McCann v. Letcher

47 Ky. 320, 8 B. Mon. 320, 1847 Ky. LEXIS 176
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedFebruary 1, 1847
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 47 Ky. 320 (McCann v. Letcher) 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
McCann v. Letcher, 47 Ky. 320, 8 B. Mon. 320, 1847 Ky. LEXIS 176 (Ky. Ct. App. 1847).

Opinion

Ckpe'f Justice Marshall

delivered the opinion of the Court. — Judge Breclt did not sit in tiiis case.

On the 29th day of October, 1841, James H. Letcher being much embarrassed by debts, and desirous, as a means of relief, to sell a valuable tract of land which belonged to his wife by devise from her father, and having made a contract for the sale, at the price of about about $14,000, upon an agreement with his wife, that the slaves, also received from her father’s estate, should be secured to her and her children, executed a deed of trust, conveying in trust to R.P. Letcher, a large number of slaves, some of which were included in a previous mortgage to Bridgee and Mason, and some others had been sold to J.L. Adams, who, from a regard for Mrs. Letcher, and in consideration of her attachment to the slaves, agreed that he would surrender them for her use, if he should be repaid out of the price of the land. It appears, too, that Bi’idges, named above as a mortgagee, and who was bound for Letcher im several large liabilities, being a brother-in-law of Mrs? Letcher, concurred with others of her friends, in representing to her that it would be better for her to sell the land, for payment of her husband’s debts and save the slaves; and it was the opinion of Letcher himself, that the sale of the land would relieve him from embarrassment. Under these circumstances, the deed for the land was prepared and brought to Mrs. Letcher by the clerk, for her execution and acknowledgment, and she having steadily refused to execute it until the slaves should be secured to herself and children, the clerk, an esteemed friend in whom she placed great confidence, wrote the deed of trust, for the purpose of securing the slaves as desired. Upon its being executed and acknowledged by Letcher, and [321]*321«pon the-assurance of the clerk that it was all right, and •secured the slaves to her and her children, without danger of loss, Mrs. Letcher executed and acknowledged the deed for the land, the price of which was afterwards appropriated to relieving some of the slaves from the prior mortgage, and others from the prior purchase of Adams, and to the payment of other debts of Letcher.

•On the 11th day of November following the date of the deed of trust, Letcher executed a mortgage to Bridges, Baird, Fishback and others, conveying the same, and other slaves and personal property, in fact, all his visible estate, and a note held for a part of the price of the land, to secure various debts and liabilities therein specified.

In September, 1842, Mrs. Letcher, by her next friend, filed her bill against' her husband and children, and against the mortgagees, alledging fraud or mistake in the deed of trust, whereby the slaves, instead of being secured to her and her children, were said to be left subject to her husband’s debts, &c. And in February following, Baird, Fishback, &c., mortgagees in the last mortgage, filed their bill for foreclosure and sale of the slaves, &c.

The deed of trust recites, that “in order to secure my wife Nancy T. Letcher and her children, (naming six,) and such children as she and I may hereafter have, certain property hereinafter mentioned, and at the same time- reserve to creditors all liens for just debts now contracted, I do hereby, in consideration of the love I have for my said wife and children, convey to Robert P. Letcher,” &c., (the slaves named with their future increase,) “To have and to hold said negroes and increase for the use and. benefit of myself during life, and my wife and children now living, and such as my wife and myself may hereafter have, and to be under the control of said trustee, who may, by and with the advice and consent of the said Nancy T. Letcher, dispose of any one or all of said negroes and increase, and vest ¡the money in any manner she may direct, but the said slaves nor their increase are to be subject to any debt [322]*322of mine hereafter to be contracted,” and power is given to change the trustee.

Decree of the Circuit Court. If A. pays to B. a full price for properly, and a contract is drawn through mistake to A. and D. •who is absent, and has no participation in the arrangement, and A. ignorantly accept it, D, cannothold in equity against A. tho’ he may be a creditor of B.

[322]*322It should have been stated that the value.of Mrs. Letcher’s interest in the land conveyed by her, exceeded the aggregate value of the slaves conveyed by this deed, together with the value of her husband’s life estate in the land, and that all the deeds above stated, were duly recorded' Upon the hearing the Circuit Court, consisting of Judge Simpson, now being one of the two members of this Court for the revision of the decree, (Judge Bréele being interested and a party,) was of opinion that the mortgagees having but an equity and Mrs. Letcher’s being an elder equity, her right should prevail although the mortgagees may not have had notice of it; and therefore decreed the .slaves to be in the hands of the trustee, for the sole and separate use of Mrs. Letcher, and of her children. The adherence of Judge Simpson to this opinion, would alone be sufficient to produce an affirmance of the decree by a division of the Court. It is, therefore, unnecessary for the other member of the Court to say more upon this branch of the subject, than that he doubts whether, to the extent that J. H. Letcher had an actual available interest as cestui que trust under the deed of trust, the 13th section of the act of 1796, (1 Stat. Law, 443,) does not give to his conveyance of that interest by recorded mortgage, greater effect than is in a Court of equity allowed to the transfer of a mere equity, and whether therefore the mere priority of Mrs. Letcher’s equity, without notice to the mortgagees, should give it the preference. He has not, however, a decided opinion on this subject, and therefore does not on this ground dissent from the opinion on which the decree is based. But upon the construction of the deed, in which both of the Judges concur, this question ceases to be the turning point of the case.

1st. We are satisfied that the deed of trust creates no lien in favor of creditors which did not exist before its execution, but merely reserves such liens as were then upon the estate. And further, that if it had in terms< created liens for existing debts, it would under the actual circumstances, be no more than this case: that A. [323]*323pays to B. a full price for property, upon a contract for his own exclusive benefit, and C. being requested to draw the deed, makes it to import a transfer to A. and D., who was absent and had no participation in the consideration or the contract, and the deed thus drawn is'ignorantly accepted by A.; clearly D. could not in equity hold against A., although he may have been a creditor of B. If, therefore, these mortgagees or other creditors, claimed directly under the deed of trust, their claim would be of no avail against Mrs. Letcher, the actual purchaser. But they have no shadow of claim as beneficiaries under the deed.

A conveyance in trust by husband for the benefit of his wife andchildren, and such as Iheymay thereafter have, passes a present interest, and not an interest at the death of husband alone. This construction is rendered more manifest by conferring on the trustee power to sell with the consent of the wife.

2d.

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Bluebook (online)
47 Ky. 320, 8 B. Mon. 320, 1847 Ky. LEXIS 176, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccann-v-letcher-kyctapp-1847.