Shepherd v. Haymond

165 S.W.2d 812, 291 Ky. 780, 1942 Ky. LEXIS 328
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedNovember 4, 1942
StatusPublished

This text of 165 S.W.2d 812 (Shepherd v. Haymond) 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
Shepherd v. Haymond, 165 S.W.2d 812, 291 Ky. 780, 1942 Ky. LEXIS 328 (Ky. 1942).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Stanley, Commissioner—

Affirming in part and Reversing in part.

There are two branches of this case, one of which is ancillary and dependant upon the other, although it became and is the chief contest.

1. The State Banking Commissioner and a special deputy in charge of liquidating the Bank of Wayland, in Floyd County, closed in August, 1931, filed suit against J. H. Shepherd to recover on his promissory note to the Bank for $2,200. Grounds of attachment were appropriately set up and a general order of attachment was prayed. It was alleged that M. Y. Wicker and nine other individuals were severally indebted to Shepherd, but “the exact amount and nature of the indebtedness” was unknown to the plaintiffs and those defendants were called upon to answer and make disclosure and be required to pay same into court for distribution. Shepherd traversed the allegations of the petition in respect to the .execution and his liability on the note and denied any of the ten individuals were indebted to him. He also pleaded no consideration. After awhile, during the leisurely course of the suit, an amended petition was filed showing that Thomas S. Haymond had purchased the note and *783 the prosecution of the case was thereafter in his behalf as the party plaintiff. Collateral had been sold for $243 and credited. Judgment was rendered against Shepherd. He insists on this appeal that it was error.

Shepherd’s testimony is that in 1922 when he was employed as a clerk by the Elkhorn Coal Corporation, Ira N. Morgan, a superior in employment, and a director of the bank, without his authority, had signed his name as the maker of a note for $2,400 to the bank. This had been repeated with each renewal until in September, 1930, when he, Shepherd, for the first time had signed a renewal note, as maker, with Morgan as endorser. The note sued on was a renewal of that one. Shepherd produced a letter addressed to him and signed' by Morgan, dated December 8, 1922, confirming a conversation of that day relative to a note for $2,400 “put in the Bank of Wayland in your name,” and secured by certain collateral. This stated that Morgan had received the proceeds of. the note and owned the collateral and that he would pay the principal and interest without expense to Shepherd. Shepherd testified that he had executed the two last notes as an accommodation and indicates that it was to extricate his friend, Morgan, from the consequences of his previous unauthorized signing of his name, of which, said Shepherd, he was ignorant until that time. On the other side Morgan testified that Shepherd had signed the original and all subsequent renewals as the maker as an accommodation to him. Morgan had subsequently been adjudged a bankrupt.

Irrespective of what had been done before, Shepherd’s action in signing the note sued on clearly brings him within the definition of “an accommodation party” and makes him liable to the bank and its successors as the holders for value as provided in the Negotiable Instrument Act. KBS 356.029 (Sec. 3720b-29, Ky. Stats.); Howard v. Southern National Bank, 204 Ky. 71, 263 S. W. 719. The judgment against him is manifestly proper.

2. The other branch of the case relates to the subjection of the indebtedness of M. Y. Wicker and the other nine individuals alleged in the Banking Commissioners’ petition to be owing J. H. Shepherd to the judgment against him. In 1926, Shepherd loaned Morgan $3,000, which was evidenced by his note secured by certain collateral. As of October 1, 1930, Morgan substituted 10 notes for $300 each, severally endorsed by those persons *784 to.secure them. J. H. Shepherd and his brother, B. F. Shepherd, by pleadings and testimony, claimed that in August, 1930, before the former had signed the note to the bank or its immediate predecessor, the Morgan $3,000 note had been sold to B. F. Shepherd for $2,500, paid in cash, and that J. H Shepherd, at the instance of and for his brother, had had the ten notes executed in substitution, although they, too, were made payable to J. H. Shepherd rather than to B. F. Shepherd, claimed to be the owner at that time. During that transaction and also when those ten notes were renewed on October 1, 1931, there had been no disclosure of the transfer or assignment to B. F. Shepherd as claimed.

In March, 1933, B. F. Shepherd sued one of the 10 individuals as the holder in due course of his note, pleading the bankruptcy and inability to. recover of Morgan, the maker. A year later, March 21, 1934, he filed similar suits against the other nine endorsers. These cases were consolidated with the suit of the Banking Commissioners against J. H. Shepherd by agreement on May 4, 1934. On September 5, 1934, B. F. Shepherd filed a pleading in the consolidated cases denying material allegations in the Banking Commissioners’ petition as to the indebtedness of the ten men to his brother, J. H. Shepherd, and the claims to have it subjected to the payment of his obligation. He prayed judgment in accordance with the. prayers of his ten several suits. On the same day J. H. Shepherd filed an answer denying the claim of the Banking Commissioners to have these obligations subjéeted to the satisfaction of the note sued on. Depositions were taken on the issue of ownership of these ten notes, as well as on that of J. H. Shepherd’s liability to the bank on the $2,200 note. Orders of submission for judgment were entered in January, 1935, and in October, 1937.

On September 6, 1939, the Banking Commissioners and Haymond filed a motion to set aside the order of submission and permit them to file an answer, counterclaim and cross petition against J. H. Shepherd and B. F. Shepherd and the ten other parties. On September 30, 1939, the court overruled Shepherd’s objections and ordered the pleading filed. In it the plaintiffs denied B. F. Shepherd’s ownership of the ten notes. ■ For the first time they denied there had been a transfer or assignment of the notes for a valuable consideration before ma *785 tnrity and for the first time alleged that the "brothers had entered into a fraudulent scheme to defeat J. H. Shepherd’s creditors and to prevent recovery on the bank’s nóte: They averred that “the alleged purchase” of the ten notes by B. F. Shepherd was “fraudulent and fictitious and without any consideration whatever.” This ■ pleading prayed that the alleged assignments be declared null and void; that the notes be adjudged the property of J. H. Shepherd; that the Banking Commissioners and Haymond be adjudged a first and prior lien upon them; that the several garnishee-defendants be ordered to pay the amounts into court, and upon their failure that the plaintiffs be given judgment against them for the amount of their claim against J. H. Shepherd. Replies traversed the allegations and pleaded the five-year statute of limitations in bar of the relief sought. The affirmative allegations of the replies were controverted of record.

The ten defendants were served with summons to answer the suit but without notice that they were being summoned in the capacity of garnishees. None of them answered, but four of them testified to circumstances tending to show that J. H. Shepherd had not sold the notes in the early part of 1933.

The court adjudged that the transfer and assignment by J. H. Shepherd to B. F. Shepherd was fraudulent as to the former’s creditor.

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Bluebook (online)
165 S.W.2d 812, 291 Ky. 780, 1942 Ky. LEXIS 328, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shepherd-v-haymond-kyctapphigh-1942.