White v. Nichols

211 S.W. 849, 184 Ky. 335, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 64
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 20, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 211 S.W. 849 (White v. Nichols) 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
White v. Nichols, 211 S.W. 849, 184 Ky. 335, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 64 (Ky. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge'Settle

Affirming.

The question presented for decision in this case is, whether an instrument of writing purporting on its face to be a deed, should be declared a deed or mortgage. The appeal is from a judgment of the Caldwell circuit court declaring it a deed.

The action was brought against the appellee by the appellants, widow and seven children of Peter White, deceased, the widow suing as such; also as administratrix of the decedent’s estate and statutory guardian of [336]*336five of the children, who are infants; the infants in their own right and by their statutory guardian, as heirs at law of the decedent. By the prayer of the petition the circuit court was asked to declare the instrument of writing in question a mortgage; compel the return by appellee to appellants of the possession of the sixty acres of land therein described, subject to the alleged lien given by the writing for the debt it was intended to secure; and also to compel of appellee an accounting for the rental value of the land during the several years of his possession thereof. In resistance of the relief sought by the petition the answer of appellee specifically denied its several averments, alleged the genuineness of the writing as a deed, the validity of appellee’s title to the land it purports to convey and prayed that his title thereto be quieted. The affirmative matter of the answer was controverted by reply, thereby completing the issues. On the hearing in the court below appellants were refused the relief sought and their petition dismissed.

It appears from the record before us that the land in controversy was acquired by the decedent, Peter White, in December, 1887, by purchase and a deed of conveyance from one Gr. B. Kilebrew, the then owner, which deed was duly acknowledged and recorded. The purchase price was $700.00, of which amount $466.66 was cash in hand paid and for the remaining $233.33 White executed his note, payable one year after date, bearing six per cent interest from date, its payment secured by a vendor’s lien retained upori the land by the deed. Payments were made on the note by White from time to time, but some time prior to 1909 it was assigned to one S. D. Baker, who brought suit thereon in the Caldwell circuit court and-for the enforcement of the vendor’s lien retained by the deed from Kilebrew to secure its payment. March 1, 1909, there was due on the note and owing by White $253.68, including balance of principal, interest and costs of the action brought by Baker. Being unable to pay the debt White attempted to borrow the amount thereof of the appellee, T. W. Nichols, who refused to make the innn. but offered to purchase of him the land by paying Baker’s debt, take of him and wife a deed to same and permit them to retain and cultivate the land until the end of the year 1909. This offer was accepted by White, who, together with his wife, the appellant, Lula White, executed, acknowledged and delivered to appellee March 1, 1909, [337]*337a deed conveying him the land with covenant of general warranty. Appellee, upon receiving the deed, paid to Baker, through his attorneys, the $253.68 due him, which was followed by the dismissal of Baker’s action. The check evidencing the payment to Baker of the amount due him appears in the record. Following the delivery of the deed to appellee, by a separate writing executed by him and then delivered to White, the latter was given the option, if exercised on or before January 1, 1910, to repurchase the land and take title thereto at the price of $302.00, by then paying appellee in cash one-half of the amount, $151.00, and executing to him his note for the remaining $151.00, payable one year after date, bearing six per cent interest from date and secured by a lien retained on the land; the writing further providing that if White failed by the first day of January, 1910, to avail himself of the option therein given, the writing should be null and void and .he would on that date surrender the possession of the land to appellee.

White failed to avail himself of the option to repurchase the land given him by the writing, and did not, therefore, make the cash payment of $151,00, or give his note for the remaining $151:00 of the agreed consideration, but on January 1, 1910, removed from the land and surrendered it to appellee, who immediately took possession of same and has since continuously held such possession. Although the death of White did not occur until February 11, 1917, more than seven years after his surrender of the land to appellee, no complaint was made by him of the transaction by which the latter acquired it. The contention that the deed made him by White and wife March 1, 1909, was intended by the parties as a mortgage to secure as a loan the repayment to appellee of the $253.68, he paid in discharge of the Baker note, was first made by the widow and heirs at law in the petition instituting this action, which was filed May 23, 1917, about three months after White’s death.

In our opinion their contention is not supported by the weight of the evidence. The, only evidence tending to sustain-it is found in the depositions of the appellant, Lula White, widow, and the appellants, Lena and Prince White, children of the decedent* and much of their testimony is incompetent, because evidently based on what admittedly took place between appellee and the decedent when the witnesses were not present. It is true the [338]*338widow claimed to have heard' a part of a conversation between appellee and the decedent regarding tlje land after the latter had arranged with the former to have him pay the Baker lien debt, which conversation it was said occurred near the house when appellee called to view the land and from which she understood that although appellee had previously agreed with the decedent to pay for him the Balter debt and give him until the end of the year to redeem the land by repaying appellee the amount paid Baker and $50.00 in addition, he (appellee) claimed to have reached the conclusion that the decedent would have to pay him by the end of the year the still further sum of $50.00, in redemption of the land, making altogether $100.00, in excess of the debt appellee would have to pay Baker, to which demand the decedent at first demurred, but finally consented. She also testified that on the day she and the decedent went to Princeton to execute to appellee the deed conveying him the land, the latter in a conversation with them in the court house yard, before giving the decedent' the separate writing mentioned in the pleadings, in substance told them he would not pay the Baker debt and thereby prevent the sale of the land, unless they would pay him $100.00 in addition to the Baker debt by the end of the year in redemption of the land, to which the witness said they agreed, as they had no other means of raising the money to prevent the sale of the land for the Baker debt.

The testimony of the widow as to what was said by appellee in the first conversation was corroborated by the deposition of one of the children who claimed to be present at the time, and as to what she claimed was said by appellee in Princeton, by that of the other child who claimed to be with his parents in that city on the day of the execution of the deed by them to appellee. We think it apparent, however, from the depositions of these three witnsses that they did not have a clear or dependable understanding or recollection of the facts connected with the transactions with respect to which they gave their depositions.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
211 S.W. 849, 184 Ky. 335, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-nichols-kyctapp-1919.