuit Court against appellees by the appellants as plaintiffs on August 12, 1935, under the provisions of section 518, Civil Code of Practice and its immediately subsequent ones, to obtain a new trial of an action filed in the Todd circuit court on October 30, 1930, by Richard H. Gill, Jr., against the plaintiffs in the instant action. The action in which the attacked judgment was rendered will hereafter be referred to as the “Richard H. Gill” action, and the one filed to obtain a new trial will be referred to as the “instant” one. The Richard H. Gill action was one filed against plaintiffs in the instant action (Eugene Gill, Sr., having died intestate leaving a widow and the other plaintiffs in the instant action as his heirs) to enforce the collection of a note executed to Richard H. Gill, Jr., on October 8, 1925, and signed by Eugene Gill, Sr., and his wife, Alice A. Gill, which was secured by a mortgage on a tract of land in Todd county containing about 180 acres. The petition prayed for a foreclosure of that mortgage as a part of the complete relief that plaintiff therein sought. Upon the death of Eugene Gill, Sr., intestate, his wife, Mrs. Alice A. Gill, qualified as administratrix of his estate and she was proceeded against in the Richard H. Gill, Jr., action as such administratrix and also individually — the latter because she had signed both the note and the mortgage to secure it upon which that action was based. The other defendants in that action were three heirs of Eugene Gill, Sr., and their spouses, one of the latter (undivorced wife of a male heir) being a non-resident of the state at the time of the filing of that action, but whose residence was unknown and so stated in the petition, which was verified. One of the heirs of Eugene Gill, Sr., Mrs. Mary Leach, with her husband, was also a non-resident of the state at the time and resided in Detroit, Michigan.

Such non-resident parties were proceeded against by constructive service (warning order) duly made upon proper showing. After it had ripened and the report of the appointed non-resident attorney was filed — and long after all of the resident defendants had been sum *99 moned for the time required by law — the canse was submitted for judgment and the court rendered a personal judgment against the widow of Eugene Gill, Sr., who had signed the note and mortgage to Eichard H. Gill, Jr., but no judgment was rendered against her as ad-ministratrix of her husband’s estate, although the petition had prayed for that relief. The judgment also enforced the mortgage lien against the land — 80 acres of which was owned exclusively by Mrs. Eugene Gill, Sr., while the other 100 acres was owned jointly by her and her husband. The judgment ordered a sale of the property to satisfy the lien, hut it was not made by the commissioner who was directed to do so, for quite a while after the rendition of the judgment. At that sale the plaintiff in that action (Eichard H. Gill, Jr.) became the purchaser for an amount exceeding his judgment, interest and costs of $582.89, which was distributed among the heirs who are the plaintiffs in the instant action, but defendants in that one. The sale was confirmed without exceptions filed to the commissioner’s report of it, and deed was later made by him to the purchaser who took possession and who, before any effort was made to question his purchase, made lasting and valuable improvements upon the land, which greatly enhanced its value.

The first step taken by anyone calling in question the validity of the judgment and sale made thereunder was made and done in the action of Eichard H. Gill, by the filing of an affidavit of Mrs. Leach in support of her motion to set aside all of the proceedings had and done in that case, upon the same grounds now urged in the instant action and to be hereinafter stated. Such motion and affidavit were made and filed on July 18, 1935, 25 days before the instant action was filed, but no disposition of that motion appears to have been made. The instant action, seeking the relief supra, was based upon these alleged grounds: (1) That the three non-resident defendants (Mrs. Leach, her husband and the undi-vorced wife of a male heir) were before the court at the time the judgment was rendered upon constructive service only, and that Mrs. Leach had no actual notice of the action at the time of the submission of the cause and the rendition of the judgment- — she denying that she ever received any notice from the warning order attorney; but there is no contention but that her proper address was given in.the affidavit made for the warning order; *100 (2) that neither the note nor the mortgage was filed with the petition in that (Richard H. Gill) action; (3) that no demand of the verified note was made by plaintiff in that action of the personal representative for payment; (4) that it was not shown in that case that Eugene Gill, Sr., did not own at the time of his death sufficient personal estate to pay the debt and that the judgment was rendered without any proof taken — contrary to what is claimed to be required under the provisions of section 126 of the Civil Code of Practice; (5) that no bond was executed by plaintiff therein as is required by section 410 of the Civil Code of Practice in favor of defendants constructively summoned; (6) that no proof was heard as to whether a less quantity of the land than the whole was of sufficient value to discharge the debt, and the land was sold as a whole and purchased by .the plaintiff in the action, and (7) that on April 29, 1931, Eugene Gill, Jr. (an heir of his father and a plaintiff herein), paid to Richard H. Gill, Jr., on the judgment the sum of $750 for which it is averred the plaintiff in the judgment agreed not to direct a sale of the land under the judgment referred to for one year thereafter and that he nevertheless procured the land to be sold in September, 1931, less than the full period of that agreed extension.

The answer of defendants in the instant action put in issue all of such grounds, and in addition thereto it was pleaded that the alleged agreement for postponing the sale, even if true, was without consideration. Furthermore, that plaintiffs, having received and accepted their portion of the surplus proceeds of the sale were estopped to now question the correctness of the proceedings under which it was realized. Other affirmative matters in the answer and counterclaim stated the facts under which the debt was created, which was the assumption of the same amount of indebtedness that Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Gill, Sr., owed to another creditor who was pressing them for payment, and that it was upon their earnest solicitation that Richard H. Gill, Jr.,, agreed to pay off that debt and to substitute himself as their creditor instead of their former one. It was likewise averred by defendant herein that since taking possession of the property under his decretal purchase he had made lasting improvements to the land which enhanced its value to the amount of about $4500. After the cause (instant action) was submitted, the court ren

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Bluebook (online)
122 S.W.2d 789, 276 Ky. 97, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 513, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leach-v-gill-kyctapphigh-1938.