Springfield State Bank v. Kelly

102 S.W.2d 360, 267 Ky. 595, 1936 Ky. LEXIS 770
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedNovember 4, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 102 S.W.2d 360 (Springfield State Bank v. Kelly) 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
Springfield State Bank v. Kelly, 102 S.W.2d 360, 267 Ky. 595, 1936 Ky. LEXIS 770 (Ky. 1936).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Chief Justice Ratliff—

Reversing.

On October 30, 1934, and some time prior thereto, P. J. Kelly was indebted to the appellant, Springfield State Bank (hereinafter referred to as the bank) in the sum of $3,786.54, represented by two notes which Kelly executed and delivered to the bank, one bearing date of December 25, 1933, for $1,512.66 with 6 per cent, interest until paid, subject to a credit of $14.67 paid October 22, 1934; and another dated June 30, 1934, for the sum of $2,273.88, with interest until paid.

At the time P. J. Kelly created the indebtedness above mentioned and many years prior thereto, ‘he was the owner of a certain farm in Washington county, Ky., consisting of approximately 131 acres, and on October *596 30, 1934, lie deeded Ms farm to Ms wife, Mayóla C. Kelly, Ms codefendant below and coappellee in this appeal, for a recited consideration “of a large indebtedness wliicb the party of the first part owes and has long owed to the party of the second part, with interest amounting to a sum far in excess of the value of the property hereby conveyed, * * * ” subject to a homestead exemption of $1,000 which he reserved to himself.

On November 19, 1934, the bank filed this action in the Washington circuit court seeking a cancellation of the deed from Kelly to his wife, on the ground (a) that the property was conveyed to Mrs. Kelly with the intent to delay, hinder, or defraud the creditors of P. J. Kelly, including the bank; or (b) the consideration stated in the deed was untrue and the deed was made and delivered to Mrs. Kelly without valuable consideration therefor; or (c) that P. J. Kelly was insolvent and the deed was made and delivered to Mrs. Kelly in contemplation of insolvency, and with the design to prefer her as one of his creditors, to the exclusion, in whole or in part, of the plaintiff and other creditors.

P. J. Kelly and Mrs. Kelly filed separate answers. P. J. Kelly denied that he made the deed with any fraudulent intent, or that there was no consideration paid therefor, or that it was1 intended as a preference. He further pleaded that he was indebted to his wife, in various sums of money which she had loaned to him at various times,' for the purpose of paying a balance of purchase money due on the land which he owed his grantor and paying his debts incurred in erecting a dwelling, barns, and other improvements on the land, including taxes, etc., all of which he agreed and promised to pay her with interest; that “finding himself ruined, like most farmers by the great decline in the value of his property and the actual loss in farming for the last six years,, he endeavored to effect a settlement with his creditors by pro-rating the proceeds, or value, of his property among all his creditors including his wife, who was and is, his chief creditor, hoping thereby to salvage something to save her from want, particularly did he open negotiations thereupon with plaintiff, but it, through its chief agent, declined to recognize the validity or extent of his wife’s claim as it does now in its petition. Fearing that the plaintiff, or some other creditor, or creditors, might attach his property and *597 thereby secure an advantage over his wife who was his. oldest and much the largest creditor, he made the conveyance complained of to her merely to secure her rights, knowing full well it could ■ and would be questioned * * *”

Mrs. Kelly also denied the bank’s allegation of fraud, no consideration and preference and further pleaded that she and P. J. Kelly were married in the autumn of 1904 at which time her husband was the owner and in possession of the land in question but was indebted for unpaid purchose money or money borrowed to make payment on the land, and soon after their marriage she received from her father’s estate $500, which sum, at the request of her husband, she loaned to him before the 15th day of January, 1905, and which was used by him in paying his indebtedness on the land, and this sum with interest now amounts to $1,850.90; that in January, 1918, she received a further inheritance from her father’s estate in the sum of $1,-228.51, which sum she also loaned to her husband, which was used by him in paying indebtedness incurred by building a house, barn, and other improvements on the land and that said sum with legal interest thereon now amounts to the sum of $2,481.65. She further detailed other sums of money that she had received from the estate of her mother and a sister during the years 1915, 1916, and 1917, which sums she also loaned her husband for the purposes indicated above, and that she received various other sums of money from various investments and loaned those sums to her husband, all of which he promised and agreed to pay her with interest. She also listed various other claims consisting of small items ranging from less than $2 to approximately $150, which she alleged she paid for her husband on various store accounts for clothing, groceries, and many other family and household purposes, aggregating the sum of $2,123, and claimed interest thereon. The total indebtedness including interest which she claimed against her husband aggregated the sum of approximately $13,000. In her answer, we find this statement:

“Answering the ugly charge of fraud made by the plaintiff, defendant says she does not now and never had claimed more than her fair prorate on her claims out. of the land covered by said deed and offered to settle with plaintiff on that basis before *598 the aeea complained was executed but plaintiff was unwilling to settle on such terms.”

Finally it was conceded by both P .J. Kelly and Mrs. Kelly that the deed of conveyance should be treated as a deed of assignment for the benefit of ad the creditors of P. J. Kelly and that the land should be sold subject to homestead and the proceeds thereof divided between Mrs. Kelly and the bank according to their respective debts against P. J. Kelly.

The hank filed its reply denying certain material allegations of the answer, and pleaded that P. J. Kelly acquired title to the real estate in question in the year 1904 and within a few years thereafter and before any of the indebtedness to it by Kelly was created, the purchase money liens against the land were released of record, and since that time P. J. Kelly had held the land in his name and free of any incumbencies whatever until he executed the deed now in question, and its entire indebtedness sued for was created after the release of the liens aforesaid and the record showed that Kelly was vested with the fee-simple title to said land; and that it loaned him the sums of money sued on believing in good faith that he was the owner of said land and held a fee-simple title thereto as shown by the records.

By subsequent pleadings the issues were made and the evidence taken, and the chancellor held and adjudged the deed from Kelly to his wife to have the effect of a deed of assignment for the benefit of all of P. J. Kelly’s creditors and ordered the commissioner to sell the land and adjudged that the proceeds of the sale be prorated among the creditors of P. J. Kelly. The court also gave the bank a personal judgment against P. J. Kelly for the amount of its notes with interest, and adjudged that Mayóla C. Kelly recover of P. J.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
102 S.W.2d 360, 267 Ky. 595, 1936 Ky. LEXIS 770, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/springfield-state-bank-v-kelly-kyctapphigh-1936.