181 Ky. 158 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1918
Opinion of the Court by
Affirming.
In April, 1912, the Sunrise Coal Company, a corporation, with its principal place of business in Dayton, Ohio, was adjudged a bankrupt by the United States District Court for the Southern District of Ohio, and appellee, William P. Pice, was elected trustee in bankruptcy for the company. Pursuant to an order of the court, the trustee, on April 30, 1913, sold and conveyed to appellant, Sallie J. Thompson, the mining properties of the bankrupt, located in Muhlenberg county, Kentucky, in consideration of $10,000.00, and the agreement on the part of appellant to pay sixty per centum of the costs of the • bankruptcy proceedings. Appellant had a first lien against the property of the bankrupt for $6,000.00, and this was credited upon the purchase price. She paid $500.00 in cash, and in addition executed and delivered to the trustee four notes: one for' $1,000.00, due in ninety days; one for $1,250.00, due in six months; one for $1,250.00, due in nine months; and one for $1,887.50, due in twelve months; and, to secure their payment, a lien was retained in the deed by the following clause thereof:
“A lien is hereby expressly retained, and reserved by the party of the first part upon all of the real property hereinabove described to secure the payment of four certain promissory notes this day executed by the said Sallie J. Thompson and James M. Thompson, and payable to the -order of said first party, one for the payment of one thousand dollars ($1,000.00), in ninety days from this date, one for the payment of twelve hundred fifty dollars ($1,250.00) in six months from this date, one for the payment of twelve hundred fifty dollars ($1,250.00) in nine months from this date, one for the payment of eighteen hundred eighty-seven and 50-100 dollars, in twelve months from this date, all with six per cent interest from date, said notes representing a part of the purchase
The first three of these notes and a part of the last were paid by appellant. Upon her failure to fully discharge the last npte when due, the trustee, pursuant to an order of the court, in which the bankruptcy proceedings were pending, instituted this action in the Muhlenberg circuit court against appellant for the balance due on the $1,887.50 note, and to enforce the lien retained upon the land in the deed to her to secure its payment. Copies of the note sued on and the deed to appellee in which the lien was retained were filed with and made parts of the petition.
To this petition defendant, Sallie J. Thompson, filed a separate answer and counterclaim divided into three paragraphs, to each paragraph of which a demurrer was sustained, and upon her failure to amend within the time allowed by the court therefor, a judgment was entered in favor of the plaintiff for the balance due upon the note and ordering a sale of a sufficiency of the land conveyed to the defendant to satisfy the judgment, and from that judgment this appeal is prosecuted.
This, it will be seen, is but a denial of the legal effect of the terms of the notes and deed, which defendant admitted were regularly executed, and is therefore no more than the pleader’s conclusion of the legal effect of such instruments, and that an erroneous conclusion. Hence, it is apparent that this paragraph did not state facts sufficient to constitute a defense to plaintiff’s cause of action.
. It will be noticed that she does not charge that sixty per cent of the costs, as allowed in the bankruptcy proceedings, did not amount to $1,887.50, but only that- plaintiff, in collusion with some of the other creditors, had fraudulently conspired “in accumulating costs” in said bankruptcy proceedings; that she was not justly, or truly, or equitably entitled to pay a greater amount of the costs than $617.51. It is therefore apparent that she does not charge that the costs, sixty per cent of which was $1,887.50, were not actxxally accxxmulated or allowed in the bankruptcy proceedings, but only that she was not justly, or truly or equitably entitled to pay sixty per cent of the amount allowed'in that court, and that she was, in fact, attempting to have reviewed in this action the taxation of costs in the bankruptcy proceedings to which she was a party. That she could not in this action have re
The.only authority cited by counsel for appellant in support of this paragraph of her answer and counterclaim is 20 Cyc. p. 86, which reads:
“Where a public officer enters into a fraudulent scheme, he will not be protected by his official connection
This clearly refers to the personal liability of an officer and has no application whatever to the case at bar, since he is not personálly but only as trustee a party to this action. It, therefore, results that the court did not err in sustaining the demurrer to each of the paragraphs of the defendant’s answer and counterclaim.
4. Defendant also urges as a reason for reversal ©f the judgment her denial in the first paragraph of the answer ‘ ‘ that the original draft of said note is filed herewith,” and insists that since section 120, Civil Code, requires that a note such as is sued on here must be filed with and made a part of the pleading, no judgment should have been entered in favor of plaintiff. This position is untenable, since it has been frequently decided by this court that, although a writing upon which an action is founded is not filed, the adverse party can not complain of it after judgment. Preston v. Roberts, 12 Bush. 570; McGhee v. Southerland, 84 Ky. 198, and especially, if the question has not been raised by demurrer. Combs v. Breathitt County, 18 Ky. L. R. 809, 38 S. W. 138.
The mere fact that the defendant in her answer called attention to the fact that a copy and not the original note was filed with the petition was not a proper step to require the original to be filed, which, if desired, should have been done by motion for a rule to require it to be filed. Hughes v. Grogan, 159 Ky. 411; 167 S. W. 381; Nuckels v. Robinson-Pettitt Co., 159 Ky. 215, 166 S. W. 972.
Judgment affirmed.