McCormack v. Moore

117 S.W.2d 952, 273 Ky. 724, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 714
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 27, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 117 S.W.2d 952 (McCormack v. Moore) 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
McCormack v. Moore, 117 S.W.2d 952, 273 Ky. 724, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 714 (Ky. 1938).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas —

Affirming.

The appellee, Mary Stuart Moore, recovered a. judgment in the Harlan circuit court against Dr. H. K. Buttermore and Dr. W. M. Martin for the sum of' $2293.83, interest and costs. See case of Moore v. Spicer, 249 Ky. 464, 61 S. W. (2d) 5. Execution was: issued thereon and it was levied on 19 pieces of real estate as the property of Dr. Buttermore to which he. held either complete or part title. It later turned out, after the inauguration of the instant proceedings, that. Dr. Buttermore owned only an undivided interest in some of the parcels of property levied on, and also that some of them were encumbered with either a vendor’s lien or a mortgage. All of the property was sold by the sheriff on the 6th day of November, 1933, when appellee became the purchaser thereof at the then amount of her judgment. The price bid was not equal to two-thirds of the appraised value of the property and nothing’ was done beyond reporting the sale until after the expiration of more than twelve months from its date. On October 8, 1935, pursuant to notice theretofore given, Mrs. Moore, as authorized by the provisions of section 1689 of Baldwin’s 1936 Revision of' Carroll’s Kentucky Statutes, entered motion in the Harlan circuit court for a writ of possession of the property bought by her at her execution sale, to which Dr. Buttermore responded on October 29, of the same year, in which he set out the extent of his interest in each parcel of property involved, naming the other joint-owners, one being his wife — and also averred the fact of the existence of liens upon named parcels of the property which were created prior to the levy of appellee’s execution, and which were likewise alive at the time of the sale of the sheriff made thereunder.

All of such liens so pointed out by him were upon separate or individual pieces of the property. Among the liens he named was one held by his sister, the appellant herein, M. B. McCormack, to whom he had executed a mortgage in April, 1933 on all of the 19 pieces of property involved for the ostensible purpose of se *726 curing an alleged indebtedness he owed her in the amount of $25,000.00. She at that time, and at all other times throughout her life so far as this record discloses, was a non-resident of the state, having been born in Pennsylvania and later moved after her marriage to Tampa, Florida, and from thence to Lakeland, Florida, where she was residing at the time of the mortgage and during- the period of this litigation. Her husband died in 1932 and her father’s death preceded considerably that of her husband. She, after her husband’s death, continued the business he was conducting before then, which was a wholesale dealer in automobile parts.

Following pleadings, extending to sur-rejoinders, developed the issues that were tried and disposed of by the judgment appealed from, and which are the only two presented by this appeal. They are: (1) The validity and effectiveness of the $25,000.00 mortgage given by Dr. Buttermore to his sister, the appellant, M. B. McCormack, and (2) whether or not a certain judgment, hereinafter referred to, constituted a legal bar to appellee’s right to insist upon and have adjudged to her a superior lien to that of Mrs. McCormack because of the bogus nature of the latter’s mortgage which Mrs. Moore charged was without consideration, and was made and given for the fraudulent purpose and design of cheating and hindering the creditors of Dr. Buttermore and especially herself.

The litigation in which the pleaded judgment was interposed in bar of appellee’s rights supra, had been inaugurated sometime prior to the instant one, which was commenced by appellee’s motion for possession referred to. The style of that litigation — which was pending in the same court — was Commonwealth Life Insurance Company v. F. D. Perkins et al., the purpose of which was to foreclose a mortgage lien on one of the pieces of property levied on and sold under appellee’s execution (designated as parcel No. 1) which was a four story brick business building in the city of Harlan, Kentucky. The mortgage had originally been given by one Perkins; but at the time of the levying of the execution Buttermore had acquired an interest therein, subject, however, to the mortgage of the insurance company. That action will hereinafter be referred to as the “Perkins case.”

Following the giving of the mortgage one Cole ae *727 quired a one-half interest in the same store building and during the pendency of the Perkins case he (Cole) filed a separate action in the same court against the owners.of the other one-half for a sale of the property for distribution of its proceeds after satisfying the prior Perkins mortgage to the insurance company, and it will be hereinafter referred to as the “Cole case.” It was later consolidated with the Perkins case, when some sort of arrangement was made whereby a local building and loan association, operating in Harlan, acquired the insurance company’s debt, and from what happened thereafter it is inferable that the building and loan association agreed to extend the time and let the case rest, since nothing was done thereafter, though the two actions remained on the docket.

The record with reference to those cases was in that condition when the motion for possession herein was made, which was after the issues — including the attack upon appellant’s mortgage — were also made. Both appellant and appellee were parties defendant in the Perkins ease, and appellant in her pleadings in that case, setting up her mortgage, made it .a cross petition against Dr. Buttermore. Perhaps also it was made a cross petition against appellee; and the latter’s pleadings in the Perkins case were practically of the same nature. However, no affirmative relief was asked in appellant’s pleadings in that cause against Mrs. Moore, except she did state therein that her mortgage was superior to the one acquired by appellee through the levy of her execution. Such was the condition of the pleadings in the consolidated Perkins and Cole cases, as well as ■ the condition of the pleadings in the instant proceedings, on September 1, 1936. On that day counsel for Mrs. McCormack and Dr. Buttermore prepared and filed a somewhat anamolous judgment in the two consolidated actions, the substance of which was to simply and only declare and adjudge the fact of the existence of appellant’s mortgage and that it was a superior lien to that of appellee, which she obtained by the levy of her execution and the sale thereunder. That judgment is the .one pleaded in the instant action in bar of appellee’s rights herein attempted to be asserted.

In response to that plea appellee’s counsel denied its validity and asserted that it was fraudulently procured and entered, and especially so in that the theretofore promulgated and published rules of the Harlan *728 circuit court had been grossly violated in its obtention, and which rules we declared in the case of Coombs Land Company v. Lanier, 222 Ky. 139, 300 S. W. 328, to be valid and enforceable. Appellee’s counsel, therefore, asked that it be cancelled or ignored and set aside. Responsive pleadings made the issues on that contention — thus forming the issues to be tried in the instant case. Proof was thereafter taken by appellee only, and it consisted mainly in depositions as upon cross examination of appellant, and that of her brother, Dr. Buttermore.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
117 S.W.2d 952, 273 Ky. 724, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 714, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccormack-v-moore-kyctapphigh-1938.