Owens v. Witmer Co.

121 S.W.2d 966, 275 Ky. 439, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 451
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedNovember 18, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 121 S.W.2d 966 (Owens v. Witmer Co.) 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
Owens v. Witmer Co., 121 S.W.2d 966, 275 Ky. 439, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 451 (Ky. 1938).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Morris, Commissioner

Reversing.

Appellant was purchaser at a decretal sale of an interest in certain lands sold to satisfy a debt of a bank against appellees Mat and Bessie Mills, who with others were defendants in an action brought to enforce collection, as we gather from an incomplete record. The Witmer Company, appellee, which became party to the action below, was. mineral leaseholder on the land in controversy. This appeal was considered with Mills v. Mills, supra, this day decided.

We have none of the pleadings in the case of the Bank and Witmer Company, Assignee, v. Mat and Bessie Mills, or Bessie Mills v. the Bank, &c., on cross-petition.

We do have a judgment entered in the Knox circuit court on April 12, 1932, in the consolidated cases above mentioned. In that judgment it is recited that on September 22, 1928, Bessie Mills filed suit in equity against the First National Bank, A. Y. Mills, Mat Mills and Harrison Jackson, seeking to enjoin the bank from proceeding with the sale of land levied on, under execution issued in favor of the bank, for the sum of $567 with interest and costs, as being the land of defendants Mat and A. Y. Mills. We learn from the incomplete record that the Bank had recovered judgment against Mat and A Y. Mills, and execution had issued on said judgment.

On June 5, 1929, the bank instituted a suit in equity against plaintiff Bessie Mills and defendants A. Y. Mills and others, for disclosure, and to have the property levied on, subjected to satisfaction of its judgment.

As bo an alleged prior transfer of title from Mat to Bessie Mills, the court finding “earmarks of fraud/’ *441 and lack of consideration, refused to uphold the conveyance and discharged a restraining order which was found to have been wrongfully issued. The land levied on under the execution was adjudged to be the property of Mat Mills, hence subject to the execution.

It was further adjudged that the bank, by reason of the execution and its levy, had obtained a lien for its $567 debt, interest, costs, etc., and that the land, or a sufficiency thereof be sold to satisfy the bank’s debt, and ordered sale. To all of said judgment “the defendants, A. Y. and Mat Mills, and plaintiff, Bessie Mills, excepted.”

There was no sale in the meantime, and on February 13,1933, the First National Bank assigned the judgment and lien to the Witmer Company. There was then set out the judgment of the Knox circuit court a judgment of September 13, 1934, in the case of A. Y. and Nancy Mills v. Mat and Sawyer Mills, in which it had been held that Mat and Sawyer Mills owned one-fourth undivided interest jointly in the tract of land involved, because of their payment of the purchase price to Butler and others. See Mills v. Mills, supra.

The deed dated November 6, 1924, from Butler and others to Mat and Sawyer Mills (in part), is in this record. How it got in, and whether it was filed in the consolidated suits is not shown. This deed vested the title to the tract in Mat and Sawyer Mills.

The Witmer Company (assignee), after notice to all parties, moved the court (February 24, 1934) to set aside the bond executed in the case of Bank v. Mills, whereby the judgment was replevined, and moved the court for an order directing the commissioner to sell the land. The court sustained the motion, redocketed the case, and set aside the bond.

It was then adjudged that the Witmer Company was entitled to enforce the assigned lien and order of sale was postponed by agreement of parties. Thereafter, on July 16, 1937, the Witmer Company moved the court to order sale, and on the same day the court ordered a sale to satisfy the lien of the Witmer Company’s assigned judgment in the sum of $837.16, interests and costs, and directing the sale of the entire tract. This, and a subsequent order, were not carried into effect, and on December 24, 1937, the court entered another order substantially in effect as the prior order.

*442 The report of sale, February 28, 1938, showed the sale to have been made on January 3, 1938. The property as described (apparently the entire tract) was appraised at $3,000. gale was made on a credit of six months, and appellant was the successful bidder at the sum of $1,051. ‘ ‘ The quantity sold was one-half the following boundary,” apparently the Mat and Sawyer Mills’ boundary.

On January 6, 1938, appellant executed bond for the purchase price, but on March 1, 1938, filed exceptions to the sale and report of sale, setting up as grounds therefor: “1. The sale shows that the entire property was sold and the entire property was sold. The judgment covered only one-half of the property described in the advertisement and sold. ’ ’

Appellant secondly excepted on the ground that there was a judgment of the Knox circuit court, entered subsequent to the judgment under which this property was sold, by which the title of Mat Mills in the property was adjudged to be an undivided one-fourth interest held by himself and Sawyer Mills, with life estate, in the other three-fourths, with remainder in the heirs of A. Y. and Nancy Mills, as such rights exist at the death of Mat and Sawyer Mills. Mills v. Mills, 261 Ky. 190, 87 S. W. (2d) 389. So it is claimed that the sale of the entire tract is erroneous and void, since the court under said judgment against Mat Mills and wife could only sell their interest.

Appellant with his exceptions filed a statement “in order that the facts may be before the court for consideration.” He stated that he was attorney for the Bank in the Bessie Mills contest, and in the suit against A. Y. and Mat Mills, and was entirely familiar with the judgment rendered and levy of execution, and knew that the only interest which could be sold was that of Mat and Á. Y. Mills, since the deed from Mat Mills to his wife Bessie had been cancelled. He knew that Sawyer, who was joint owner with Mat of the boundary of land levied on, was not a judgment debtor, and not on the note to the Bank for whose benefit, or the benefit of its assignees, the land was sold. That the advertising of all of said land was a mistake.

Furthermore the purchaser (appellant) appeared at the sale and announced that the commissioner could only sell the one-half undivided interest of Mat, and he *443 knew lie was under the judgment bidding only on the one-half undivided interest of Mat, A. Y. and Bessie Mills, and not on the interest of Sawyer Mills. His bid was more than two-thirds of the appraised value of the one-half interest, since the entire tract had been appraised at $3,000, and appellant advised the commissioner to report the sale of only one-half undivided interest.

The main question is as to the title which the master commissioner can convey on account of the subsequent judgment. The court overruled the exceptions of appellant, holding that the purchaser would take a good and perfect title to the undivided one-half interest in the said boundary of land sold by the commissioner.

From reading the briefs it appears that the Witmer Company is materially interested in having the report of sale confirmed in all respects.

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Bluebook (online)
121 S.W.2d 966, 275 Ky. 439, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 451, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/owens-v-witmer-co-kyctapphigh-1938.