Lemaster v. Burckhart

5 Ky. 25
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJuly 1, 1810
StatusPublished

This text of 5 Ky. 25 (Lemaster v. Burckhart) 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
Lemaster v. Burckhart, 5 Ky. 25 (Ky. Ct. App. 1810).

Opinion

OPINION of the Court, by

Judge Logan.

This cause stands upon a rehearing granted April term 1809. It is now our duty to pronounce such decree herein as will best conform to general and settled rules of equity, -

In November 1799, Briscoe and Burckhart executed their joint obligation to Lemaster for £. 730, to be paid on or beiore the first day of July 1801, in castings, &c. in consideration of a certain lease at Mann’s Lick lor the purpose of making salt.

On the 14th of August 1800, Burckhart sold Ms moiety in the lease to Joshua Hobbs, and paid Lemas» ter his half of the debt with bonds on Hobbs, which were payable-at the same time and in the same manner, as the one given by Briscoe anti him to Lemaster.

Upon executing this agreement Lemaster endorsed a credit on the obligation in these words : u Credit Christopher Burckhart by three obligations on Joshua Hobbs, lor half the amount of the within obligation, which I receive as a payment of his half the within obligation : Witness my hand and seal this 14th day of August 1800.”

On the 28th day of January 1801, Lemaster assign-cd this obligation to John Speed, who, on the 29th of July, commenced suit thereon. To which Burckhart píead; first,, the receipt on the obligation as a release td him; 2d, that Lemaster had agreed to acquit him in. consideration of Hobbs’s bonds.

In support of these pleas parol evidence was admitted to the jury, as well as the receipt on the obligation ; and the jury having found a special verdict, which required the opinion of the court as to the legal import of the receipt, upon the question being brought before this court, it was decided, spring term 1804, that it did not release Burckhart from his joint obligation for the other half of the debt.

Metre ended the controversy at la#. Burckhart then exhibited his bill for relief against the judgment at tawv

The equity in his bill may be comprised within these three allegations — 1st, The payment of half the debe, with bonds on Hobbs, which he charges were received and endorsed on the joint obligation in satisfacticjti of [26]*26his half. 2d, That independent of said receipt, h? can establish by unquestionable testimony that Lemaster declared, at the time of receiving and «indorsing the same, that he did forever acquit him from the said ob-ligati -n, and that he would look solely to Briscoe for the other half. And 3d, That Briscoe was able to pay his proportion of the debt, when the alleged contract with Lemaster was made , and that he, Burckhart, could have secured himself out of Briscoe’s property, if he had not rested upon the assurances of Lemaster, and the beliefi'he was discharged from his liability ; and that Briscoe becáme insolvent and died.

«ence of Sbac which not alleged can - not warrant a dea - — Accor. Morrjpn's tx'r. •sft, iió/tf ante 4

In investigating this cause, the court will consider — - 1st, the equity set forth in the bill; 2d, the trial at law and its effect in this suit; 3d, the endorsement on the obligation, and whether parol evidence was admissible to contradict or explain it; and 4th, the consideration upon which the complainant founds his claim for relief in this court.

With respect to the equity contained in the bill, Xt: ts essential that a complainant should shew in his bill sufficient equity to warrant a decree in his favor. That which is not in substance alleged, must be unavailing in proof. The decree must substantially conform to the equity in the bill; and evidence in support oí art equity cannot supply the want of it in a bill, more than evidence in relation to one claim in equity could justify a decree upon a bill charging a different one.

It has already been shewn that the complainant reste his first allegation on the endorsement credited upon the obligation, to which he refers iti support thereof. Viewing the endorsement as apart of the bill, stud then giving it its settled import, and this part of the bill cannot justify the interposition of a court of chancery, or warrant a decree against the settled meaning of the wri ting upon which it is made to depend.

The complainant then states in his hill, what he can prove, independent of the receipt endorsed on the obligation ; and it ⅛ this, that the defendant Lemaster had declared, at the time the payment was received in Hobbs’s bonds and endorsed on the obligation, that he forever discharged and did acquit the complainant of the said debt.

A voluntary promife without consideration, not to call on one of two ob = Iigors for any but half of the fum would nos. be binding,

This part of the bill presents two questions proper for consideration : 1st, Does the complainant Charge a fact repugnant to the receipt endorsed and before referred to in the bill ? 2d, If he does, what is its claim upon a court of chancery for enjoining the judgment at law?

The complainant having referred to the endorsement aforesaid as a part of his bill, and recognised it as true in fact, ought not to be understood as meaning to allege repugnant matter depending upon his own knowledge- and for the truth of which he means to be considered as responsible, without expressions of unequivocal import directly and substantially setting forth such matter.

if the contract were different from that evidenced by ".he receipt, the complainant was conusant thereof and could have charged it with certainty from his own knowledge. He does not state it as part of the contract, that he was to be discharged from all liability for the other half of the debt. He does not state it as |⅜ fact upon his own oath or information, that Lemaster did make the declaration set forth in the bill. The court can only say, if such were the fact and a part of the contract, the complainant must be presumed to have known it; arid if he knew it, he could safely have charged it directly and unequivocally in his bill; and not have rested upon stating merely what he could prove, without vouching for its correctness,.

But suppose the statement of what the complainant can prove was charged a^ a fact within his own knowledge ; it would by no means be satisfactory against the judgment at law, unless it went so far as to state it as a part of the contract, or the consideration which had induced the complainant to make it.

If the bargain had been understood and its terms agreed on, before the payment to Lemaster of the bonds on Hobbs and the endorsing of the credit, and Lemas-ter had then used such expressions as are stated in the bill, it would shew a case as strong as the one stated in this part of the bill; and the court could not esteem it more than a voluntary promise without consideration.

A voluntary declaration at the time the joint obligation was wrote, that the obligee would not call on either of the obligors, or take from him more than his half of the debt, would seem to form as strong ground for re[28]*28lief in chancery against a judgment at law , and yet sucir| a case it is conceived could not warrant chancery inter position.

fromtheeff-as i>f the co-obii-got before info! lonS ate** an» ground for relief Trbat the ci-ther co obligor has become in-fclyent, and but for the promife to hold the one tefponflble for his half, he could have fe- , J}1* an-/ equity are th- tai„c — Acc «⅞1*4 ⅝ JParolevidence sot admintble to explain or contradrS a wri ting— Accord.

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5 Ky. 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lemaster-v-burckhart-kyctapp-1810.