Young v. Wood & Abbot

50 Ky. 123, 11 B. Mon. 123, 1850 Ky. LEXIS 31
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 6, 1850
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 50 Ky. 123 (Young v. Wood & Abbot) 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
Young v. Wood & Abbot, 50 Ky. 123, 11 B. Mon. 123, 1850 Ky. LEXIS 31 (Ky. Ct. App. 1850).

Opinion

Uhiet Justice Marshall

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Sometime previous to the year 1844, Milton Young sold to L. W. Kincheloe a tract of land in Nelson county for the sum of $16,000. On the 24th of August 1844, about eight thousand dollars of the purchase money having been paid, Young then residing in Union county, made a deed conveying the land to Kincheloe, for the recited consideration of $16,000 “paid and secured to be paid,” and at the same time Kincheloe executed to him a mortgage conveying the same land, and a house and lot in the county of Muhlenburg, and a negro woman slave, to secure the residue of the purchase money payable in instalments, the last of which was due in February 1848. Kincheloe had his deed lodged for record In the Clerk’s office in Nelson county on the 31st of August, seven days after its date. The mortgage to Young was recorded in the Clerk’s office of the Court of Appeals at Frankfort on the 2d day of September, nine days after its date, but was never recorded in the county of Muhlenburg, and was not lodged for record in the county of Nelson until the 7th day of October following its date. In the meantime Kincheloe .took his deed from Young to the city of Philadelphia and upon the faith of the title conveyed, purchased from Wood & Abbot and others a large amount of goods, and ekecuted to Wood & Abbot foi* themselves and in trust for ■ the other vendors a mortgage upon the tract of land in Nelson county, to secure the amount of the several notes for the price of the goods so bought. This mortgage was executed on the 23d day of September,' and was lodged for record in the Clerk’s office of the Nelson [124]*124Coúhty Court on the 4th day of October, three days-' before the first mortgage was presented there.

Decree' óf Ore Circuit Cónrt, 4 n former deciee of this Court in itvi'n ease.-

In-March 1846, Wood & Abbot filed their bill to fore-dose the mortgage to them, but did not make Young a party. In' May 1846 Young filed his bill to foreclose his mortgage, and did not make Wood & Abbot or any claimants under the other'mortgage, parties to his bill,, ñor to an amended bill;' charging that his deed to Kincn-éloe showed that a part of the purchase money was not paid, but secured to be paid, and that the only security was the mortgage. The two suits were consolidated,, and Young answered one of the amended bills of Wood & Abbot denyingcharg.es of fraud, but they answered none of his allegations- And on these pleadings and several depositions, a. decree was rendered for the sale of the land, and giving to Young the priority in the appropriation of the proceeds.

That decree was reversed by this Court on the ground that Young having answered one of the amended bills of Wood & Abbot, should be considered as a party to their suit, and. that having failed to answer a subsequent amended bill, charging that from the proceeds of the other property in his mortgage besides the land in Nelson, or from other sources, he had received a considerable. part of his debt, it was erroneous do give him the precedence without an account of these alleged payments. And as the consolidation of the two suits was not regarded as making the respective complainants parties to the pleadings of each other, the decree giving precedence to Young wa.s reversed, and the cause remanded with directions that the parties should interplead, &c., (MS opinion, September 1849.)

The reversal seems not to have extended to the decree of sale, and a sale was made at which Young became the purchaser for something more than $8000, being considerably less than his own demand with the accruing interest. On the return of the cause to the Circuit Court, Wood & Abbot filed an amended bill, charging in substance that the deed from Young was [125]*125an absolute conveyance, and so claimed to be by Kincheloe, both in Nelson county before he went to Philadelphia, and in his negotiations for the purchase of goods there, and that he did not state and they did not know that any part of the purchase money was unpaid, or that there was a mortgage or other lien on the land for it, and that upon this ground he obtained credit for the goods, to be secured by the mortgage to them.

They expressly charge that the deed was made for the purpose of giving Kincheloe credit in Philadelphia to purchase goods — that he told Young at the time, that it was necessary for him to have a good and valid deed, absolute, clear of all incumbrance in order that he should be able to purchase on a credit the goods that he needed, and accordingly the deed was made and afterwards exhibited to them by Kincheloe as an absolute deed, that Young knew that Kincheloe’s credit was not good in Philadelphia for four or five thousand dollars, that he well knew that a deed absolute from him to Kincheloe was necessary to enable him to purchase the desired goods, and he accordingly executed the deed absolute. They charge that the lodging of the deed in the office at Frankfort, when the recording office in Nelson county was much nearer and in the way to Frankfort, was for the purpose of concealing it, as Kincheloe and his creditors resided in Nelson. And that both Young and Kincheloe in the State of Kentucky, and Kincheloe in Philadelphia as above stated, gave out in speeches that the deed was an absolute deed and clear of all incumbrances, and that they had no notice of any claim or lien of Young on the land.

Young in answer denies having made any thing out of the other mortgaged property, which he alleges not to have been worth more than $600, and says the house and lot in Muhlenburg was not worth more than fifty dollars. He says that Louisville is in his way to Frankfort, and that being in Louisville he sent the mortgage to the Clerk of the Court of Appeals by letter, and that as soon as he learned that it was necessary to record [126]*126it in Nelson comity, lie sent it there, and in a previous-answer adopted in this, he denies any fraud or- intended concealment of the mortgage, and says that when he executed the deed, he was advised that it. gave notice that part of the purchase money was unpaid, but. that to make assurance doubly sure he took the mortgage which he had recorded in the office of the Clerk of this Court under advice that it was legal, and to save the expense of recording in two counties. lie says he did not make an absolute deed to Kincheloe to enable him to obtain a/a/se credit in Philadelphia or elsewhere, for the deed itself shews the land was not paid for, and he is informed and charges that Kincheloe showed the deed to the persons from whom he bought goods, and told them how much was paid and how much was unpaid. And that he had given a mortgage on the land to secure the residue that was unpaid. Plow far the deed was absolute on its face, he says the Court will judge when it sees that a part of the purchase money is unpaid. Pie denies that he intended to enable Kincheloe to obtain a false credit, or to cheat and defraud any person, and says the Writing of the deed and its execution, and the mortgage and where it should be recorded, were all done by and under the direction of W. ITagood, lawyer of Union county, and that he did not intend to abandon his lien by including other property, all together not worlh more than $600, in the mortgage.

Young did not make this answer a cross bill, nor in any other manner call upon the other claimants to respond to his allegations.

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Bluebook (online)
50 Ky. 123, 11 B. Mon. 123, 1850 Ky. LEXIS 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-v-wood-abbot-kyctapp-1850.