Stout v. Bradley

82 S.W.2d 201, 260 Ky. 275, 1935 Ky. LEXIS 394
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedApril 30, 1935
StatusPublished

This text of 82 S.W.2d 201 (Stout v. Bradley) 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
Stout v. Bradley, 82 S.W.2d 201, 260 Ky. 275, 1935 Ky. LEXIS 394 (Ky. 1935).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Rees —

Reversing.

*276 The appellants, John L. Stout, Guy Herdman, and Virgil J. Pritchett, attorneys at law, represented Mrs. Beulah Taylor De France individually and in her representative capacity in the settlement of the estate of her mother, Mrs. Nannie C. Taylor. In the settlement suit in the Cumberland circuit court, the appellants were allowed by the court and paid a fee of $500. Mrs. De France also paid them a fee of $500 for services rendered to her individually. The litigation was somewhat involved, and the fees were not unreasonable. The appellees Pauline Bradley, Henry Bradley, ami Camilla Gerard are partners engaged in the undertaking business under the firm name of Eugene Gerard & Co. Under a contract with Mrs. De France, they buried Mrs. Taylor. The funeral bill amounted to. $490.20. They did not file their claim in the settlement suit, and, after the estate of Mrs. Taylor had been settled and Mrs. De France had left the state, they filed a petition in equity in the Cumberland circuit court, in which Mrs. De France, the appellants and the creditors of Mrs. Taylor whose claims had been allowed were made defendants.

They alleged that $500 had been wrongfully allowed and paid to appellants, and they asked that the order of allowance in the settlement suit be set aside and that appellants be required to pay into court the sum of $500 and that their claim be paid out of such sum. Their action was based on the theory that appellants had made certain fraudulent representations to them in regard to the solvency of the estate of Mrs. Taylor, thereby causing them to omit the filing of their claim in the settlement suit and that appellants had aided and assisted Beulah Taylor De France in defrauding the appellees. Considerable proof was heard and the circuit court adjudged that appellants were not entitled to $500 which had been paid to them under an order of the court in the settlement suit, and that such sum should be paid into court by the appellants. The case before us is, in effect, a suit against the attorneys to require them to pay the funeral bill out of the attorneys ’ fee they had collected. A careful reading of the pleadings fails to disclose that a cause of action was stated against the appellants. A brief history of the proceedings leading up to this litigation will assist in an understanding of the controversy.

Mrs. Nannie C. Taylor owned a large farm in Cumberland county. In 1928 she went to Bowling Green to *277 live with, her daughter, Mrs. Beulah Taylor De France, her only child. On July 23, 1928, she conveyed her farm in Cumberland county to her daughter, who immediately employed H. P. Rogers, a real estate agent, to sell the farm. There was some question concerning Mrs. Taylor’s mental capacity at the time, and it was understood that any sale by Rogers was subject to the procurement of affidavits of two reputable physicians that Mrs. Taylor was competent to make the deed to Mrs. De France. Rogers found a purchaser for the land at a price of $11,000. The sale was not consummated, however, since the necessary affidavits of two physicians that Mrs. Taylor was competent to execute a deed could not be obtained. Rogers claimed his commission of $1,165, and Mrs. De France executed a mortgage on the land to secure the payment of the commission. At an inquest held in the Warren circuit court, Mrs. Taylor was adjudged incompetent, and her daughter was appointed committee for her. In February, 1929, as committee for her mother, Mrs. De France filed a suit in equity in the Cumberland circuit court against Mrs. Nannie C. Taylor and a number of Mrs. Taylor’s creditors, whose debts were secured by mortgages on the land. She asked that the deed which her mother had executed to her be canceled on the ground that Mrs. Taylor was incompetent at the time she signed it, and she asked that the land be sold for the purpose of paying the mortgage debts. Appellants represented Mrs. De France in that suit. Rogers filed an intervening petition, seeking a judgment against Mrs. De France on his mortgage of $1,165. Sampson Thurman, who was the purchaser obtained by Rogers, also filed an intervening petition against Mrs. De France, claiming the land under the purchase. Other suits by lien creditors were pending, and all of them were consolidated with the action brought by Mrs. De France as committee.

Before all the proof had been taken, the property was ordered sold, the proceeds to be held subject to the future orders of the court. The property was sold by the master commissioner, and brought $12,445. Mrs. Taylor died on June 15, 1930, during the pendency of the action, and her daughter was appointed her administratrix. The action was revived in the name of Beulah Taylor De France as administratrix, and the cause was referred to the master commissioner to take proof *278 of the claims against the estate of Mrs. Nannie C. Taylor. Mrs. Beulah Taylor De France filed a claim against her mother’s estate for $2,370 and her husband, B. K. De France, filed a claim of $420 both of which were allowed. Numerous other claims were allowed, and, after the payment of all claims and costs, including the attorneys’ fee allowed to appellants, a balance of $281.59 remained, which was paid to Beulah Taylor De France as the only heir of Mrs. Taylor. After the land had been sold, the circuit court adjudged that the deed executed by Mrs. Taylor to her daughter in 1928 was valid, though all the proof as to her mental capacity at the time was to the effect that she was incompetent to make a deed. However, all claims filed by her creditors in the case and proved were allowed and paid. The appellees failed to file their claim, and, after Mrs. De France had received the balance of the proceeds of the farm and had left the state, they brought this action, seeking payment of their claim from the money that had been paid to appellants as attorneys ’ fees.

The allegations of their petition, in so far as they are pertinent, are as follows:

“They further allege that the said Beulah Taylor DeFrance being the only child of the said Nannie C. Taylor, and who lived with the said Nannie C. Taylor previous to and at the time of her death, immediately upon the death of her mother and within a few hours thereafter, came to this petitioner and plaintiff and sought to obtain a casket and all the necessary goods and merchandise for the burial of the said Nannie C. Taylor and selected the same from the stock of the said Eugene Gerard 'Company and agreed upon the,price therefor and represented to the said Eugene Gerard Company that her mother had a large estate in Cumberland county which would be settled very shortly, within a very few weeks, and there was ample property and means belonging to the estate of her mother and more than enough to pay for such funeral expenses and to pay the said Eugene Gerard Company the full amount for said bills and for said burial outfit, which amounts to $-and that the said Eugene Gerard Company upon the suggestion of the said Beulah Taylor DeFrance had inquiry made from the defendant herein, John L. Stout, who *279 was at that time attorney for said Beulah Taylor DeFrance and her husband in all of these suits or matters then pending pertaining to the estate of Nannie C. Taylor and that the said John L. Stout who was familiar with the affairs and the estate of said Nannie C.

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Bluebook (online)
82 S.W.2d 201, 260 Ky. 275, 1935 Ky. LEXIS 394, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stout-v-bradley-kyctapphigh-1935.