Webster v. Bronston

68 Ky. 521, 5 Bush 521, 1869 Ky. LEXIS 45
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJuly 7, 1869
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 68 Ky. 521 (Webster v. Bronston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Webster v. Bronston, 68 Ky. 521, 5 Bush 521, 1869 Ky. LEXIS 45 (Ky. Ct. App. 1869).

Opinion

CHIEF JUSTICE WILLIAMS

delivered the following opinion, in whicb

Judge HARDIN concurred :

Mary Webster, being embarrassed with debts more than she could pay, on March 9, ,1867, made a deed of assignment to Thos. S. Bronston, as therein recited, “for the purpose of paying all my debts, or as far as possible, I hereby convey in trust to Thos. S. Bronston, jr., all my estate that, by law, is subject to sale under execution.’1'1 She then authorizes him to sell the property and take such steps as will, in his judgment, redound most to her creditors’ benefit. She directs that the costs, attorney’s fee, and trustee’s compensation be first paid, “ and the residue I desire him to pay ratably among all my creditors.”

She here conveys all her property subject to execution, and specifically directs, after the payment of all necessary expense, that the residue be ratably — that is, equally or pro rata — divided among all her creditors. She closes the deed by providing, that “it is distinctly understood that nothing herein is, in any way, to impair my claim to my homestead, or any of the property exempt by law from sale under execution.” By this she meant to say, that, so far as the law exempted her homestead or other property from execution sale, it was not conveyed, and is only a more explicit and emphatic statement of what she conveyed than the terms of conveyance used at the beginning of the deed, when she conveyed all her estate that, by law, is subject to sale under execution; but in no sense either restricts or qualifies the legal effect of the conveyance; but, as she expresses it, she did not mean by the deed of trust [524]*524to impair her legal right to a homestead, whatever, that legal right might be.

At the time of the conveyance she owed two classes of debts — one class existed prior to June 1, 18(56, the date of our homestead statute, and which provides, that as to such debts there shall be no exemption under it; the other class was created after the said enactment.; and as to these, a homestead exemption existed.

There were of the first class debts, - - $1,616 81

Of the second class, - - - - 2,052 43

Making the aggregate of - - - - $3,669 24

Her personalty, amounting to seventy-six dollars and twenty-two cents, was not sufficient to pay the costs; and after paying the remainder of these, there only remained of the house and lot, her only realty, two thousand six hundred and twenty-seven dollars and seventy-seven cents, this being sold because not divisible.

As a large deficit thus appeared, and as the trustee did not know the legal rights of the different classes of creditors of Mrs. Webster, he filed this petition against her and her creditors, to have a proper distribution made, under the direction of the chancellor, who referred the matter to a commissioner, and by his report the foregoing facts were ascertained. He also ascertained, that setting aside one thousand dollars homestead fund, there would remain, to be divided ratubly among all her creditors, as provided in the deed, one thousand six hundred and twenty-seven dollars and seventy-seven cents, and that this would pay to each creditor forty-four and forty-hundredths per cent; and paying this per cent./to the first class of creditors, there would still remain due them eight hundred and ninety-eight dollars and sixty cents; [525]*525and as there was no exemption as to these by the express provisions of said statute, these must be paid in full out of the exemption fund of one thousand dollars, and only left her one hundred and one dollars and forty cents, which the court confirmed, and accordingly adjudged ; and of this she complains and seeks a reversal.

This involves three important inquiries—

1. What did she convey?
2. Was the pro rata distribution among all the creditors of the general surplus fund right, after setting apart the one thousand dollars for homestead exemption?
3. Was the appropriation of eight hundred and ninety-eight dollars and sixty cents of this homestead fund, to pay the prior creditors in full, correct?

By the act of February 10, 1866 (Myers’ Supplement, 714-15), it is provided, that “on all debts or liabilities, created or incurred after the first day of June, 1866, there shall be exempt from sale under execution, attachment, or judgment of any court, except to foreclose a mortgage given by the owner of a homestead, or for purchase money therefor, so much land, including the dwelling-house and appurtenances owned by the debtor, as will not exceed in value one thousand dollars.”

By section 4, when the property is indivisible, and worth more than one thousand dollars, it must be sold, and that sum set aside as a homestead fund. No homestead was exempt by this act as to debts existing prior to June 1, 1866; so had all these creditors had executions, and put them in the sheriff’s hands at the same instant, as all their rights under the deed accrued at the same time, and just as if all had had executions, could there be any doubt as to the duty of the sheriff? that is, to sell the house and lot, and after reserving one thousand dollars for homestead, to divide the remainder of the fund pro rata among all the execution creditors.

[526]*526Section 3, article 3, chapter 36, 1 Stanton’s Revised Statutes, 474, is as follows:

“ When two or more executions come to an officer’s hands at the same time, and he is unable to make the amount thereof, he shall apportion the sum made among the several executions so coming to his hands according to the amount thereof.”

As the interest and rights of these creditors vested at the same instant under the same instrument, the application of the principle of this statute would be highly equitable, and especially so when the deed itself provides for this equality of distribution.

After so distributing equally this surplus fund among all the creditors, and finding the larger half of each debt unsatisfied, can there be any doubt but that the prior creditors could then force the officer to make the remainder of their debts out of this homestead fund of one thousand dollars? Certainly not; for the very potent legal reason, that as to these there is no homestead exemption.

But suppose the subsequent creditors alone had obtained executions; they could have sold the entire property in satisfaction of their claims, after setting aside one thousand dollars; and having done so, had the prior' creditors subsequently obtained executions, is there any legal reason why they could not have subjected the entire homestead fund to their debts?

This is a full answer to the argument, that had the prior creditors first obtained executions, they could have made their entire debts; and then the subsequent execution of the second class creditors could not have subjected the remaining property of the debtor without setting aside to her one thousand dollars.

[527]*527Either class of creditors would have obtained legal advantages by first having executions in the sheriff’s hands; so this in nowise elucidates the equitable rule of distribution as applicable to this case.

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Bluebook (online)
68 Ky. 521, 5 Bush 521, 1869 Ky. LEXIS 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/webster-v-bronston-kyctapp-1869.