Vanover v. Ford

20 S.W.2d 1017, 230 Ky. 848, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 191
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedOctober 11, 1929
StatusPublished

This text of 20 S.W.2d 1017 (Vanover v. Ford) 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
Vanover v. Ford, 20 S.W.2d 1017, 230 Ky. 848, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 191 (Ky. 1929).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas

— Affirming.

On July 12, 1912, Eoscoe Vanover borrowed from Jobn W. Ford $5,000, for wbicb be executed bis note payable 12 months thereafter, and to secure it be and bis wife, Martha Vanover, executed a mortgage on certain real estate in Pike county. Ford died testate in 1924, and bis widow, Elizabeth Ford, was designated in bis will and qualified as executrix of bis estate; but so far as we .are able to discover from the record there is nothing ■contained therein as to the contents of Ford’s will or to whom be devised bis property — questions that become important later.

On March 2,1925, as such executrix, Mrs. Ford filed this action against Eoscoe Vanover to recover the balance due on the note so executed to her intestate and wbicb balance, with interest, amounted to approximately :$750, the last payment of $500 having been made on October 15, 1921. The action also sought the enforce *849 ment of the mortgage lien on the land described in the mortgage of Vanover and wife. The answer, filed by Vanover in person, admitted his execution of the note to Ford and the payments made thereon, but denied that any balance was due thereon, for the reasons stated in subsequent paragraphs of the answer, which were: (1) An offset for attorney’s fees and legal services rendered by defendant to Ford amounting to more than the balance of the note, and (2) that the note was originally executed for the purpose of procuring money with which the defendant was to and did purchase votes in his race against one Butler for the office of circuit court judge in the judicial district of which Pike county was a part, and that Ford knew and consented to the purpose for which the money was borrowed and knew that Vanover later used it for such unlawful purpose. Proper pleadings made the issues, and upon final submission on January 26, 1929, the court rendered judgment for the balance due on the note and directed that a sufficiency of the mortgaged land be sold by the master commissioner for the purpose of liquidating the judgment, and from it the personal representative of Vanover (his wife) prosecutes this appeal.

It is first insisted that the court erroneously determined the issues of fact made by the pleadings upon the only two issues involved, which were: Whether Ford was indebted to Vanover for legal services and, if so, in what amount, and whether Ford knew of the unlawful purposes for which the money was borrowed and that it was so used by the borrower? It would serve no useful purpose to undertake to rehearse the testimony on those two issues. Upon issue (1) it consisted almost exclusively of the testimony of Bussell Vanover, the son and partner of Boscoe Vanover, and his evidence was entirely insufficient to authorize a recovery of any sum for performed and unpaid for legal services. It appears to be a fact that Vanover had been, at least in some matters, the attorney for Ford before his election to the office of circuit judge of his district, but after that time Ford employed other counsel in his legal matters, as he was compelled to do, and there is but scant, if any, evidence that Vanover rendered any legal services to Ford thereafter. Moreover, there is nothing in any testimony found in the record by which any specific or definite sum could be arrived at, even if it was clearly shown that such services *850 had been rendered and not paid for. To say the least of it, we shall on this issue yield to the judgment of the chancellor disallowing a recovery, since it is clearly apparent that his finding on that issue is of such a nature as to not authorize us under the thoroughly established rule on the subject to interfere with his judgment.

The same comments also apply to the judgment of the trial court on issue (2), i. e., that the note was executed to obtain money for unlawful purposes and that it was so employed with the knowledge of Ford. The extreme extent to which the testimony on that issue might be stretched is that Vanover, with the knowledge of Ford, intended to use the money in the prosecution of his campaign for circuit judge; but there is no testimony whatever that Ford afterwards knew that it was so used, much less that it was corruptly done. At that time our statute commonly known as the Corrupt Practices Act (Ky. Stats., sec. 1565bl et seq.) had not become a law and there was no limitation upon the amount that a candidate for circuit judge might legally employ in the prosecution of his campaign, and, therefore, it cannot even be said that Ford was cognizant of, or a party to, the expenditure by Vanover of a larger sum in prosecuting his campaign than that allowed by law.

At the time the proof was taken Roscoe Vanover had died, and whether or not he used any of the proceeds of the note for the purpose of corrupting voters is not disclosed by the record, except arguendo from inferences to be drawn from the proof. But, if it were otherwise, then there is an absolute dearth of proof showing any knowledge or consent of Ford that the money borrowed from him should be so employed, and the court properly determined this issue of fact against defendant.

The only other question relied on for a reversal, and the only one that we regard as possessing any merit, has reference to an order of revivor appearing in the record. Before any evidence was taken by either side, both plaintiff and defendant died, and within a short time and less than a year after their deaths, and on November 9, 1927, the court entered this order: “Since the last term of this court, the defendant, Roscoe Vanover, departed his life, testate, devising his property to the defendant, Martha Vanover, and making her sole executrix. That since the last term of the court, Elizabeth Ford, Ex., departed her life testate, devising her property to her descendants and making Myrtle Ford Polley, *851 executrix, and J. M. Yost, Trustee. By consent, it is ordered that the case be revived and stand revived, in the style Myrtle Ford Polley, Ex., etc., plaintiff v. Martha Vanover, Ex., etc., defendants, and this eause is continued.”

Intervening between that term and a special term held in January, 1929, at which the cause was finally submitted and determined, there were at least two regular terms of the Pike circuit court at which various motions were made and orders taken, among which was one by defendant’s attorney to continue the cause so as to enable him to take his proof, which later he did. After the expiration of one' year from the deaths of the original parties (one of which occurred in September, 1927, and the •other in October of the same year), and on January 21, 1929, defendant’s counsel moved the court to dismiss the action because plaintiff died more than one year from that date “and no amended petition or affidavit has been filed suggesting her death and this cause has not been revived.” On the 25th day of the same month he filed written motion to set aside the above inserted order of revivor upon the ground that “same is a fake order” and that “the record in this case showing that no amended petition, affidavit, or other pleading was ever filed suggesting the death of the plaintiff, Elizabeth Ford,” and counsel filed his affidavit in support of that motion which was everruled by the court. In his affidavit he states that he purposely waited to make those motions until after the expiration of one year from the death of Mrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 S.W.2d 1017, 230 Ky. 848, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 191, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vanover-v-ford-kyctapphigh-1929.