Lemons v. Wilson

172 S.W.2d 67, 294 Ky. 439, 1943 Ky. LEXIS 481
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 25, 1943
StatusPublished

This text of 172 S.W.2d 67 (Lemons v. Wilson) 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
Lemons v. Wilson, 172 S.W.2d 67, 294 Ky. 439, 1943 Ky. LEXIS 481 (Ky. 1943).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Rees

Affirming.

On September 23, 1923, O. M. Wilson conveyed to Mrs. Mildred Lemons a large body of land described in six tracts located in tbe northern part of Christian county. The consideration was $6,000, and the purchaser executed six promissory notes for $1,000 each, payable on the first day of January in each year commencing with 1925 and ending with 1930. The deed provided that the entire debt should be precipitated upon the failure of the purchaser to pay any note when due. Three of the notes were paid, and when Mrs. Lemons failed to pay the note due January 1, 1928, Wilson brought suit to recover the remainder of the purchase price and to *440 enforce his vendor’s lien. When the deed was executed there was a mortgage of $1,800 on a portion of the land, which had been executed to the Planters Bank of Morton’s Gap and by it assigned to J. E. Williams. Mrs. Lemons failed to record the deed of September 23, 1923, and it burned when her home was destroyed by fire. Wilson executed another deed in July, 1924, and it was recorded in 1926. The dwelling, a store, a stock barn, and probably two tobacco barns on the land burned within a year or two after Mrs. Lemons took possession of the property. The insurance policies apparently were not assigned when the deed was executed, and the insurance was collected by Wilson. He claimed that he delivered all of it to Mrs. Lemons, which she denied. This was one of the issues in the suit instituted by Wilson in' 1928. In answer to the averment that she was indebted to the plaintiff in the sum of $3,000, Mrs. Lemons pleaded a compromise and settlement and alleged that in 1927 she paid to Wilson $1,200 in cash and agreed to assume the mortgage indebtedness of $1,800. She claimed that she borrowed the money from James W-Lemons, who handed it to her in cash at the courthouse and she handed it to Wilson. James W. Lemons was her former husband from whom she had been divorced several years. Wilson pleaded and introduced proof tending to show that Mrs. Lemons did agree to pay him $1,200 and assume payment of the mortgage debt and induced him to release his vendor’s lien on the margin of the deed book to enable her to borrow the $1,200. He did not surrender the notes. Mrs. Lemons failed to carry out the agreement, and after the lapse of several months Wilson went to the clerk’s office and wrote on the margin of the deed book that the release was made in error and was not effective for any purpose. In the meantime, Mrs. Lemons had conveyed the land to her former husband. James W. Lemons intervened in the action and alleged that he had purchased the land in good faith and asked that he be adjudged to be the owner free from any claim of the plaintiff, O. M. Wilson. J. E. Williams died in April, 1929, and on September 5, 1929, Mrs. Pairleigh Williams, executrix of the will of J. E. Williams, filed a petition asking to be made a party, setting up the. $1,800 mortgage upon a portion of the land and asking that the estate of J. E. Williams be adjudged a prior lien on the land described in the mortgage. A large amount of proof was taken on the various issues *441 made by the pleadings, and on April 4, 1930, a judgment was entered adjudging that James W. Lemons was not the owner of any of the land and dismissing his petition; that Mrs. Lemons was indebted to O. M. Wilson in the sum of $3,000, with interest from January 1, 1928; that the J. E. Williams estate had a lien on four tracts of land superior to Wilson’s lien; that Wilson had a first lien on tracts 1 and 6 described in his deed to Mrs. Lemons, and a lien inferior to the mortgage lien on the remaining four tracts, and the land was ordered sold to satisfy the liens. James W. Lemons and Mrs. Mildred Lemons prayed and were granted appeals to the Court of Appeals, but the appeals were never perfected.

When the six tracts of land were conveyed to Mrs. Lemons on September 23, 1923, O. M. Wilson, 'the grantor, was sheriff of Christian county. His term of office expired on the first Monday in January, 1926. At or about the time the judgment in his favor against Mrs. Lemons was rendered, it was discovered that he was short in his accounts as sheriff, and suit was instituted by the county against him and his corporate surety, and a judgment for $10,000 was obtained. The surety satisfied the judgment and brought suit in the Federal court and attached all the land owned by Wilson at the time he entered upon the duties of the office of sheriff, including the land conveyed by him to Mrs. Lemons in 1923. After this suit had been pending for several years, the corporate surety’s claim was compromised and settled, and the amount agreed upon in the settlement was paid by relatives of Wilson. Pending this litigation and settlement the judgment obtained by Wilson against Mrs. Lemons remained in abeyance. Wilson made no effort, to enforce it and Mrs. Lemons did not offer to satisfy it. as the corporate surety’s lien was superior to her interest in the land. The case was stricken from the docket on October 24, 1938, with leave to reinstate without notice. On January 27, 1941, after the litigation growing out of Wilson’s shortage as sheriff had ended and the corporate surety’s lien had been released, the case of O. M. Wilson against Mildred Lemons was reinstated on the docket. On March 7, 1941, John W. Lemons, son of Mildred Lemons, filed a petition asking to be made a party defendant. He alleged that he had purchased and was the owner of the judgment rendered April 4, 1930, against O. M. Wilson in favor of Mrs. Fairleigh Williams, executrix of J. E. Williams, deceased, for $1,800, *442 with interest from January 10, 1928, and he asked that he be paid $1,800 with interest from January 10, 1928, out of the proceeds of the sale of the four tracts of land covered by the mortgage. Wilson filed a pleading styled “Answer of O. M. Wilson to the intervening petition of John W. Lemons and his setoff and counterclaim thereto and against Mildred Lemons,” in which he denied that John W. Lemons was the owner of the judgment in favor of Williams’ executrix, and alleged that Mildred Lemons purchased the judgment for $400, had it assigned to her, and later fraudently assigned it without consideration to her son, John W. Lemons, who took it subject to any and all defenses of the plaintiff against the judgment in the hands of Mildred Lemons. John W. Lemons and Mildred Lemons filed separate replies, and several other pleadings were filed later. An effort was made to raise a number of issues which had been determined by the judgment of April 4, 1930, but it is conceded now by appellants that they are.precluded by that judgment from relitigating those questions.

The new issues raised by the pleadings filed subsequent to the reinstatement of the case on the docket in January, 1941, are two in number. One involves the ownership of the Williams judgment and, as a consequence, the amount to which the owner is entitled, and the other involves a question of damages for alleged shortage in acreage of the land conveyed to Mildred Lemons by O. M. Wilson September 23, 1923. In one of her pleadings filed subsequent to the reinstatement of the case in 1941, Mrs. Lemons alleged that Wilson represented to her that the six tracts of land contained 500 acres, whereas 127.14 acres of parcel 1 of tract No. 6 were included in the boundaries of tract No. 2. She alleged other shortages, amounting in all to 181.14 acres, and she asked judgment for $2,447.12 on her counterclaim.

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Bluebook (online)
172 S.W.2d 67, 294 Ky. 439, 1943 Ky. LEXIS 481, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lemons-v-wilson-kyctapphigh-1943.