Ruth & King v. Ford

9 Kan. 17
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 15, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 9 Kan. 17 (Ruth & King v. Ford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ruth & King v. Ford, 9 Kan. 17 (kan 1872).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Valentine, J.:

This was an action brought by the plaintiff in error, Isaac M. Ruth, for the purpose of having certain deeds of conveyance declared fraudulent and void, and to have determined who was the owner in law and equity of a certain piece of land covered by said deeds. The whole tract consisted of forty acres, but only the west three-fourths was in dispute. The action was tried by a referee, and the report of the referee and the judgment of the court gave the west ten acres of said tract to said Ruth, and the middle twenty acres to Gurdon Grovenor, one of the defendants below and one of the defendants in error. The east ten acres were not in dispute, but such tract belonged to the heirs of S. S. Snyder deceased.

It is difficult to see why Ruth should complain of the judgment of the court below, or why he should unite with King in bringing the case to this court. He got1 everything in the court below that he had any right in justice or equity to claim, even if everything that he stated in his petition below was true; and neither the evidence nor the report of the referee made any better case for him than he made for himself in his .petition. Whatever errors there may have been committed by either the court or the referee, were, so far as they affected Ruth, immaterial and unsubstantial, and will not therefore be considered by this court.

With King, the other plaintiff in error, it is different. He got nothing bjr the judgment of the court below. And therefore we are not surprised that lie should complain. If any error was committed in the court below affecting his sub[22]*22stantial rights, he of course has a right to ask that the same be corrected. He docs not however seem to complain of the judgment as rendered between himself and Ruth, for he associated Ruth with himself in his petition in error; but he does complain of the judgment as rendered between himself and Grovcnor and the other defendants in error. We suppose it will be conceded that he cannot complain because the property was given by the judgment to Grovenor, instead of to one of the other defendants in error, or to Ruth; but he can complain only because the property was not given to himself. In other words, if it was legally shown that he had no right to the property he cannot complain of any disposition that the court made or might have made of the same.

We supjjosc it will hardly be questioned that the findings of the referee are sufficient to sustain the judgment rendered thereon; but it is claimed (and we think with very good reason as to some of the findings,) that the findings are not sustained by the weight of the evidence. It is also claimed that the referee erred in receiving a certain portion of the evidence.

statement of racts.

The facts of this case present some strange transactions. S. S. Snyder was the patentee of the said forty-acre tract of land. On the 28th of July 1858, he and his wife conveyed by warranty deed, the same to George Ford and Isaac M. Ruth, and took a mortgage back for the same from them to secure the payment of $1,000, a part of the purchase money. The deed was recorded in the Pawnee District Recorder's Office July 28th 1858, and in the Douglas county register’s office August 18th 1868. The mortgage was recorded August 3d 1858 in the register’s office. Afterwards, sometime in 1858 or 1859, a parol agreement or arrangement was made between Ford and Ruth and Snyder whereby Snyder was to have the east ten acres of said tract, Fcpkl the middle twenty, and Ruth the west ten acres. On July 13th 1859, as the referee finds, Ford and wife and Ruth conveyed back by deed the west thirty acres of said tract to said Snyder. This deed was proved by parol testimony, the [23]*23same having been lost or destroyed, if it ever had any existence. There Avas no evidence of its ever having been recorded. On the same day, July 13th 1859, Snyder and AA'ifeconveyed by warranty deed the Avest ton acres of said tract to said Ruth, and about this time Ruth mortgaged the same back to Snyder to secure the payment of $400 of the purchase-money. Said deed from Snyder to Ruth was acknowledged July 30th .1859, and recorded August 4th 1859. On July 21st 1859 said Ford and Ruth conveyed by quit-claim deed the middle twenty acres of said tract to Lemuel Fillmore the-husband of Ford’s adopted daughter, and to Rachael H. Ford the Avife of said Ford. This deed Avas acknoAvledged on the same day before said Fillmore, one of the grantees, he being a notary public;-and it Avas never recorded. On the next day, July 22d 1859, Snyder and Avife conveyed by warranty deed the middle tAvcnty acres of said tract to said Fillmore and Rachael H. Ford. This deed Avas recorded on the same day that it Avas executed. On July 25th 185.9, Ruth, and Ford and Avife, conveyed by quit-claim deed the east ten acres of said tract to said Snyder. This deed AA'as recorded August 11th 1859. On the same day, July 25th 1859, Ford convoyed by deed of assignment a large portion if not all of his property to his said son-in-larv, Fillmore, for the benefit of his (Ford’s) creditors, among which Avere Doan, King & Co., Avhom Ford owed about $1200. This assignment AA'as recorded the same day. On October 15th 1859 judgment Avas rendered in the district court of Douglas county in favor of Doan, King & Co., and against Ford for the sum of $1,284.29 and costs; and on December 16th 1859 an execution was issued on said judgment and levied on the undivided-half of’ the middle twenty .acres of said tract, and on the 6 th of February 1860 the same Avas sold at sheriff sale to said Doan, King & Co., Avho purchased the same Avith notice of the rights of the other parties, and in May 1860 this sale was confirmed by the court. On May 12th 1860 Fillmore and Avife conveyed by quit-claim deed the middle tAA'enty acres of said tract to Rachael H. Ford; consideration one dollar; recorded same day. On [24]*24May 14tli 1860 Ruth conveyed by quit-claim deed the middle twenty acres of said tract to said Fillmore. This deed was recorded May 21st 1860. On August 14th, 1862, the sheriff of Douglas county executed a sheriff’s deed to Doan, King & Co. for the undivided-half of the middle twenty acres of said tract; recorded samé day. On the next day, August 15th 1862, Fillmore, as assignee of Ford, conveyed Ford’s interest in the undivided-half of the middle twenty acres of said tract to Witter S. McCurdy. This deed was recorded the same day it was executed. September 1st 1862 Fillmore and wife executed a warranty deed to said McCurdy for the middle twenty acres of said tract. This deed was recorded April 29th 1863. While both the last-mentioned deeds purport to have been executed upon consideration—the first five dollars, and the second three hundred dollars—yet there was really no consideration given for either, according to the oral testimony in the case. On February 2d 1864, Doan, King & Co. conveyed by quit-claim deed the undivided-half of the middle twenty acres of said tract to said Wyllys King, the plaintiff’ in error, who was one of the firm of Doan, King & Co. This deed was recorded September 23d 1864. On July 20th 1865, Rachael PI. Ford and George Ford executed a quit-claim deed to Gurdon Grovenor for the middle twenty acres of said tract, in consideration of a promissory note for $1,000 given by Grovenor to Rachael IP. Ford, which note had not yet been paid when this case was tried before the referee. This deed was acknowledged and recorded July 21st 1865.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
9 Kan. 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ruth-king-v-ford-kan-1872.