Mason v. Cook

218 S.W. 740, 187 Ky. 260, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 389
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 16, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 218 S.W. 740 (Mason v. Cook) 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
Mason v. Cook, 218 S.W. 740, 187 Ky. 260, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 389 (Ky. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

[262]*262Opinion op the Court bt

Judge Hurt

Reversing upon the appeals of W. L. Brand, executor of J. C. Brand, Gr. R. Allen and V. E. Allen, in part and affirming in part; and reversing upon the appeals of J. A. Hamilton and-S. T. Hamilton, and affirming as to all other parties.

The appellant, W. L. Brand, was elected sheriff of Graves county, for the term, embracing the years, 1906, 1907, 1908 and 1909, and duly qualified as such, by executing the bonds, for each of the years of his term, which are required by law, and in each of these bonds, the appellant, G. R. Allen, the appellees, W. S. Cook, W. A. Usher and J. L. Stuns,ton, became his sureties. The bonds and sureties, thereupon, were duly accepted by appropriate orders of the county court. For each of the years, a commissioner was appointed, by the fiscal court, to make a settlement with Brand,' of his accounts as sheriff, touching the collection of the taxes, which were levied for each of the years, in Graves county, for county purposes, including the taxes levied for the benefit of the common schools of the county. The settlements were made, and whatever sums, if any, the sheriff appeared from the settlements to be owing, were paid by him to the authority or party entitled thereto, and after the settlements were made and approved, the fiscal court, for' each of the years, granted to the sheriff a quietus as provided by section 4130 Kentucky Statutes.

In the early part of the year,-1911, the officer's, of thq county, for some reason, suspected, that the settlements made by the commissioner with Brand of hig collection and disbursementg of the money received by him by virtue of his office of sheriff and due to the county, were incorrect, and that he had failed to perform his duties according to the tenor of his bonds, and thereupon, an investigation of his official conduct, was undertaken, and accountants were employed for that purpose, and, as a result of the investigation, the officials of the county, as alleged, learned, for the first time, on the 7th day of September, 1911, that, in the settlement for each of the years, there was a failure to charge Brand with large sums of moneys, which he had received as sheriff, and which was due the county, and the collection of which he had fraudulently concealed, and that, in each of the -settlements,, he had been credited by various sums of money, erroneously, and by which he was not entitled to credit, [263]*263and that by reason of these various errors- and concealments, there, yet, remained in his hands unaccounted for and not paid to the county, a sum of money in the aggregate sum of nearly $20,000.00. Commissioners were appointed by the fiscal court to demand of Brand and to receive from him, the sums claimed to he wrongfully held by him, but, upon demand, he failed to pay the sums claimed, or any part of them. Actions were thereupon instituted, by the county against Brand and his sureties upon the bonds, which had been executed by them, to surcharge the settlements made by the sheriff upon the grounds of fraud and mistake, and to recover the sums, claimed to he due from him to the county. A -suit was instituted for the money, alleged, to be due, from him, for each of the years of his term as sheriff. The board of education instituted a similar action, to recover a sum, which it was claimed was due it from Brand, for taxes, collected by him, which had been levied for its benefit. Brand and his sureties filed a joint answer to the petition in each of the five actions, employing, for that pur•pose, the same attorney. The answers consisted of a denial of the averments of the petitions. After the actions had continued until in March, 1914, and the county had taken a great deal of evidence, the cost of which it is claimed, amounted to the sum of $3,000.00, but no evidence having been taken by Brand, or his sureties, the actions were submitted on the 5th day of March,'1914, and judgments rendered in favor of the county against Brand and his sureties in the bonds, for the following sums: For the year, 1906, $4,168.53; for the year, 1907, $2,882.97; for the year, 1908, $2,575.05, and for the year, 1909, $2,136.15, and in favor of the board of education against Brand and his sureties in the suit, it was maintaining, the sum of $2,215.35, making in the aggregate, the sum of $13,978.05. No accrued interest upon the sums was adjudged, which, at that time, must have amounted to several thousand dollars, and the county and board of.education were, by agreement of the parties as appears from the record, adjudged to pay all the costs, which had been incurred in the actions.

Thereafter, on the 16th day of March, certain of the sureties on the bonds of Brand, and against whom the judgments had been rendered, filed an action against him to require him to indemnify them against the payment of one of the judgments, and, as incident to it, secured a general order of attachment to issue against his prop[264]*264erty, which, was levied upon certain articles of personal property, and, on June 1, thereafter, Brand filed an answer, by which he claimed, that he was a housekeeper with a family, and entitled to certain articles of the personal property, levied upon, as property exempt from coercive process for the collection of his debts, but, did not question in any way, the validity of the- judgment.

On June 15, 1914, Brand, as executor of J. C. Brand, filed his petition to be made a party to the same action, claiming the remainder of the personalty levied upon as the property of the estate of J. C. Brand, but, yet, failed to complain of, or question the validity of the judgments against him.

On June 1, 1914, the appellees, Cook, Stunston and Usher, who were three of the sureties against whom the judgments had been recovered, together with the appellant, G. R. Allen, who was another surety, satisfied the judgments against them and Brand, and after a return of nulla, bona, Cook, Stunston and Usher, Allen refusing to join with them, brought an action against W. L. Brand, W. L. Brand as the executor of J. C. Brand, L. F. Mason, W. L. Harris, Carrie Leonard, J. A. Hamilton, Omar Dodson, S. T. Hamilton and Graves County Banking and Trust Company, and others who are not parties to this appeal, and averred, that they, and their co-surety, G. R. Allen, having been required to satisfy the five judgments,. rendered against them and Brand, were entitled to be subrogated to the liens and the rights of action, which they averred, that the county and' board of education had against the property of W. L. Brand, and, also, upon the real property, owned by-him after his induction into the office of sheriff to secure the payment of the judgments, and -prayed, that such property be subjected to the liens and applied to their reimbursement.

The appellant, Cr. R. Allen, having refused to join in this, action, was made a defendant, because of his ownership of a tract of land, which had been the property of Brand.

W. L. Brand, on the 1st day of January, 1912, had conveyed to J. C. Brand, a tract of sixty acres of land, which the latter mortgaged to the Graves County Banking and Trust Company, to secure a debt of $1,700.00, and having died, the banking and trust company brought an action to enforce its lien upon the land, and for a settlement of the decedent’s estate in which W. L. [265]*265Brand as executor of J. C. Brand, and the heirs and creditors of the decedent, were made parties.

W. L. Brand with Gr. R. Allen as his surety, owed a promissory note to j. L.

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Bluebook (online)
218 S.W. 740, 187 Ky. 260, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 389, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mason-v-cook-kyctapp-1919.