Loverett v. Veatch

105 S.W.2d 1052, 268 Ky. 797, 110 A.L.R. 1378, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 534
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 28, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 105 S.W.2d 1052 (Loverett v. Veatch) 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
Loverett v. Veatch, 105 S.W.2d 1052, 268 Ky. 797, 110 A.L.R. 1378, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 534 (Ky. 1937).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Thomas

Affirming.

Onr opinion on the first appeal of this case is reported in 265 Ky. 532, 97 S. W. (2d) 47, 49. It contains the facts as presented by that record. But additional pleadings filed, and evidence heard upon the second hearing, after the filing of the mandate from this court, slightly altered the facts as stated in the former opinion. However, the learned trial judge concluded that such alterations did not affect the proper determination of the legal issue involved and rendered judgment giving the beneficiaries of the estate of John T. Veatch, deceased, a superior lien over appellant, a creditor of one of his sons, who had procured an attachment against that son (Allen T. Veatch) and levied it on his undivided interest in his father’s real estate that he inherited from his ancestor, the latter dying intestate. From that judgment appellant again appeals to this court, seeking a reversal thereof upon the ground that the amended pleadings — supported as he contends by proof taken and heard upon the last trial — destroys the principle upon which onr former opinion was based, and forcing a different conclusion from the one therein reached. We deem it necessary for a clear understanding of the case to make an abridged statement of the facts as may be necessary to present the true picture.

The intestate, John T. Veatch, died on February 14, 1934. His wife predeceased him and the only beneficiaries of his estate surviving him were some children and grandchildren whose parents were dead. Among the former was Allen T. Veatch. Some years prior to 1925 he left the parent’s home and, following his departure, he borrowed from his father the sum of $1,800. In the year mentioned, on account of some questionable involvement, it became imperatively necessary for him to raise $5,000. He - and his banker — to whom he had issued a check drawn on his father without authority — appeared at the residence of the father in Mercer county, Ky. The facts concerning the matter were laid before him and he wa.s asked by the son *799 to pay the check that the latter had so fraudulently issued. He finally agreed to do so and borrowed that amount for the purpose. According to the testimony of the son, taken since our former opinion, there was no written obligation of any kind given by him to his father at that time. He, the son, made this statement in his testimony relative to the agreement between bim and his father at the time the check was paid: “The only agreement made at that time was that I should keep the interest paid on the note,” but the only note at that time was the prior existing indebtedness of $1,800, less some small payments made thereon reducing it.

On December 7, 1927, Allen T. Yeatch, the son, executed the note in litigation (which will hereafter be referred to as the “present note”) for $6,601.49, which represented the balance due on the prior $1,800 note, plus the $5,000 obtained in 1925, and, possibly, the interest on all of it. There was indorsed on that (the present) note this language: “It is agreed and understood that if the interest and principal of this note is not paid to the said J. T. (John Thomas) Veatch during his lifetime then same (all interest then due and principal or balance due on principal) shall be deducted from my share in his estate.” The facts as so briefly recited, and as presented only by pleadings, constituted the basis of our opinion on the first appeal, and which was arrived at by us by the process of reasoning therein employed. It need not be repeated here; except to say that it therein appeared that the present note was executed simultaneously with the advancement of the .$5,000 by the father to the son — but which the later development of the case showed was slightly inaccurate inasmuch as no note was taken for the $5,000 at the time it was paid by the father for the benefit of the son, but it was incorporated in the present note executed about one month more than two years thereafter.

The learned trial judge in rendering the instant judgment did so upon the theory that the present note should be treated as an advancement under the principle announced in our former opinion and which should also govern us in the disposition of this appeal, if for no other reason than that the first opinion became “the law of the case,” unless the slight change in the facts to which we have referred was sufficient to render the *800 “law-of-the-case” rule inapplicable. We are convinced that the change referred to cannot be given that effect, since at least a- part of the consideration for the present note was a past contracted indebtedness, represented by the remaining unpaid portion of the $1,800 note of the son to the father. If that past consideration was sufficient to deny the application of the principle upon which we based our first opinion, then it was erroneous to the extent of giving the beneficiaries of John T. Yeatch’s estate any priority over appellant. However, we did not so determine, but impliedly held that such prior existing indebtedness, as part consideration for the execution of the present note, would not affect the right of the beneficiaries to a prior lien on the inherited interest of Allen T. Yeatch in his father’s real estate over appellant, the attaching creditor of the son for the whole of the present note.

Moreover, if both amounts — the prior $1,800 note and the later amount of $5,000 (each being prior to the execution of the present note) — should be considered as debts at the times of their creation, then it might be true that the execution of the present note at the date it was made constituted an agreement between the parties whereby such prior indebtedness was converted in such form as that the entire amount should be treated as an advancement under the principle applied in our former opinion. See American Jurisprudence, Yolume 1, p. 741, sec. 65, and 18 C. J. 924, sec. 235. But for reasons already and to be hereinafter stated, we deem it unnecessary to determine that point.

In our former opinion, we discussed the superior right of the beneficiaries of an intestate ancestor to require those of them who are indebted to the estate to account for his debt in the distribution of the estate out of his interest by not sharing in either the personalty or realty of the ancestor until his indebtedness was paid. Such superior right over that of any encumbrancer of the indebted heir, or any other lienholder, upon his interest in his ancestor’s real estate as well as his personal property, is most generally designated in the opinions as the right of “set off” or “the right of retainer,” the latter designation being more frequently employed by the courts and textwriters because of the suggested distinction that the right of *801 “set-off” exists only when the obligations of both parties are technical debts, i. e., the obligation employed as a set-off against a debt should itself also be a debt, but which is not technically true as to the interest of an indebteded heir in his ancestor’s estate, since the amount due him from the estate is not a technical debt of the estate to, him.

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Bluebook (online)
105 S.W.2d 1052, 268 Ky. 797, 110 A.L.R. 1378, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 534, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/loverett-v-veatch-kyctapphigh-1937.