Williams v. Shockey

72 S.W.2d 461, 254 Ky. 705, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 152
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 6, 1934
StatusPublished

This text of 72 S.W.2d 461 (Williams v. Shockey) 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
Williams v. Shockey, 72 S.W.2d 461, 254 Ky. 705, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 152 (Ky. 1934).

Opinion

*706 Opinion of the Court by

Judge Ratliff

Reversing.

In the year 1926, the appellant, Sallie Wells Williams, loaned to C. J. Little $2,500 for which he executed to her his note secured by mortgage on a lot in the town of Jackson, Ky.

In the fall of 1928, Mrs. Williams filed her suit in Breathitt circuit court to collect the note and foreclose the mortgage. No defense was made to the action, and she was awarded a judgment on the 23d day of March, 1929, for the full amount of her note and an order of sale of the mortgaged property. Mrs. Williams became the purchaser of the lot at the commissioner’s sale for the price of $1,150, leaving the balance of the judgment unsatisfied. After the confirmation of the sale she procured an execution for the balance of her judgment, which execution was levied upon certain other lands of Little, referred to in this record as the Cedar Creek tract. However, while the case was pending on the note and mortgage foreclosure, in December, 1928, C. J. Little conveyed all his property, consisting of ten separate tracts or parcels, to J. A. Shockey, for the recited consideration “of the sum of $1.00 cash in hand paid and other good and bountiful consideration, well and truly paid and to be paid. * * *”

The appellee, J. A. Shockey, filed this suit in the Breathitt circuit court alleging that he was the owner of the land on which the execution was levied, and asked that appellant, Mrs. Williams, and the sheriff of Breathitt county be enjoined from selling said land under the execution and from further interfering with him in any way in the quiet and peaceful ownership and possession of said property and from taking any further steps under the execution toward selling the land.

Mrs. Williams filed her answer in which she denied that Shockey was then or ever was the owner of the land or the oil and gas or minerals thereunder or on same or any other interest therein. She further pleaded her judgment against C. J. Little which was credited with the sum of $1,150, the purchase price of the lot mortgaged to secure same, and that, while the suit was pending, “C. J. Little, in contemplation of fraud, and for the fraudulent purpose of avoiding the payment of her debt and judgment, conveyed to the plaintiff who is his nephew, the property described and claimed by him *707 under the aforesaid deed, for the sole purpose to defraud this defendant and to avoid the payment of her debt and judgment and for these reasons the said deed from C. J. Little to plaintiff, J. A. Shockey, to the land described in the petition under which he claims said property, is void.” She denied plaintiff’s right to an injunction or other relief asked in his petition, and asked that the deed from C. J. Little to Shockey be canceled on ground that it was a fraudulent conveyance and made for the purpose of avoiding payment of her debt.

The issues were made up and the evidence taken, whereupon the chancellor adjudged J. A. Shockey, plaintiff below, to be the owner of the land known as the Cedar Creek tract in Breathitt county, containing 615-^ acres, tract No. 1, and tract No. 2 consisting of 10 acres, more or less, and granted the injunction prayed for in the petition. From that judgment Mrs. Williams prosecutes this appeal.

Appellant insists that the conveyances from nittje to Shockey were fraudulent and made to hinder, delay, and cheat the creditors of Little.

The consideration recited in the deed from Little to Shockey being indefinite, Shockey sought to show the actual consideration paid and to be paid.

Shockey stated in his deposition that he agreed to pay a note of $200 indebtedness to the Hargis Bank & Trust Company, which Little owed to it, on which he had paid $100 on the principal and $10 interest, and that he had paid taxes on the land for the years 1927 and 1928, but that he still owed the last two years ’ taxes just preceding the date of his depositions. We note the following question and answer:

"Q. How much taxes in all have you paid for C. J. Little as payment on this property? A. Here it is summed up — $246.32 taxes.”

It is not clearly shown whether he meant in the above answer that he had actually paid $246.32, or whether that sum included taxes due, but not actually paid. He further stated that he was to keep and care for Little his lifetime and pay his burial expenses and tombstone equal to his wife (Little’s wife, who had predeceased him) in the sum of about $350. He stated that Little *708 was living with, him at that time and had been for the past thirty-eight months, during which time he had boarded and cared for Little.

On cross-examination Shockey was asked about his knowledge of the various párcels of land deeded to him by Little, and he stated, in substance, that he was acquainted with a part of them, but admitted that he knew but little, if anything, about others. He admitted that he had never been on or seen a number of the tracts of land, and knew nothing about their value except what people had told him. He said' he had leased the oil and gas and received one-fourth of the value of 710 acres. He attempts to fix the value of the mineral on some of this land at $1.50 to $2 per acre, basing his opinion upon information only, but said that the timber and surface was assessed at $5 per acre for taxes. He said that' part of the land was cleared and worn-out hillside, while other parts were timbered.

The evidence conduces to show that the title to a portion of . this land is questionable, and it is doubtful that C. J. Little or Shockey has title to part of it, but the proof is too indefinite to show what title Little actually had. However, Little conveyed the property to Shockey for a consideration and warranted the title thereto, and, in the present state of the record, we assume that he had title thereto, in the absence of satisfactory proof that he had no title.

Shockey denies that he knew anything about Little’s indebtedness to Mrs. Williams, and stated that he purchased the property in good faith and considered the consideration paid and promised to be paid a fair and adequate price for the property.

C. J. Little, testifying for Shockey, stated that he had no one to care for him, and that he deeded his property to Shockey to care for him his lifetime and the further consideration that Shockey was to .pay the back taxes and all future taxes on the property and a mortgage to the Hargis bank. Little’s testimony as a whole was, in substance, about the same as Shockey relating* to the value of the land conveyed to Shockey, and he also sought to disparage his title by stating that a portion of it was “wildcat land,” and intimated that his title to a portion of the land was doubtful. He also denied that he made the conveyance to Shockey with any fraudulent intent and that same was in good faith *709 and the consideration paid and promised to be paid by Shockey was an adequate and fair price for the lard.. Little admitted that he knew at the time he conveyed the • property to Shockey that Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
72 S.W.2d 461, 254 Ky. 705, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-shockey-kyctapphigh-1934.