Morris v. Murray

82 Ky. 36, 1884 Ky. LEXIS 34
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 15, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 82 Ky. 36 (Morris v. Murray) 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
Morris v. Murray, 82 Ky. 36, 1884 Ky. LEXIS 34 (Ky. Ct. App. 1884).

Opinion

JUDGE LEWIS

DELIVERED THE OPINION OP THE COURT.

September, 1884, B. II. Blanton and Harrison Blanton gave their note to appellee for $4,000, and to secure the payment of it the latter executed to him, at the isame time, a mortgage upon 100 acres of land.

Appellee brought this action to recover personal judgment on the note, and to enforce his lien on the land, to satisfy it. And appellants, children and grandchildren of Harrison Blanton, and of his wife, Betsy Blanton, deceased, having, upon their own motion, been made parties, filed an answer and cross-petition asserting a prior mortgage lien on the same land [38]*38for the payment of a debt for $8,166.42 and interest from 1846, which they allege one E. A. Dudley transferred to them as heirs of Betsy Blanton.

Prom the statement of the answer and exhibits filed and made parts of it the following facts appear:

In March, 1846, Harrison Blanton executed to Jeptha Dudley and others a mortgage upon the farm where he then resided and the tracts adjoining and connected with it, including the land mortgaged to appellee in 1874, and also other detached tracts and lots and personal property, for the purpose of securing debts he owed the other mortgagees that seem to have been long since paid, or canceled other ways, and also a debt he owed Dudley, which, as stated in the mortgage, then amounted to $16,166.42, subject to a deduction for whatever might be due Blanton for brick and other work, etc., the amount of which was not then ascertained.

In 1863 Harrison Blanton and E. A. Dudley, the only child and heir-at-law of Jeptha Dudley, then deceased, entered into a written contract, acknowledged by them and recorded, in which, after reciting that Blanton was indebted to Jeptha Dudley divers sums, growing out of various transactions, part of which indebtedness was. secured by mortgage, and that, at the time it was executed, part of the farm was under execution, and after-wards purchased by Dudley, and deeds made to him therefor, and for other lots, they agreed as follows: That all the former conveyances, mortgages, and other securities held by Jeptha Dudley were re-affirmed, that Blanton should pay E. A. Dudley $5,090.21 within five years ¿rom that date, and the interest thereon at [39]*39the end of each year; that if Blanton complied with, this stipulation, Dudley was to reconvey to him all the property for which Jeptha Dudley held conveyances' and mortgages, and the entire indebtedness of Blanton, to E. A. Dudley as an heir, as well as representative of' Jeptha Dudley, was to be thereby discharged and satisfied. But on failure of Blanton to pay the' principal, or any instalment of interest, at the time specified, Dudley was to be no longer bound to take the-above-mentioned sum in full satisfaction of his indebtedness, but might, if he thought proper, fall back upon the original conveyances and mortgages, and regard the-payments, if any, which might be made by Blanton, as-payments on the indebtedness as it stood before the contract. And upon the final payment of the $5,090.21. as specified, Dudley was to relinquish, in favor of the-heirs of Betsy Blanton, the over plus of his claim above that sum and interest, with the security which he had upon the farm on which Blanton then resided, for the payment thereof.

In 1869 they entered into another contract, also acknowledged and recorded, in which it was agreed that Blanton, having failed to make all the payments of the sum mentioned within the time specified in the contract of 1863, Dudley was thereby released from the obligation to relinquish the overplus of his claim in favor of the heirs of Betsy Blanton; but Blanton having; since finished paying the sum of $5,090.21, with interest, Dudley then and thereby relinquished, released,, and conveyed to him during his life all the lands and estate contemplated and mentioned in the contract of 1863, except certain lots which were released abso[40]*40'lutely, and also relinquished, in favor of the heirs of Mrs. Blanton, said over plus of debt claimed by him, with all the security, or securities, which he held for its payment, not, however, to be enforced during the life ■of Harrison Blanton. But Dudley was not to be responsible for the relinquishment, and was to be indemnified against any claim of the heirs on that account.

A demurrer having been sustained to the answer and ■cross-petition, and judgment rendered for the sale of the 100 acres of land to satisfy the debt due appellee, the heirs of Mrs. Blanton prosecuted an appeal to this •court and the judgment was reversed, it being held in the opinion rendered that the facts stated by them showed a prima facie, right in appellants, and that the lower court erred in sustaining the demurrer to their pleading.

Upon a return of the cause, the present appellee, Murray, filed his answer, in which he denied that there •existed any over plus of the debt, for the payment of which the mortgage of 1846 was executed to Jeptha Dudley, beyond the $5,090.21 paid by Harrison Blanton between 1863 and 1869, and-also denied he had any notice, actual or constructive, of the attempted transfer by E. A. Dudley to appellants.

The action having been submitted upon the pleadings and proof, the lower court again rendered judgment for the sale of the 100 acres of land to satisfy Murray’s debt, and the case is now here upon appeal from that judgment.

The parties to the mortgage.of 1846 not only then left undetermined the amount to which Blanton was untitled as a credit on the mortgage debt of $16,186.42. [41]*41but, so far- as this record shows, it continued unsettled and undetermined during the life of Jeptha Dudley. Nor was the amount determined, or even estimated and .stated, in the contract of 1863. It is recited in that contract that Blanton was indebted to Jeptha Dudley in divers sums of money, growing out of various transactions, part of which indebtedness is secured by a mortgage on his farm and other property. But is not stated what the nature of these transactions were or the amount involved, nor is there in the record any account, memorandum, or written evidence showing or conducing to show what was the over plus, or balance due by Blanton to the. estate of Jeptha Dudley at the date of the contract of 1863. Besides, if there existed data sufficient to arrive at the proximate amount of such over plus, it would still be uncertain how much of it was secured by the mortgage of 1846, and how much not, for it is recited in the contract of 1863 that only part of the indebtedness of Blanton to Jeptha Dudley was secured by mortgage.

E. A. Dudley and Harrison Blanton are the only two witnesses wdio testify in regard to that indebtedness.

The former does not state anything on the subject. The latter is biased by both his feelings and interest. Eor, if the 100 acres of land be made subject to appellees’ debt, the estate of his children and grandchildren, as well as his own life estate in the farm, will be lessened to that extent. Moreover, he is confronted by his own act in executing the mortgage of 1874, which was fraudulent, if his statement, as a witness, that such over plus exists, be true.

In his deposition he says that the credit to which he [42]*42was entitled in 1846 was stated to be about $8,000, but-does not recollect how he got the amount, but says it corresponds with J. Dudley’s views of his indebtedness, and with E. A. Dudley’s views.

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Bluebook (online)
82 Ky. 36, 1884 Ky. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morris-v-murray-kyctapp-1884.