Myers's administrator v. Forsythe

73 Ky. 394, 10 Bush 394, 1874 Ky. LEXIS 63
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedNovember 10, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 73 Ky. 394 (Myers's administrator v. Forsythe) 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
Myers's administrator v. Forsythe, 73 Ky. 394, 10 Bush 394, 1874 Ky. LEXIS 63 (Ky. Ct. App. 1874).

Opinion

CHIEF JUSTICE PETERS

delivered the opinion of the court.

Prior to the 26th of October, 1867, several persons, creditors of John M. Alexander, instituted actions in the Woodford Circuit Court against him, and procured orders of attachment ■against his estate, on the ground that he had been absent from the state for more than four months.

It seems that the defendant had no real estate in Kentucky, but that he had rented a farm from S. P. Porter in Woodford County, where he with' his wife and five children was residing and keeping house, and where he left his family in January, 1867, when he left with horses,' mules, and sheep for the New Orleans market; and his wife and children remained on the place rented by him of Porter and continued to keep house.

[395]*395All the attachments but two were placed in the hands of W. W. George, sheriff of Woodford County, and after setting apart for the use of the family such property of bona fide housekeepers as is exempt by law from seizure by execution or attachment, as he (George) proves, he levied the attachments on the residue of said Alexander’s property, or so much thereof as he deemed necessary to satisfy the debts for which said orders of attachment were obtained.

Afterward an attachment was sued out by appellee against Alexander, and was placed in the hands of -Redd, coroner of said county, to execute, and he levied it on the property which had been set apart by George, the sheriff, for the use of the family as exempt from attachment, and perhaps on other property.

On the — of October, 1867, the attachments in the six cases first named were sustained on the ground that the defendant Alexander had been absent since January, 1867; and after deciding on and fixing the amount owing by him to the several creditors named the court ordered and adjudged that, as the property on which the attachments were levied was of a perishable nature, it should be' sold by said W. W. George, prescribing the terms, place, and manner of the sale; and it was further adjudged that it appeared from the return of the attachments in the case of Forsythe against Alexander, and of--against the same (the name of the plaintiff not given in the transcript before us), that they were levied by John W. Redd, coroner of Woodford County; that said Redd should deliver to the sheriff the property levied on by him, to be sold by the'sheriff as in said judgment directed, etc., closing the judgment in these words: “ The questions as to priority of liens and other questions not herein decided arising in these suits are reserved, and these cases are continued.”

The commissioner (George) sold the property as directed [396]*396by the judgment aforesaid, and. made an intelligent, comprehensive, and satisfactory report thereof, setting forth each article sold, the price, and the name of the purchaser; and his report contains the articles levied on by Redd, the coroner, and which he sold under said judgment.

At the sale made by George as aforesaid Mrs. Sarah H. Myers purchased property to the amount of 1314.90, for which she executed her bond with the said Forsythe as her surety. Afterward Mrs. Myers filed her petition in the Woodford Circuit Court and enjoined the collection of said bond, charging that the property for which she executed her bond was in fact bid in by Mrs. Alexander, the wife of said J. M. Alexander, by the advice and at the request of said Forsythe, for whose benefit it was being sold, and that she executed her bond- for the price of said property purchased by Mrs. Alexander at the instance of Forsythe, who told her at the time that the money was going to him; that she never-should pay one cent on said bond, and that he would have it indorsed satisfied; ” and that she was induced by said statement and assurances of said Forsythe to execute said bond; that she received no benefit from the property purchased by Mrs. Alexander, and no consideration passed to her.

Forsythe in his answer denies the material allegations of Mrs. Myers’s- petition.

In October, 1870, Mrs. Frances C. Alexander, wife of J'ohn M. Alexander, filed her petition to be made- defendant, and her answer and cross-petition in the cases of the creditors of her husband against him, all of whioh had been consolidated, and were still pending in said court. She states that her husband, the said John M. Alexander, died on the 21st of July, 1868, intestate, leaving her (his widow) and five infdnt children his heirs and distributees; that at the time said attachments were sued out her said husband- was temporarily absent from the state; that he was in possession of a farm in [397]*397Woodford County on which he and family resided, and had a crop raised on it in 1867, and had there horses, jacks, jennets, cattle, hogs, and household and kitchen furniture and farming implements, and was a housekeeper there with a family consisting of wife and children as aforesaid; that said plaintiffs -in said attachment suits caused every article of household and kitchen furniture, all the crop grown on said farm, all the farming implements, and all the live-stock, and every species of property of said John M. Alexander to be levied upon and sold, leaving her and her children destitute of every thing, and with nothing to subsist upon.

And she prays, as the attaching creditors and officers who levied said attachments failed to set apart for the benefit of the family of said Alexander the property exempt by law from seizure and sale, that the court will adjudge to her a sum of money out of the proceeds of the sale equal to the •value of the exempted property; and she charges that the money for which the property was sold is in Court or under its control, and not distributed.

Forsythe in his answer avers that at the time of the institution of the actions, consolidated, said John M. Alexander was a non-resident of the state; therefore denies that he was only temporarily absent from Kentucky, and denies that he was a bona fide housekeeper with a family in the state of Kentucky. He denies that his attachments were levied on any property of said Alexander that was exempt from execution for debt. He states that he does not know whether all the property of said Alexander was sold or not; that he himself directed the sale of no particular property or any property. He states that Mrs. Alexander was present at the sale and made no objections, and that she had a brother-in-law, who was a lawyer, advising hér and consenting to the sale; and he avers that if she had any claim that she could have asserted it, and that she is estopped by her acts at the sale [398]*398from subsequently asserting it. He states that said John M. Alexander is dead, and that his personal representative is not a party to this proceeding; avers that Frances C. Alexander in no event has any claim to any property exempt from execution, and can not lawfully in her own right assert such a claim. Finally he says he sets up and relies on the former judgment in these consolidated cases and the lapse of time as a defense against the claim of Mrs. Alexander.

The plaintiffs in the consolidated cases, except Forsythe, answered Mrs. Alexander’s cross-petition jointly, and state that, although they obtained their attachments on the ground that John M. Alexander had been absent from the state for more than four months, he had at the time a plantation in the state of Louisiana and was a resident of that state.

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45 S.W. 883 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1898)

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Bluebook (online)
73 Ky. 394, 10 Bush 394, 1874 Ky. LEXIS 63, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/myerss-administrator-v-forsythe-kyctapp-1874.