Starbird v. Blair

12 S.W.2d 693, 227 Ky. 258, 1928 Ky. LEXIS 501
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 4, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 12 S.W.2d 693 (Starbird v. Blair) 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
Starbird v. Blair, 12 S.W.2d 693, 227 Ky. 258, 1928 Ky. LEXIS 501 (Ky. 1928).

Opinion

*259 Opinion op the Court by

Judge Logan

— Reversing.

Tbe facts in this case are so involved that it is difficult to get to the points which must be decided without making a statement as clearly as it is possible to make it under the circumstances. On June 16, 1920, H. Retta Wynn sold a large boundary of land in Harlan county to E. J. Ford. Ford executed to her his note for $4,790 as part payment. On August 3, 1920, Ford conveyed the property to the Powell Paxton Lumber Corporation, which assumed the payment of the Ford note to her. On July 26, 1921, the Powell Paxton Lumber Corporation conveyed the property to Jules L. Emerich. Each of the purchasers assumed to pay the Wynn note. When the Powell Paxton Lumber Corporation conveyed the property to Jules L. Emerich, five notes, for $7,310 each, were executed by him to Gr. L. White, and on February 23,1922, a mortgage was executed by him to White to secure the payment of these notes. This mortgage was recorded in the Harlan .circuit court clerk’s office in April, 1922.

The notes were executed to White, instead of the Powell Paxton Lumber Corporation, to whom it is agreed the notes should have been executed, for reasons not necessary to discuss in this opinion. White transferred and assigned the notes to the Powell Paxton Lumber Corporation. On September 1, 1923, Jules L. Emerich conveyed the property to the Emerich Lumber Company, of Cleveland, Ohio, in consideration of $10 in cash and the further consideration that the company assume the payment of the Wynn note, and the further sum of $37,-210 payable to the Powell Paxton Lumber Corporation. On the 29th day of October, 1926, the Emerich Lumber Company executed a deed of conveyance for the same land to B. H. Starbird, in consideration of $1 and other valuable considerations. The last-mentioned deed was placed on record in the Harlan county court clerk’s office on October 29,1926. The deed from Jules L. Emerich to the Emerich Lumber Company was recorded in the Harlan county court clerk’s office on September 10, 1923.

The Powell Paxton Lumber Corporation paid all the purchase money for the land, except the $4,790 Wynn note. The Powell Paxton Lumber Corporation was indebted to the People’s State Bank & Trust Company of Perryville, Ky., in large sums. To secure the indebtedness to that bank it put up as collateral two of the $7,310 notes. The same company also borrowed money from *260 the-guardian of Marion O. Hill, and also sold one of the notes for $7,310 to the guardian of that infant,, and put up with the guardian as collateral to secure the note executed for borrowed money, and to also secure the payment of the note which was sold to the guardian, another one of the $7,310 notes. Later the People’s State Bank & Trust Company of Perryville failed, and went into the hands of a deputy banking commissioner for liquidation. The Citizens’ National Bank of Danville was then appointed guardian of Marion O. Hill, and it received two of the $7,310 notes, which had been turned over to the former guardian as above stated, and thereafter the remaining note of the five was put up with the Citizens’ National Bank as additional security. At this stage of the proceedings H. Retta Wynn held a lien note for $4,-790 against the property, The People’s State Bank & Trust Company in process of liquidation held two of the $7,310 notes, and the Citizens’ National Bank of Dan-ville, as the guardian of Marion O. Hill, held three of the $7,310 notes.

On September 11, 1924, H. Retta Wynn instituted suit in the Harlan circuit court to enforce her lien against the land which she had sold to E. J. Ford. It appears that during the transfers referred to additional lands had been acquired, and that the boundary, according to a later survey, contained something more than 2,300 acres. When Mrs. Wjmn instituted her suit, she made E. J. Ford, the Powell Paxton Lumber Corporation, the receiver of the People’s State Bank & Trust Company, the Citizens’ National Bank of Danville, guardian for Marion O. Hill, Emma Emerich, Dr. Chelf, Administrator of the estate of William Chelf, and O. L. Ford defendants. The last three defendants appear to have had no interest in the property, except that O. L. Ford was a stockholder in the Emerich Lumber Company. E. J. Ford answered, stating that the Powell Paxton Lumber Corporation, to whom he sold the land, assumed the payment of the $4,790 note, which was executed by him. The receiver of the People’s State Bank & Trust Company and the Citizens’ National Bank of Danville, guardian, filed an answer, asserting their rights in the property bv reason of the notes which they held, and praying that their liens be enforced. The two banks made their pleading a cross-petition against E. J. Ford, O. L. Ford, Emma Emerich, Jules L. Emerich, Gr. W. Faulkner, *261 and tbe Emerich Lumber Company, and caused a warning order to be made against them, and an attorney was appointed pursuant to said order. ■ ;

E. J. Ford and O. L. Ford filed an answer to the cross-petition of the two banks, in which they attacked the execution of the five $7,310 notes, and the mortgage executed to secure their payment. Their pleading is long and involved, but it amounts to a plea of non est factum. The whole transaction was attacked by them as fraudulent, and it was denied that the notes or the mortgage were signed by Jules ,-L. Emerich, or by any one authorized to sign them in his behalf, or that he signed or acknowledged the mortgage. ' Mrs. Wynn then amended her petition, and alleged that one Fred B. Davis had instituted some sort of proceeding in the Harlan circuit court against Jules L. Emerich, and had obtained a judgment against him, and was making some kind of claim against the land described in the petition, and he was called on to answer and_set up any claim that he might ■have.

Davis answered, and made his answer a cross-petition against the receiver of the People’s State Bank & Trust Company of Perryville and the Citizens’ National Bank of Danville, as guardian. He alleged that the notes held by the banks were not executed or signed by Jules L. Emerich, or any one having authority to sign them, and that the mortgage was neither signed nor acknowledged by Jules L. Emerich. He adopts the pleading of E. J. and O. L. Ford, attacking the validity of the notes and mortgage, and goes further and alleges that they were forgeries. He then sets up his claim to the land in controversy, and the claim is that he is the owner of the land. He became the owner, so he alleges, through the institution of a suit by him on June 7, 1923, when he obtained a general order of attachment against the property of Jules L. Emerich, which was levied on the land described in the petition; that he prosecuted his suit to a judgment for $766, and that the judgment directed that his attachment lien be enforced and the land sold, which was accordingly done by a special commissioner, when he became the purchaser on January 5, 1925, for the amount of his debt, interest, and cost, and that a deed was executed to him by the special commissioner, with the approval of the court on March 23, 1925. *262 He alleged that on September 1, 1923, Jules L.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
12 S.W.2d 693, 227 Ky. 258, 1928 Ky. LEXIS 501, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/starbird-v-blair-kyctapphigh-1928.