Samuel v. Samuel's Admr.

151 S.W. 676, 151 Ky. 235, 1912 Ky. LEXIS 795
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 17, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 151 S.W. 676 (Samuel v. Samuel's Admr.) 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
Samuel v. Samuel's Admr., 151 S.W. 676, 151 Ky. 235, 1912 Ky. LEXIS 795 (Ky. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Carroll

Affirming,

In July, 1911, H. E. Samuel died, and tbe following November a suit was filed in tbe Mercer Circuit Court' for a settlement of bis estate. In this suit tbe appellant filed six claims against bis estate, amounting, in tbe aggregate to $3,700. One of these claims was an open ac-. count for services rendered to bim as clerk. Tbe others were five notes: One for $1,419.68, dated February 6, [236]*2361894, and due one day after date; one for $200, dated May 3, 1895, due one day after date; one for $400, dated June 19, 1897, due one day after date; one for $200, dated March. 30, 1897, due one day after date, and one for $892.21, dated Feb. 1, 1905, due one day after date. The notes for $1,419.68 and $200 were contested by the administrator upon the ground that they were barred by the fifteen year statute of limitation. From the judgment of the lower court sustaining this defense this appeal is prosecuted.

As more than fifteen years had elapsed between the maturity of the notes and the death of H. E. Samuel, the statute presented a complete bar, unless, as contended by counsel for appellant, the life of these two notes was extended by payments, which it is claimed appellant had the right to credit them by, before the expiration of fifteen years from their maturity. No credit is endorsed on either of the notes, but it is insisted, on behalf of appellant, that the amount of a store account, and a board bill due by appellant to H. E. Samuel, should have been credited on these notes, and that it was agreed this should be done.

The evidence in the case consists of checks and other written exhibits, an agreed statement of fact, and the deposition of Miss Mary Bright. The appellant also gave her deposition, but objection was properly sustained to so much of it as related to conversations or transactions had with the deceased, and the remainder of it throws no light on the controversy.

It appears that in 1898 the deceased began business in Harrodsburg as a druggist, at which time the appellant, who was his daughter-in-law, came to live with him, and so continued until his death. During this time, and beginning in January, 1898, the appellant opened an account at the drug store of H. E. Samuel, and this account continued to February 1, 1905, when it amounted, including $50 for Miss Bright’s board, to $496.52. On this date it appears that the account of $496.52 was deducted from a note for $1,388.70, due to Mrs. Samuel and a new note executed for $892.21, this new noté being one of the five heretofore mentioned. On March 4, 1905, a new account was opened, and this account, which was made up of various articles of merchandise, and included a charge of $100 for Miss Bright’s board from March 20, 1905, to January 28, 1906, continued until June 27, 1911, when it amounted to $314.91.

[237]*237Passing for the present the evidence of Miss Bright, it appears from the exhibits and agreed state of facts that appellant opened an account at the store of H. E. Samuel in January, 1898, and that this account continued to run until February 1, 1905, at which time it was settled in the manner before stated, and in March, 1905, a new account was opened by appellant, which continued to run until June 27,1911, at which time it amounted to $314.91. Prom this statement it will be seen that virtually all the time from January, 1898, to June, 1911, appellant owed H. E. Samuel a store account, which included the board of Miss Bright, and that H. É. Samuel owed appellants during all this time the two notes in controversy in this case, dated 1894 and 1895, as well as the two notes dated in 1897, and, for about six years of this time, the note dated in 1905. No credit is indorsed on either of these notes, but it is the contention of appellant in her pleadings that it was agreed that the store account due by her and the board of Miss Bright should be credited on these notes at stated intervals; for example, in July and January of each year.

If this was done, of course the barred notes would be taken out of the statute. There is, however, no evidence tending to support this averment of the pleading except the testimony of Miss Bright, whose board from November, 1904, to January, 1906, was due to H. E. Samuel, and Miss Bright’s testimony, so far as pertinent, is as follows:

“Q. When you came to live with her were there any arrangements made about your board? A. Yes, sir. Q. Who paid that board? A. Mr. Henry Bright, of Danville. Q. To whom was it paid? A. It was to go on Mrs. Samuel’s notes. Q. What amount was paid? A. $10 a month for fourteen months; $140. Q. When these arrangements were made for board how did you know anything about it? A. My uncle told me so. Q. Were you present when’ the arrangements were made? A. Yes, sir; I was in the store. Q. When the' checks would come in would they be payable to Mrs. Samuel? ‘A. Yes; and she would take them to the’ store and show them to him every month. Q. You! heard Mr. Samuel tell her to let the board money goj on the notes? A. Yes, sir. Q. And that is all you! know about that? A. Yes, sir. Q. Did you know anything about these notes except what she said? A. I1 [238]*238knew he owed her money. Q. She told you that? A. Yes.” ■

It appears from this evidence that the hoard Miss Bright paid was to go as a credit on the notes appellant held against H. E. Samuel, but she does not say on which of the five notes appellant at that time held it was to go as a credit. She only knew that she heard H. E. Samuel tell appellant to “let the board money go on the notes.” She did not know anything about the notes except what appellant told her, and it does not.' appear that appellant told her what notes she held or anything about them except that II. E. Samuel owed her money.

That the parties did not understand that Miss Bright’s board was to be put as a credit on the notes executed in 1894 and 1895, or on any particular note, is shown by the fact that a part of her board was included in the settlement made on February 1, 1905, and went to reduce a note for $1,388.70 to $892.21. But treating this circumstance as of no importance in adjudging the case, the evidence of Miss Bright is not sufficient to save the notes in controversy from the statutory bar.

At the time Miss Bright’s board was paid no one of the notes was barred by limitation, and it may be conceded that under the general direction given by H. E. Samuel as to the manner in which he wanted Miss Bright’s board applied, the appellant, had the right, at the time, or in a reasonable time thereafter, to apply the amount of the board as a credit on any of the notes, or to distribute it as a credit on all of them, and that if she had then made this application it would have cut off the antecedent time on all of the notes to which the payment was applied as a credit. Brown v. Osborne, 136 Ky., 456.

But appellant did not at the time the board was paid, or at any time during the five years that II. E. Samuel lived thereafter, apply the board money as a credit on any of the notes; nor is there any evidence to show why she did not. do this or to excuse or explain her failure to make the application when the board was paid or within a reasonable time. This being true the case must be considered as if no special direction was given by H. E. Samuel as to the application of the board money, and so we will treat the board money merely as a part of the account that appellant owed H. E. Samuel ard deal with it as a part of that account.

[239]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
151 S.W. 676, 151 Ky. 235, 1912 Ky. LEXIS 795, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/samuel-v-samuels-admr-kyctapp-1912.