McLear v. Morgan

44 Ky. 282, 5 B. Mon. 282, 1845 Ky. LEXIS 8
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 15, 1845
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 44 Ky. 282 (McLear v. Morgan) 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
McLear v. Morgan, 44 Ky. 282, 5 B. Mon. 282, 1845 Ky. LEXIS 8 (Ky. Ct. App. 1845).

Opinion

Chief Justice Ewing

delivered the opinion of the Court.

About the 1st of May, 1840, a most grievous assault and battery, was committed by Morgan, Dorsey, McKale •and Segar, upon the body of one William Grady, at his own house, after dark, and on the 2d of June following, he commenced a joint action against them, in which he recovered a judgment at the September Term following,' against the three former, for $4000 and costs ; a nolle prossequi having been entered, as to the latter. McKale was insolvent, and Morgan, after the battery, and about the time of the institution of the suit, made a conveyance [283]*283of his house and mill, and a tract of land of about nine acres, upon which they were situated, to his son-in-law, Samuel A. Young, at and for the pretended consideration of $3000 paid. Morgan at the time, was, and had for years before, heen greatly embarrassed, and had, as early as 1836, made a fraudulent conveyance of the same tract of land, embracing also about 26i acres adjoining, to another son-in-law, by the name of Edwards; and had afterwards, on the 19th day of March, 1838, mortgaged the entire tract to one Parker, to secure the payment of a note then executed for $855 35 cents, payable in twelve months, with interest from the date. Executions after-wards were issued against Morgan, and levied upon Morgan’s equity of redemption, which was sold, and Parker became the purchaser, at $449 86 cents, on the 10th day of December, 1838. The 26¿ acres, that portion of the entire tract which lies on the east side of South Elkhorn, was sold by Morgan to Dorsey, for $60 per aeree, and an article of agreement bearing date the 10th January, evidencing the sale executed, in which Parker and Edwards joined. In this article it is stipulated, that $300 is to be paid in hand to Morgan, and the balance to be paid in twelve months, as follows : “It is agreed by all the parties hereto, that said Parker’s claim on said mortgage, and for his payments, in purchasing the equity of redemption of said Morgan, in said tract, shall be satisfied out of the last payment, and the balance, if any, paid to said Morgan.” Edwards had joined in this article, as well as in the conveyances to Parker and Young, by way of passing the pretended title acquired by the prior conveyance from Morgan to him. After the recovery of judgment in damages by Grady, an arrangement was made between his counsel and the counsel of Dorsey, sanctioned by the parties, tand by McLear, the complainant, by which Grady’s execution was assigned to McLear, and Dorsey, with McLear' and Omera as his sureties, assumed to pay Grady and his counsel, $3000 and costs, payable in four, eight and twelve months, and he and his wife executed to McLear and Omera, a mortgage on the tract of land on which he lived, which he had derived through his wife, for their indemnification, and which was [284]*284to be sold, and was afterwards sold by him, and the proceeds applied in payment of the amount assumed to be paid to Grady. Dorsey was an Irish emigrant, without property at the time of his marriage. His wife was-possessed of a handsome property in lands and slaves. They had no children, and were not likely to have any;- and she apprehended in case of her death, that her collateral heirs might come in and oust her husband from, the enjoyment of her estate. It was therefore distinctly agreed between them, that her whole estate should be so settled and arranged, that they and each of them should enjoy it during their joint lives, and the survivor during his or her life, and afterwards the one equal moiety of the etate should go and pass to his collateral heirs, and the other to her collateral heirs. In pursuance to this agreement, and on account at the time, of her then indisposition, a deed was prepared and executed by Dorsey and wife, conveying her real estate to Omera, and one executed by Omera re-conveying'the estate to Dorsey, the husband; but the execution of the balance of'the agreement, which was for the benefit of the wife, and which superinduced and was the moving consideration for the execution of the deed on her part, was suspended at the time, for some cause, not recollected by the witness, but was to be consummated by the express agreement of the parties, at some future time. This had not been done until after Dorsey became involved with Morgan in the assault and battery upon Grady. The intention of her counsel and McLear in the arrangement affected with Grady, was to wield the execution off of the property of Dorsey, which was subject to the agreement made .with his wife, and to secure to her as far as might be, the benefit of that agreement, by coercing out of Morgan, a joint trespasser, for her use, whatever might be made on the execution, not exceeding one half of its amount. And this consideration induced her to agree to the arrangement, and join her husband in mortgaging a tract of land which was subject to be settled on her under the unexecuted agreement between her and her husband, parting with even her right of dower in the same, to secure the securities of Dorsey in the assumpsit to Grady.

The objects of the bill of McLear. Parker’s answer and cross bill. Objections urged to the decree cree of the Circuit Court.

McLear having the control of the execution of Grady, caused it to be levied on Morgan’s equity of redemption in the nine acres of land mortgaged to Parker, and conveyed to Young, and purchased the same for twenty dollars, had the execution returned no property found as to the balance, and filed the bill in this cause, to compel Edwards and Young to surrender their title as fraudulent, and Parker to release his mortgage, and surrender all title to the land, on equitable terms, that the same might be subjected to McLear’s execution. Young answered, denying fraud, and asserting valid title; Morgan answered admitting the fraud charged, and asserting that Young had paid no part of the consideration, except about $124 oh an execution which wasin the hands of the officer against him, Morgan, and about $100 inthe settlement of an order with Spencer, to whom, by his consent, Young afterwards sold the land; and Spencer had paid 'him something upwards of $400. Parker answered, asserting absolute right to the land mv der his mortgage and purchase of the equity of redemption.

The Circuit Court dismissed McLear’s bill, and ordered an account to be taken, and the amounts paid ascertained, as well as the amount still due, upon Paarker’s mortgage and purchase of the equity of redemption ; and upon the coming in of the report of the auditor, it appearing that only about $194 90 was due to Parker, ordered his bill to be dismissed, so far as he set up claim to absolute title, and decreed Morgan to pay to him the amount reported as due him, and the land to be subjected to its payment, and the deed from Morgan to Edwards to be annuled. From this decree McLear appealed to this Court, and Parker, files cross errors.

Three objections are urged by the counsel of the appellees, against the relief sought by the complainant.

I, That the judgment of Grady was paid off by Dorsey, and the proceeding in the name of McLear, is for his use, and will redound to his benefit, in the nature of a contribution, and equity will not entertain jurisdiction to compel one joint trespasser to make contribution to another.

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Bluebook (online)
44 Ky. 282, 5 B. Mon. 282, 1845 Ky. LEXIS 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mclear-v-morgan-kyctapp-1845.