Spencer v. Hogg's Administrator

58 S.W.2d 401, 248 Ky. 229, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 214
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMarch 17, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 58 S.W.2d 401 (Spencer v. Hogg's Administrator) 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
Spencer v. Hogg's Administrator, 58 S.W.2d 401, 248 Ky. 229, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 214 (Ky. 1933).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Thomas

— Affirming.

In 1922, E. E. Hogg died intestate while a resident of Woodford county, Ky. His two sons, Hiram and St. Clair Hogg, were appointed and qualified as administrators of his estate. There survived him a number of children, and his widow, Louise Hogg. Some years thereafter a suit was filed in the Woodford circuit court to settle his estate, which pended on the ■ docket for some considerable time, and on final submission at the May, 1931, term of the court a personal judgment wns rendered against the administrators in favor of. the *230 estate, or some one interested therein, for the sum- of $7,012.23, with interest from that date, and costs. An execution issued thereon was returned no property found, and on August 29, 1931, this action was hied against the defendants in the judgment, which was and is in the nature of a bill of discovery of assets of defendants with which to satisfy the judgment. Attachments were procured against defendants, which were levied upon certain property claimed to be owned by them, and certain garnishees were summoned and ordered to answer, which was later done. Later, and on December 1, 1931, the petition was amended, and the appellant and defendant below, Lillie Spencer, was therein made a party defendant to the action, and sumr mons was served upon her. In the amendment plaintiffs averred that defendant, St. Clair Hogg, on December 22, 1925, owned a large farm in Woodford county, bordering on the Kentucky river, and on the latter date he executed a mortgage oh it to his mother-in-law, the appellant and defendant, Lillie Spencer, to secure, an alleged note, that day executed to her by hitó for the sum of $6,000; that it was not recorded in the county clerk’s office of Woodford county until April 25, 1931, and on May 6, 1931, the appellant filed an action against her son-in-law, and his wife, in the-Woodford circuit court to recover judgment on the note and for the foreclosure of her mortgage lien; that the defendants therein were duly summoned and failed to answer, and a default judgment was taken in which the • land was ordered to be-sold-by the master commissioner of the county, and he advertised it for sale pursuant to that judgment.

Before the sale was made, St. Clair Hogg and his wife-deeded, the land to appellant, which was followed by an order dismissing her action against them as settled. Plaintiffs averred that the mortgage was fraudulent, was without consideration, and was executed for the purpose of cheating, hindering, and delaying the creditors of St. Clair Hogg, including plaintiffs, in the collection of their debts, and that the judgment of sale of the mortgaged farm was collusive and likewise voidablé a's. against the creditors of St. Clair' Hogg. The prayer .of the .amended petition asked that it be so adjudged ■Und that the involved farm be sold and its ■ proceed,s ■applied'to. the payment^of plaintiffs’ debt.- .. ■ . -

*231 Defendants, Lillie Spencer and St. Clair Hogg, filed separate answers, almost identical m terms, and in which, they denied the material averments in the amended petition, but they were represented in the trial court by separate attorneys. Proof was heard orally before the court, with the exception of the deposition of Senator A. H. Hargis, taken by plaintiffs, and upon submission the court upheld the averments of the amended petition, and adjudged that the mortgage referred to was fraudulent, as well as the judgment enforcing it, and set aside and canceled each of them, and ordered the land sold as prayed for in the amended petition, and from that judgment appellant (Lillie Spencer alone) prosecutes this appeal.

The sole question involved is one of fact, and it is to be solved from the testimony heard at the trial and the law applicable to the facts it tends to establish. Some preliminary questions are discussed by counsel for appellant, but which do not relate to the merits and.' which we think are each untenable. An illustration of them is that the judgment sought to be collected is one against the estate of the decedent, E. E. Hogg, and which can be realized only out of his estate, and from which premise it is argued that neither St. Clair Hogg nor his codefendants in the judgment, Hiram Hogg, are individually liable therefor. The error in that conclusion lies in the fact that the debt sought to be collected, is not one-owed by, or due from, the estate of which the Hogg brothers were the personal representatives. On the contrary, it is a debt due from them individually to that estate, and they are designated in the pleadings of. the case in which the judgment was rendered as administrators only for the purpose of describing their relationship to the estate that they attempted to administer. They were guilty of a devastavit as such personal representatives, and became personally liable to the estate for their defalcation, some or all of which it is intimated in the record were obligations that they owed the estate individually. It is. therefore clear that this argument of counsel is entirely falacions and untenable. The other technical ones are of no greater materiality. or more defensively applicable. We will therefore proceed to a consideration and determination of the merits of the ease.

' - - This case- is- not different from others of its kind *232 that have heretofore been considered by this court. The participants in the attacked transactions expressly testified that the debt for which the mortgage was given by St. Clair Hogg to the appellant, his mother-in-law, represented good faith loans by the latter to the former covering a period of 12 years or more beginning in the year 1912, shortly after the marriage of the debtor to the daughter of the creditor, at which time there was a loan of $50. From time to time after that, thev testified that other loans were made ranging from $100 to :$400, until in 1919 the total indebtedness was $1,500. Following that, and up to the time of the alleged date of the execution of the mortgage, $3,500 additional advances were made by the mother-in-law to her son-in-law in different amounts, the largest of which was $1,000. Appellant, according to her testimony, then ■concluded that all of the notes for the various sums so lent should be secured in some manner, and she communicated her determination to her daughter, the wife ■of her debtor, and the latter coincided therewith and went to Jackson, Ky., about six miles from which appellant resided, and prepared his note and mortgage to .his mother-in-law for exactly $6,000, which both he and appellant say represented the accumulated indebtedness with interest to that date. They testified that the principal of the aggregated loans then totaled exactly $5,-■000, and they testified also to the coincidental fact that the accumulated interest on all of such scattered loans from their respective dates amounted exactly to $1,000, making the total amount of $6,000, for which the note and mortgage were executed.

Notwithstanding notes were given for the various alleged loans, none of them was presented or accounted for at the trial. It is insisted, however, by counsel for appellant, in avoidance of the effect of that omission, that neither his client nor her mortgagor were asked to produce those notes.

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Bluebook (online)
58 S.W.2d 401, 248 Ky. 229, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 214, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spencer-v-hoggs-administrator-kyctapphigh-1933.