Ringo v. McFarland, County Judge

24 S.W.2d 265, 232 Ky. 622, 1930 Ky. LEXIS 51
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJanuary 31, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 24 S.W.2d 265 (Ringo v. McFarland, County Judge) 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
Ringo v. McFarland, County Judge, 24 S.W.2d 265, 232 Ky. 622, 1930 Ky. LEXIS 51 (Ky. 1930).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Dietzman

Affirming.

Joseph Malcolm Smith, a World War veteran, had, prior to June 20, 1928, been employed by the county judge of Daviess county as a clerical assistant in the quarterly court and by the county road engineer as such an assistant in his office. Smith drew a salary of $125 a month for the work thus done. He also drew a pension of $60 a month from the government. He was married, and had bought a home on St. Ann street in Owensboro. Outwardly he -lived a very abstemious life, but the truth was that he had embezzled a large sum of the county’s money from the road fund,, and had used it in the payment for and the improvement and furnishing of his home and in the purchase and stocking of a small farm near the city. His embezzlements were discovered, and on Wednesday, June 20, 1928, he was arrested. Among his intimate friends were the appellants, lawyers of standing and ability, not only in their community but in the whole state. Upon Smith’s arrest, these attorneys were sent for. They went over to the county attorney’s office where Smith was being detained. He was in such a state of mind that no discussion relative to his case or even to employment could then be had, and all the appellants did for him on that occasion was to arrange for his bond, which he gave. He then went to the home of some of his Mnspeople in order to rest a bit and to get his bearings.

*624 On Friday following Ms arrest, the fiscal court of Daviess county directed the county attorney to' bring suit against him for the purpose of recovering the amount he had embezzled. The fiscal court also directed the county attorney to attach in this suit any property belonging to Smith that could be reached by such proceeding. Notice of the action of the fiscal court was published in the Owensboro papers of that day, and appellants admit having read the article that afternoon or eveMng. The county attorney prepared the suit that night but was unable to file it until Saturday, the 23d. That morning Smith and his kinspeople visited the appellants and there made arrangements with the appellants to represent him,- in the criminal proceedings that had been or would be instituted against him. In order to pay the appellants for their services to be rendered, Smith gave them a note for $2,000, secured by a second mortgage on the St. Ann street property; the first mortgage in the sum of $4,500 being held by the Owensboro Banking Company. Mr. Clements, one of the appellants, took the mortgage over immediately to the county -clerk’s office to be recorded. On his way he stopped at the circuit clerk’s office to see if the suit authorized by the fiscal court the day before had been filed, and, finding that it had not, he at once put his mortgage to record. That same day the county attorney filed this suit, in which he sought not only a recovery against Smith for the amount of his peculations estimated to be at least $10,000, but also the enforcement of an equitable lien against the St. Ann street property to the extent that the Smith’s peculations had gone into the payment for and improvement of that property.

On June 30,1928, as the result in part of the efforts of his counsel, Smith was allowed to plead guilty to one of the many indictments pending against' him, and the other indictments were thereupon filed away. At that time he filed a statement in court admitting his guilt, and setting out with some detail how he had embezzled- the funds and how he had used them. At the same time he executed a deed of trust to the master commissioner of the Daviess -circuit court which authorized the commissioner to sell the property covered by it and out of the proceeds to discharge any valid liens against the same. The commissioner sold the St. Ann street property for ;$6,600, and, after discharging the bank’s lien, which *625 everybody admitted to be valid, and paying tbe costs of tbe action, he bad in bis bands the sum of $1,963.75, wbicb was less than tbe amount Smith bad indicated in bis statement be bad used in paying for and improving tbe St. Ann street property. By an amended petition, tbe appellants were brought into this suit and required to set up whatever claim they bad in tbe property, wbicb was alleged to be inferior to that of tbe county. By their answer, counterclaim, and cross-petition, tbe appellants, on information and belief, denied that Smith bad embezzled any money, that any part of his alleged embezzlements bad gone into tbe payment for or improvement of tbe St. Ann street property, and that tbe county bad an equitable lien for any amounts which might have gone into tbe payment for or improvement of this property. Appellants also sought tbe enforcement of their mortgage. A demurrer filed to tbe answer was passed for bearing when tbe merits of tbe case were beard. A reply was filed wbicb in effect pleaded that tbe appellants took their mortgage with full knowledge of all the facts upon wbicb tbe equitable lien of tbe county was based, and that they were not bona fide purchasers for value -without notice. These allegations were put in issue. Proof was taken, and on the final submission"the court sustained tbe demurrer to tbe answer of tbe appellants, dismissed their counterclaim and cross-petition, and awarded tbe county a superior lien on tbe amount yet in tbe bands of tbe master commissioner, which was thus exhausted by this judgment of tbe court.

Tbe parties in their briefs on this appeal do not argue tbe validity of tbe court’s action in sustaining tbe demurrer. Nor shall we, for, as tbe case was also beard on its merits, if on tbe merits the court’s judgment was correct, it will have to be affirmed, even though the-court was in error in sustaining tbe demurrer. Did tbe county have an equitable lien against tbe St. Ann street property? This in turn depends on' whether tbe county established tbe fact of Smith’s peculations and tbe fact of the use of these peculations by him- in payment for and improvement of tbe St. Ann street property, and whether, if these facts be established, does tbe law by reason of them raise an equitable lien or not. Tbe only testimony introduced in this case was produced by tbe county, and tbe only witnesses it introduced were tbe appellants themselves. In the course of their examina *626 tion the county had these two gentlemen to file, as a part of their testimony, the statement which Smith had filed in court at the time he pleaded guilty to the indictments. The appellants filed this statement without protest or objection, and they did not thereafter move the court to strike it from the record. On the contrary, they submitted the case with this evidence before the court. Neither of the appellants denied the truth of the statements thus made by Smith. Although had the appellants objected, Smith’s statement would not have been competent, since it was only hearsay, yet, as they allowed it to go into the record without protest or objection, the court had a right to consider it, and it established the facts upon which the county relies to raise its asserted equitable lien.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
24 S.W.2d 265, 232 Ky. 622, 1930 Ky. LEXIS 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ringo-v-mcfarland-county-judge-kyctapphigh-1930.