United States National Bank, Trustee v. Moore

272 S.W. 899, 209 Ky. 355, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 499
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 2, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 272 S.W. 899 (United States National Bank, Trustee v. Moore) 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
United States National Bank, Trustee v. Moore, 272 S.W. 899, 209 Ky. 355, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 499 (Ky. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Sampson

Reversing.

The creditors of appellee, James Kincheloe Moore, instituted this action in the Daviess circuit court to subject certain real-property held in the name of his wife, Penelope E. Moore, but alleged to belong to him, to his debts and liabilities, and the lower court having ruled against them, they prosecute this appeal, insisting that an examination of the evidence will disclose that the husband is the true owner of at least a one-half undivided interest in and to two tracts of land deeded to and held by the wife; that this property was purchased with the proceeds of other property jointly owned and held by Moore and wife for a number of years, and then conveyed to one Vanover; that although their attention was sharply directed to the fact that the deed to the original property was made to both Moore and wife there was no effort on their part or on the part of either .of them through all the years which they owned and held it, to pass the entire title to the wife; that this title was reaffirmed about two years before the commencement of this litigation by the reconveyance to the husband and wife jointly of the entire property; that the wife fully recognized and acquiesced in the joint ownership of the lands with her husband and *357 recognized Ms right and interest and that the husband was in the active control and management of the farm and of all its operations; that the debt attempted to be enforced was created while appellant, James Kincheloe Moore, was the apparent owner by deed of a one-half undivided interest in and to the lands which were later sold and the proceeds invested -in lands now attempted to be subjected, the credit having been extended to him with’ the wife’s knowledge and acquiescence upon the faith that the husband owned a one-half undivided interest in the farm forever closes the wife’s mouth against the assertion of her right to the whole property as against creditors who extended the husband credit on the faith of his ownership to a one-half undivided interest in the property, for all of which reasons the appellants say that the chancellor erred in holding the lands in controversy subject, to the extent of the husband’s ownership, to the debts sued on.

The appellees, Mr. and Mrs. Moore, were married in the early ’70’s, and have since lived together as husband and wife, rearing a family. About 1896 he became involved in financial difficulties and his property was swept away, as he claims. His wife had very little, if any, property at that time. However, she inherited a small piece of real property from her father, valued at the time at $50:00. She also purchased from her brothers and sisters four other interests of like value, the whole property being valued at the time at $250.00. This was about 1896 or 1897. She had no means with which to pay for the property she purchased from her sisters and brothers, so far as the record, shows. From this small beginning, in 1896, Mr. and Mrs. Moore accumulated sufficient by 1910 to purchase a one-half undivided interest in a farm worth several thousand dollars. It was deeded to Penelope • Moore, James Kincheloe Moore and their son, by name, by one L. N.- Robertson. On this farm they made their home until November, 1919, when they sold it to one Vanover for something more than $14,000. In the meantime the farm had been divided between the son and the father and mother, he taking 63 and a fraction acres of the 128 acres, and the father and mother taking 65 and a fraction acres. It was sold to Vanover at the price of $110.00 per acre, thus giving, to the appellees more than- $7,000.00. There was, however, a mortgage lien upon the property, for a few hundred dollars,--a *358 portion of -which was apportioned to the parents, the balance paid by the son, after the sale of the property to Vanover. Shortly after this sale to Vanover, appellee, .Mrs. Moore, purchased the two tracts of land now in controversy, one containing 23 acres and the other 38 acres, paying $4,700.00 for the first tract and $1,500.00 for the second tract, all but $300.00 of the money and-notes received from Vanover for the sale of the original tract. These two tracts were deeded to Penelope Moore alone. The notes from Vanover for the unpaid purchase price on the original tract were made to Penelope E. Moore, and the cash payment was made to her.

On October 18, 1919 appellee, James K. Moore, purchased stock in a certain industrial corporation then being organized in Owensboro, and agreed to pay therefor $5,000.00 six months thereafter, giving his negotiable promissory note of that date therefor. This note was met and before due was sold for valuable consideration to appellant, United States National Bank. At that time there was a deed of record in the office of the clerk of the Daviess county court showing appellees, James K. Moore and Penelope E. Moore, to be the joint owners of 65 acres of land in that county. This land is the same which was later sold to Vanover, appellees realizing* something* more than $7,000.00. About a month leater and on November 17th, 1919, appellees, James Kincheloe Moore and Wife, Penelope E. Moore, sold and conveyed the Robertson land to Vanover, as before stated, while the $5,000.00 note was owing by appellee, J. K. Moore, had been ■executed and delivered at that time it was not due although held by the bank. Some time about the first of the year 1920, when appellee James K. Moore iearned that the stock in the corporation which he had purchased with the note was of little or no value, he repudiated the transaction and declined to pay the note, and soon thereafter filed his voluntary petition in bankruptcy, listing as his sole and only liability the $5,000.00 held by appellant bank.

The trustee in bankruptcy appointed to wind up his affairs asked and was granted permission by the federal court to join the appellant bank in the institution and prosecution of this case for the subjection of the real property described herein to the debts and liabilities of the appellee, James K. Moore, hence this joint action.

Appellee bank and trustee filed as evidence in the case several deeds, one from Robertson to the Moores in *359 1910 naming both appellees, James K. Moore and Penelope E. Moore as grantees, a copy of the deed from the appellees to Vanover, and also copies of the deeds to appellee, Mrs. Moore, for the two tracts now in contest. The appellee took depositions of several witnesses; the husband, James K. Moore, testified but the wife did not. He gave a rather full history of their financial affairs from their marriage up to the institution of'the suit, ex-, plaining that he owned and claimed no property since his financial failure in 1896, but that his wife had accumulated since that time the property which- she now claims. He emphatically denied any effort on his part -or on the part of his wife to hinder, delay or cheat his creditors by the conveyances of their lands to Vanover and' the purchase of the two tracts which formed the subject of this controversy. He is sustained in much of his testimony by his neighbors and acquaintances who testified in his behalf. We must, therefore, accept as true his evidence with respect to the true ownership of the property as between himself and wife and also his denial of all fraud and bad faith in the land transaction with respect to his creditors.

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Bluebook (online)
272 S.W. 899, 209 Ky. 355, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 499, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-national-bank-trustee-v-moore-kyctapphigh-1925.