Smith v. Moss

277 S.W. 245, 211 Ky. 226, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 852
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedNovember 13, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 277 S.W. 245 (Smith v. Moss) 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
Smith v. Moss, 277 S.W. 245, 211 Ky. 226, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 852 (Ky. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Settle

Reversing.

This action was brought June 7, 1922, by the appellee, 'C. A. Moss, to recover of the appellant, B. L. Smith, upon a note amounting, principal and interest, to $75.71, alleged in the petition to have been paid by him June 5, 1922, to the First National Bank of Williamsburg, as surety for the latter. By pertinent averments of the petition the maturity of the note and its nonpayment by the appellant were set forth, and an attachment sought against his property upon the ground authorized by section 194, subsection 8, Civil Code. The attachment was issued immediately following the filing of the petition and shortly thereafter evied upon a lOO-afcre tract of land in Whitley county owned by the appellant.

¡On the second day of the September1 term, 1922, of the Whitley circuit court, the appellant filed an answer to the petition, which, without denying his indebtedness upon the note sued on, controverted the grounds of attachment, and in a second paragraph set up a claim by the appellant to a homestead in and to the whole of the *228 100-acre tract of land upon which it was levied; in asserting which claim it was substantially alleged in the answer1 that the land was the only real estate owned by the appellant; that it was, as a whole, worth less, than $1,000.00, and not exceeding $600.00, and the whole of it encumbered by two duly recorded mortgages, one of $150.00, the other $50.00, the existence of both of which was known to the appellee when and before his action was instituted, who, notwithstanding such knowledge on his part, failed to make the mortgagees parties to the action. It was further alleged in the second paragraph of the answer that the appellant was and is a bona fide housekeeper with a family, consisting of a wife and seven children, all infants, and that the land in question was and is his homestead upon which he and his family now reside and in the past have resided, except such times as he has been temporarily absent therefrom “working for a living” and they with him.

It is shown by the record that the appellee filed a general demurrer to each of the two paragraphs of the appellant’s answer, and that the case was duly .submitted on this demurrer. It fails, however, to indicate what action, if any, w'as taken thereon by the circuit court. But as it is claimed by counsel for the appellee and conceded by counsel for1 the appellant that the. demurrer was sustained by the court, we will assume that such was that court’s 'ruling. At any rate it does appear from the record that' on November 3, 1922, which was the 41st day of the same term of the court, the appellant filed an amended answer, also styled a counterclaim, containing additional and more specific averments of the facts relied on to establish his right to the homestead claimed by him'in the land attempted to be subjected to the payment of the appellee’s debt.

While the record also fails to disclose that the appellee filed a demurrer to this amended answer and counterclaim, or that he insisted upon applying to the answer as thereby amended, the demurrer previously filed by him, it does appear from orders entered of record on February 15, 1923, of the January, 1923, term of the court, that the case was submitted on the appellee’s demurrer to the appellant’s first “amended answer,” and also on a motion of the appellant to discharge the appellee’s attachment; but the ruling of the court on neither of these submissions is found in the record. However, in view of the final action of the court as set *229 forth in the judgment determining the rights of the parties, the omissions of the record in the particulars last referred to, are wholly immaterial.

The next step occurring in the case, as shown ¡by the record, was the filing ¡by the appellant, September 30, 1924, the 14th day of the September term, 1924, of the court, of a second amended answer and counterclaim. To the answer as thus amended, the appellee again filed a general demurrer; and upon the submission of the case thereon the court sustained the demurrer, rejected the appellant’s claim of right to the land in question as a homestead, awarded appellee the recovery of the amount, with interest and costs, claimed to be due him on the note sued on, sustained his attachment and the levy thereof on the land, and directed the sale of the land to satisfy his debt and the costs of the action. The appellant complains of the judgment manifesting the above rulings, and by this appeal seeks its reversal.

The single question presented for decision on the appeal is whether upon the facts alleged in the answer and counterclaim, as amended, and the implied admission of the truth thereof made by the appellee’s demurrer, the appellant’s right to the homestead claimed by him in the land was prima facie shown. As a synopsis of the contents of the appellant’s original answer appear on a preceding page of the opinion, they-will not here be repeated. So it is sufficient to say, that although the facts therein alleged were material to the question of homestead involved,, they stopped short of making a complete showing of the appellant’s right to the homestead. If, therefore, the additional facts essential to á prima facie showing of the appellant’s right to the homestead claimed by him are alleged in the first and second amendments to the answer, or either of them, it would necessarily follow that the circuit court erred in sustaining the appellee’s demurrer to the answer, as amended, and, also, in granting him the relief, or any part thereof, recited in the judgment.

Our reading of the first amended answer and counterclaim filed by the appellant convinces us that it cured ■such defects as appear in the original answer. While much of it was but a repetition of what had been alleged in the original, many of such repetitions give meaning to and strengthen the original averments. ■. Its additional allegations, however, are substantially to the effect, that at the time of the creation of the appellee’s debt and prior *230 thereto the appellant owned and, with his family, was. residing on the land sought to be subjected to the payment of the appellee’s debt; that at the time mentioned,, and all time since, he has claimed and occupied it as a homestead. That while he has not continuously resided on the land, and he and his family have at times remained elsewhere, such absences were but temporary and in each instance necessary to enable him to obtain work and earn money for the support of his family, and that the presence oí his family with him during such periods of absence from the land was also necessary because of' their need of his personal care.

It was also, in substance, alleged in this amendment, that the land in question was the only real estate owned by the appellant, that its value did not exceed $600.00r that it had never been abandoned by him as a homestead, and that at .such times as he left the land he did so with the intention of returning to it with his family,, and with them reside upon and occupy it as a homestead.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
277 S.W. 245, 211 Ky. 226, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 852, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-moss-kyctapphigh-1925.