Lee's Administrators v. Reed

34 Ky. 109, 4 Dana 109, 1836 Ky. LEXIS 30
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJune 1, 1836
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 34 Ky. 109 (Lee's Administrators v. Reed) 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
Lee's Administrators v. Reed, 34 Ky. 109, 4 Dana 109, 1836 Ky. LEXIS 30 (Ky. Ct. App. 1836).

Opinion

Judge Marshall

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

In March, 1819, John W. Reed, John Murrell and Ambrose Lee, who had previously been partners in the business of merchandising, dissolved their partnership; and Murrell, who purchased the interest of the other partners, became entitled to all the debts due to the late firm, and bound himself to pay all demands against it. On the first of May, 1819, John Murrell, James Reed, John W. Reed and James Murrell executed to Ambrose Lee, their joint and several obligation for the payment of six thousand and sixty-four dollars and fifty-one cents, on or before the 25th day of March, 1820, which sum was composed of $>5,513 38 due to Lee, on account of his interest in the store, and $551 13 being ten per centum interest on the debt, for one year from the date of the dissolution of the firm.

Immediately upon the dissolution of the firm of Reed, Murrell and Lee, Murrell appears to have erected another one in its place, of which James Reed, Robert Miller and himself were the members; and in November, 1823, this firm was again modified by the substitution of Joseph Cooper in the place of Miller.

During the whole of this period, from March, 1819, and until the death of Lee, in June, 1825, an account seems to have been kept open in the store, against Lee, and in favor of John Murrell alone, consisting of merchandise furnished to Lee, of moneys paid to his order, and of debts due by him and taken in at the store, &c.

This account appears never to have been presented, or in any manner settled or closed, during the life of Lee; nor is there any direct proof, that he had ever seen it, though from his intimacy in the store, some of the \yituesses say he might have done so*

Bill

In September, 1825, about three months after Lee’s death, John Murrell, accompanied by J. W. Reed and James Murrell; parties to the above mentioned note, and Miller and Cooper, who had been at different periods partners in the store, presented the account to the administrators, with the affidavits of Miller and Cooper, stating the correctness of the respective portions of it which accrued while each was concerned in the store, and obtained from them two credits making the full amount of the account, on the note of Murrell &c. to their intestate, A. Lee. The first of these credits, amounting to $1,622 43, consisting of the items charged prior to the 25th day of March, 1820, when the note became due, together -with interest at the rale of ten per cent, per annum, h'om the date of the several items to the 25th of March, 1820, was credited as paid on that day. The second, consisting of all subsequent items, with interest from the date of each, or of small groups of them, up to the first day of September, 1825, and amounting $5,406 63, was credited as paid on the last named day. On receiving these credits. Murrell gave up to the administrators, su<?h vouchers as he had to support his charges; and a writing was executed by the adminstrators, the two Murrells and J. W. Reed, stating that there had been a settlement of the accounts of Ambrose Lee with John Murrell&emdash;setting forth the amount of the credits, and providing that, “should there be any errors in the calculations of said accounts, the undersigned parties agree to rectify any mistakes therein.”

In the course of the. year succeeding this settlement, John Murrell died, and in 1828, James Murrell being also then dead, the administrator of A. Lee commenced an action at law against the surviving obligors, for the recovery of the balance due on the note. About the same period., they also filed this bill in Chancery, against James Reed and J. W. Reed, surviving obligors, and Robert Miller, as administrator of John Murrell, and J. W. Reed and George Murrell, as administrators of James Murrell. The object of the bill was to restrain the parties from taking advantage, in the action at law, of the credits entered on the note; to suspend their effect until [111]*111the accounts between Murrell and Lee could be properly investigated; and finally, to re-adjust the accounts, and abate the amount of the credits, by deducting certain charges in Murrell’s account, alleged to be excessive, or , & •• _ otherwise incorrect, and by deducting certain items charge in favor of Lee against Murrell, which were omitted in the settlement, and which, as they allege, formed proper subjects of the accounts between the parties, and should have been embraced in the settlement.

Answer,

Besides impeaching the settlement, as being incorrect in various particulars embraced under the two general allegations just mentioned, the complainants state that, at its date, they were but little acquainted with the transactions between Murrell and their intestate; that they had not time to examine the accounts and vouchers when they were presented for settlement, and were unwilling to enter credits, for the full amount until induced by the promise that a writing should be executed securing the right of future examination and re-adjustment of the credits; that the writing already alluded to was understood by them to secure that right and to have been so intended, that if it was otherwise intended, or if a more restricted construction is now insisted on, confining its provision to the correction of mistakes in calculation only, it was a fraud upon them, and they were decoyed into giving the credits. They allege, also, that the estate of John Murrell is unable to discharge the demands set up by them in the bill, as items which should have been taken into the settlement before the balance to be credited on the note could be correctly ascertained.

The defendants answered—denying the material aliegations of the bill; relying on the settlement and the credits entered in pursuance of it, as fair and final; contesting the claims brought forward as a set-off against Murrell’s account; affirming the correctness of that account, and alleging that, the paper executed after the credits were-entered, was intended to provide for the correction of mistakes in calculation only; but admitting the propriety of correcting any mistake in the account, which should •be satisfactorily made out in proof.

Decree of the circuit court. A settlement of aco’ts between parties, each of whom is conversant with the transactions involved, is binding and ¿conclusive; the acc’ts will not be reexamined in chan eery, unless fraud or mistake in the settlement is alleged, and established by clear proof. Though much slighter evi dence may prevail against the conclusion resulting fromthesettlement, where one of the parties (e. g. an adm’r) had little or no knowledge of the transactions settled, and relied upon the representations and ex planations of the other. But even then, the settlement will be considered ' prima facie fair, and will be disturbed so far only, as improper charges, omissions, fyc. are specifically charged in the pleadings, as the results ' of fraud or mistake, and sustained by proof; and the reasons for such strictness are the stronger whea the vouchers used in the settlement weregiveijL ,up to the com. plaining party;.

[112]*112On the hearing, the bill was dismissed, with costs* But the action on the note having been dismissed, by agreement, and the whole matter in contest referred to the decision of the Chancellor, in this suit, the Circuit Court decreed against the defendants, the balance 'appearing to be due on the note, after giving full effect to-the credits endorsed.

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Bluebook (online)
34 Ky. 109, 4 Dana 109, 1836 Ky. LEXIS 30, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lees-administrators-v-reed-kyctapp-1836.