Lemaster v. Caudill

328 S.W.2d 276, 1959 Ky. LEXIS 103
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 8, 1959
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 328 S.W.2d 276 (Lemaster v. Caudill) 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. Caudill, 328 S.W.2d 276, 1959 Ky. LEXIS 103 (Ky. Ct. App. 1959).

Opinion

MOREMEN, Judge.

This is an appeal from a judgment entered on a verdict which cancelled, because of fraud, a deed that conveyed to Prock Lemaster all mineral rights which had been owned by J. W. Lemaster who died intestate. Prock Lemaster was one of nine children of J. W. Lemaster, and all the heirs of J. W. Lemaster, including descendants of his deceased children, signed the deed with the exception of one child. Both parties in their briefs have referred to appellants as defendants and to appellees as plaintiffs and we will use the same nomenclature.

The suit to cancel the deed and for an accounting was filed by all the heirs who signed the deed except two children of a deceased child. Apparently by agreement an order was entered which reads in part as follows:

“At a pre-trial conference, it appearing and counsel for both plaintiff and defendants conceding, that the only essentially factual issue is that of fraud, it is ordered that this case be submitted to a jury on the sole issue of whether the plaintiffs and their ancestors were induced to execute the purported deed sought to be cancelled, by false representations, fraudulently made by defendant, Prock Lemaster and his agents, said issue to be submitted to the jury upon proper instructions covering the issue as developed by the proof.”

An issue concerning limitations was reserved by the order and the amount of royalties paid and approved was also stipulated.

At the trial, the case was submitted to the jury which returned a verdict in favor of plaintiffs. The court passed upon the matter of limitations and judgment was entered cancelling the deed.

The trial of the action lasted six days and the íecord filed here is large because the parties agreed to little that transpired. The testimony is in sharp conflict and there are inconsistencies in some parts of the evidence offered by the parties in support of their own side of the case. A few things, however, are certain.

J. W. Lemaster, during his life, resided in the oil producing section of Magoffin County with his son, Prock Lemaster, who was the principal defendant in this suit. The home was on or adjacent to land which produced oil royalties for J. W. Lemaster. Prock Lemaster died after the verdict was returned, but before judgment was entered. The action was revived.

J. W. Lemaster died on April 16, 1949, and at the time of his death, his oil wells were producing little, and often the royalties were no more than $27 per month. He was buried on April 18, 1949, and his descendants gathered from various parts of the state. Some who were non-residents also attended the funeral and burial of their father and grandfather. From that time on, we find that the various sets of witnesses seldom agreed as to what happened.

After the burial, according to testimony introduced in behalf of defendants, Lonnie Lemaster, one of the children (who died a short time later) suggested that since Prock Lemaster and his wife had cared for J. W. Lemaster through his declining years and in his last illness, the royalties should be given to Prock Lemaster for looking after his father. It was Prock Lemaster’s contention — and he is corroborated to some extent by the heirs of two of the children of J. W. Lemaster — that all the children, except one daughter, Julia Smith, agreed to make the conveyance. The witnesses for the other heirs and plaintiffs denied that any such suggestion was made.

Shortly afterwards, the group dispersed with the exception of three sisters, Flora Weiler, Abbie Caudill, and Lulu Grace, who stayed over night with Prock Le-master.

On April 30, 1949, a deed dated April 20, 1949, was recorded and this deed bore the signatures and acknowledgments of [278]*278the children of J. W. Lemaster or their survivors with the exception of one daughter, Julia Smith. Neither side contends that the deed was signed by all parties at the same time, but all the children, with the exception of one or two of the grandchildren who testified for the defendants, are unanimous in their claim that they did not know the character of the instrument they were signing and placed great reliance upon Prock Lemaster when they put their names to the instrument.

All versions are not the same. The first group who signed included the three sisters who had stayed all night after the funeral. They testified that the following morning Prock Lemaster asked them to go with him to Salyersville and designate him to handle the estate, pay the funeral expenses and other debts, and divide the money which belonged to the estate. They went with him to Salyersville and he left them in the car while he went into the courthouse. When he .came back to the car, they returned to his home and the following morning they again went to town where they met Flora Weiler, Sis Arnett, and Will Isaacs (who had some interest in the estate) and accompanied Prock Lemas-ter to the clerk’s office where they were told by the clerk to “sign here” which they did.

They testified that they had been led to believe by Prock Lemaster that they were signing the papers in order that their brother could get the money to pay the funeral expenses and to divide the balance between the heirs. The party then went to the bank where a safety deposit box owned by the deceased person was opened by a bank official and Prock Lemaster who also had a key to the box. The money was removed. The parties then journeyed to Paintsville where the funeral expenses were paid and, after the debts had been paid, each one received a proportionate share of the $7,000 found in the box.

Thereafter, Prock Lemaster working with Richmond Salyer, clerk of Magoffin County, and Lonza Reed, obtained the signatures and acknowledgments of the various other heirs. Each witness, when testifying, gave some variation of the facts which induced his signature, but generally it was to the effect that none of them read the instrument, that it had not been read to them, and they signed it because they relied upon their brother to do the right thing. Others testified that they observed only a paper with some signatures on it and were told that it related to the administration of the estate, or that if they signed it, they would get their share of the estate.

It is interesting to note that Lonza Reed, clerk of Johnson County, also did not read the deed, but was under the impression that it was some sort of paper that had to do with the division of the estate. Two other purported signatories denied that they had signed the deed at all. The deed was later destroyed by fire and we have only the recorded copy.

The defendant, Prock Lemaster, testified that Lundy Lemaster proposed the agreement after the funeral and all except Julia Smith seemed to be in accord. We will illustrate his testimony by short excerpts from the transcript.

“Q. That was your brother Lundy. A. Yes, sir.
“Q. Was anything else said there by any of the rest of the heirs ? A. Yes, sir, they talked it through one another and I reckon they all agreed to it, except one sister, before they left the house that they would do it. * *
“Q. Did any of your sisters other than her, which you just named as being in the room, or any of your nieces and nephews who you named as being in the room voice any objection to Lundy Lemaster’s motion or proposition? A. I didn’t hear any of them.
“Q. Were they in agreement or disagreement with Lundy Lemaster’s motion? A.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
328 S.W.2d 276, 1959 Ky. LEXIS 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lemaster-v-caudill-kyctapp-1959.