Salyer v. Blessing

152 S.W. 275, 151 Ky. 459, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 505
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 9, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 152 S.W. 275 (Salyer v. Blessing) 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
Salyer v. Blessing, 152 S.W. 275, 151 Ky. 459, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 505 (Ky. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Carroll

Affirming on the original and reversing on the cross-appeal.

On O'ct. 20, 1909, the appellant, Salyer, sold and conveyed to John F. Blessing, in consideration of $11,022.90, a tract of land in Pike county. The deed recites that the boundary described is “estimated to contain about 1200 acres, be the same more or less.'’ ’ In 1910 Blessing brought this suit against Salyer to recover from him $3,600 of the purchase money paid for the land, upon the ground that there was a deficit involving this amount between the number of acres sold and the number conveyed by the deed, estimating the value of the land at $10 per acre. The petition as amended averred that the land was sold at $10 per acre, anld that Salyer falsely and fraudulently represented that there was 1200 acres in the tract conveyed, and guaranteed that it contained 1000 acres, and that Blessing, in ignorance of the quantity of land in the- boundary, [460]*460relied on the representations made by Salyer, and the purchase price! of $10,000 was paid on the assumption that the tract described in the deed .contained at least 1000 acres. The deed recites the consideration as being $11,022.90, but the excess over $10,000 represents other matters not concerned in this litigation. It was further averred that a survey of the land disclosed that it contained 578.1 acres, making a deficit of 421.9 acres in the guaranteed acreage, and judgment was sought for $4,219, with interest from Oct. 20, 1909.

In his answer Salyer denied that he represented or stated that the tract of land contained 1000 acres. He averred that he did not know the number of acres contained in the boundary sold, and that the sale was in «gross, or of a boundary of land and not by the acre, and that he was induced by Blessing to agree that there might be inserted in the deed a recital that the boundary contained 1200 acres more or less. Other matters were set up in the answer and among them a counterclaim on which he sought to recover $2,611, but as the evidence conclusively shows that there was no merit in the counterclaim the failure of the lower court to allow anything on this account is not complained of by counsel in this court and need not be further noticed. Nor does it seem necessary to devote any attention to any of the issues made by the pleadings except in so far as they relate to the question concerning the number of acres in the tract.

The lower court in disposing of the case found that the evidence showed that Salyer represented and guaranteed that the boundary sold and intended to be conveyed by the deed, contained 1000 acres, when he knew that it did not. He also found from the evidence that there was a deficit of 303 acres in the boundary described in the deed, and gave judgment in favor of the plaintiff for $3,030, with interest from May 1, 1910, the date at which Blessing first demanded that the deficit be made good. In addition to this he found that 56 acres of the boundary sold by Salyer to Blessing were not embraced in or conveyed by the deed, and he directed in the judgment that Salyer should convey this 56 acres or else pay Blessing for it at the rate of ten dollars per acre.

From this judgment both parties appeal: Salyer insisting that the petition should be dismissed, while [461]*461counsel for Blessing contends that judgment should have gone for $3,560, with interest from Oct. 20, 1909, the date of the deed, if Salyer conveys the 56 acres mentioned in the judgment, and that he should have judgment for $4,219, with like interest, in the event Salyer does not convey the 56 acres.

Before taking up the merits of the case we will dispose of a question of practice raised by counsel for Salyer. It appears from the record that after the institution of the suit by Blessing, who was a resident of the state of West Virginia, he made an assignment in West Virginia for the benefit of his creditors to Higgenbotham and Price, and by order of court these assignees were substituted as plaintiffs in place of Blessing. After this Higigenbotham died and the case proceeded to judgment in the name of Price, the surviving assignee.

It is now argued by counsel for 'Salyer that the assignees were without authority to prosecute the action or have judgment in their favor because they iwere nonresident assignees and had not executed any bond in this state permitting them to prosecute the action. There is some question as to whether this point was raised in the lower court in such manner as to make it available here, as there was no demand that the assignees execute a bond. But we will assume that objection was made in the lower count in due form ito the right of the assignees to prosecute the action, and dispose of the matter on the merits.

In the chapter in the Kentucky Statutes relating to voluntary assignments for the benefit of creditors, and which contains sections 74-96, we do not find any provision denying to a foreign assignee the right to institute or prosecute an action in this state, or any direction that a foreign assignee before instituting or prosecuting an action in this state shall execute a bond. The sections of 'the statute, supra, in ,so far as they relate to the qualification of assignees, refer to- resident assignees only.

We also think the right of a foreign assignee to maintain an action in this -state has been determined adversely to the views of counsel for appellant in Peach Orchard Coal Co. v. Woodward, 105 Ky., 790, and Zacher v. Fidelity Trust & Safety Vault Co., 109 Ky., 441. In these cases it was held that there was no provision of the statute which authorized or required a foreign [462]*462assignee to execute a bond to enable him to maintain an action in his own name under a deed of assignment in another state, if the assignment was such as would be held good and enforced if made in this state and it was in harmony with the policy of this state and not prejudicial to the rights of any creditor residing in this» state.

It is not suggested by counsel for appellant that the "West Virginia assignment was prejudicial to any creditor in this state or in conflict with the laws or public policy of this state, nor was any motion made to require the execution of a bond, and therefore the assignees of Blessing had the right to- prosecute to judgment the action instituted by ¡him.

Coming now to the merits of the case, the decided weight of the evidence shows that about a month before Salyer sold and conveyed the land to Blessing he had it surveyed and learned from the survey -that there was only 697 acres in the boundary, and that he represented to Blessing, and -others acting for Blessing in the negotiations, at the time the deed was made, that there was at least 1000 acres in the boundary. It is further shown that Blessing and the person acting for him in the transaction relied on the -statements made by Salyer as to the number of acres in the boundary and did not have any -survey made until after the deed had been accepted and the purchase price paid.

But notwithstanding the existence of these facts it is insisted in behalf of Salyer that no recovery should be had: (1) Because the deed did not contain any warranty of the number of acres in the tract and the sale was of a boundary of land and not by the -acre. (2) Because, although there may have been less than 1000 acres, the land actually conveyed was worth more than the amount paid for the tract.

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Bluebook (online)
152 S.W. 275, 151 Ky. 459, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 505, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/salyer-v-blessing-kyctapp-1913.