White's Administrators v. N. Park's Administrators

28 Ky. 603, 5 J.J. Marsh. 603, 1831 Ky. LEXIS 81
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 16, 1831
StatusPublished

This text of 28 Ky. 603 (White's Administrators v. N. Park's Administrators) 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's Administrators v. N. Park's Administrators, 28 Ky. 603, 5 J.J. Marsh. 603, 1831 Ky. LEXIS 81 (Ky. Ct. App. 1831).

Opinion

Judge Underwood,

delivered the opinion of the court.

On the 20th of-June, 18L5, J. Scrivener' recovered a judgment in the Estill circuit court against the administrators of N. Park for $704 damages, besides costs. On the same day, B. Alexander recoverd a judgment in the same court against said Park’s ad'ministrators for ,5103 60 cents in damages besides costs.

Upon these judgments executions issued against the estate of N. Park in the hands of his administrators to be administered; that in favor of Alexander was satisfied by the sale of a slave, and need not be further noticed; that in favor of Scrivener was levied on a tract of land which belonged to N. Park in his. life time, and which, upon his death, descended to his heirs.

By the sale of this land, $472 75 cents of the execution were made,:and the balance was made out of the sale of a slave. The sheriff returned the execution satisfied. This execution,, although in Scrivener’s name, belonged to John VYhite in equity. His son James was the deputy sheriff who levied on and sold the land owned by the heirs of N. Park, for part of whom, if not all, said .Tames was guardian, they being infants. Nicholas While became the purchaser of the land, which lay in two parcels, and said James, as sheriff!, executed to him a separate deed for each parcel.

Execution y;s. aclm’rs. levied upon land descended to lieirs of intestate : heirs institute ejectment and recover the land; purchaser thus ousted entitled to decree vs. adm’rs. for the amount of' credit on the execution and interest If adm’rs. thus chargeable, not before the court, bill should be dismissed without prejudice'.

[604]*604Afterwards, Nicholas While died, leaving John White, his father, heir at law. John White thereafter conveyed these lauds to the said James (likewise a son,) by deed with general,warranty. James White, shortly after the sale made- by him as sheriff, took possession of the- lands and enjoyed them for many years, and made improvements upon them. The heirs of N. Park at length instituted an action ofiejectment, and recovered possession of the lands illegally sold as aforesaid under execution against the assets in the hands pf their deceased father’s administrators. Thereupon, ■the heirs of James White (he being dead,) instituted actions of covenant upon the warranties contained in the deeds, against the administrators of John White, the. vendor, (also dead,) and recovered the- sums expressed in the- deeds, as the consideration, with interest.

To injoin these judgments, the administrators of .John White filed this bill, charging that the land had been conveyed by John White to bis son James, as a gift without consideration, and that so rnuch of the deeds as expressed a consideration .in- money, was by mistake inserted; that James White was answerable, tor having illegally levied on arid, sold the land; and that,, as vendee, he had used and possessed', and should, therefore, account for rents and profits.

Upon these- grounds, relief was asked against the representatives of James White, but if that was refused, then a decree was asked for, against the administrators of John White, far the amount for which the lands sold,, and.which had been credited upon the execution in Scrivener’s name.

The court dismissed the bill with costs, and dissolved the injunction obtained with damages, but without assessing their amount. To reverse this decree, J., White’s administrators prosecute this writ of error.

If the court had dismissed the bill without prejudice, and had ascertained the damages, we should not have disturbed the decree.' We think it was erroneous to dismiss the bill absolutely. Upon the merits of the case, the administrators of John White were- entitled to a decree against the administrators and heirs of N* Parle for the §'472 75 cents credited upon the exentv [605]*605¿ion in consequence of the sale of the lands, with interest thereon from the date of the credit up to the time of rendering the decree.

It does not appear that the administrators of N. Park, although made defendants in the bill, wei;e ever served with process. They filed .no answer. Therefore, it would have been proper to dismiss without prejudice, as the administrators of Park were essential parties, and the decree should be satisfied out of the assets in their hands before touching the estate descended to the heirs.

The case of Jones vs. Henry, &c. III Littell, 427, settles the principles upon which John White’s administrators are entitled to recover from the representatives of N Park, and shows that this is a case proper for the jurisdiction of the chancellor. By the return of the execution satisfied, the plaintiff, Scrivener, has not, nor has his transferee, White, any legal remedy by whiqh to obtain the monej', erroneously credited upon the execution, as the result of the sale of the property, not liable to the execution. The case cited is so fully in point, that it is needless to discuss the question of liability on the part of N. Park’s representatives. Their liability exists in favor of some one, because a demand against the estate of N. Park has been satisfied by the sale of property not subject to the execution.

But, it is contended, that the personal representative of Nicholas White, who purchased the land at the sheriff’s sale, is the proper person to assert this claim against the representatives of N. Park, and not the administrators of John White, who succeeded to the land, as heir at law.

Suppose Nicholas White had conveyed this land, after his purchase, without warranty, and had received, from his vendee the full amount of the purchase money paid by him to the sheriff, in that case who would be. entitled in equity to the recourse upon N. Park’s representatives? Surely it would be against conscience Shen Park’s heirs recovered the land, then to let icholas White recover what he gave for it, and hold that in addition to what was received from his vendee. This would be the result in case of a conveyance ufithout warranty and without fraud. To prevent such injustice the vendee should bo protected by a court of [606]*606étjiiityrío asserting'his right to the consideration given for the lost land. Will a descent cast alter the rtíle? We think it should not. The heir should occupy grounds as' favorable as the vendee without warranty» This doctrine Seems to conform with the analogies of' the law which gives to the heir the damages for the breach of real covenants happening after the death of the ancestor.

As long as the lands purchased by Nicholas White at the sheriff’s sale remained in-his possession, or that of his heir or the vendee of either of them; there was apparently a vested title in the possession, and: it seems to havebeen the intention of the parties to make it a valid' one. When this state of things was frustrated by the recovery in the action of ejectment, then the possessor holding the claim or title derived from the sheriff’s sale, whether by descent or purchase,’should be permitted in equity to assert a right to the consideration paid for the land. This is the only rule which will lead to the attainment of justice in all cases similar to the present. According to this rule the heirs of James White, who were evicted from the land, might have successfully claimed the amount for which the- representatives of N. Park are liable. But, as they had A

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Bluebook (online)
28 Ky. 603, 5 J.J. Marsh. 603, 1831 Ky. LEXIS 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whites-administrators-v-n-parks-administrators-kyctapp-1831.