142 Ky. 633 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1911
Opinion of the Court by
Reversing.
Appellant was the owner, by devise from her husband, cf a house and lot in the city of Louisville, Kentucky, The lot was two hundred feet deep with a twenty-five foot front. She executed a mortgage on this propperty-for $1,200.00 to a man by the name of Ruhl, and “there were also several other small liens on it for material furnished and labor performed, and a street improvement lien of thirty odd dollars. All the claims with "interests amounted to about $1,600.00. These liens were ■enforced in the Jefferson Circuit Court and the master commissioner was ordered to sell the property. Appellant was in Cincinnati, Ohio, at the time the sale was -ordered, hut received information that it would take place on a certain Monday. She arrived home on Saturday before the sale. The property was sold and appellee became the purchaser. The sale was reported
This court has often decided that verbal agreements to buy real estate at a commissioner’s sale for the owner is enforcible. (Estes v. Estes, opinion delivered Feb. 14, 1911.) The authorities hold uniformly that such verbal agreements must be well established by proof before being enforced. The only question in this case for determination is whether such an agreement 'was made between the parties. Appellant says that on her return from Cincinnati, on Saturday before the sale, she met appellee on 5th street and told her that her property was about to be sold; that she believed the debt for which it was to he sold was too much; that she only owed $1,-200.00, the amount of the mortgage; that she had kept the interest paid up, and that she could not see how it could he $1,600.00. At the instance of appellee, appellant went with her to her store on that street to talk the matter over, and appellant says that she asked appellee if she would buy the property in for her and told her that she, with the assistance of her son and daughter and the proceeds from a moving picture show, would pay it out. They first discussed some means to get the sale postponed. Appellant testified that appellee promised several times to buy the property in for her; that after the conversation in the store had progressed for a while appellee called up her lawyer, Mr. Tilford, for advice, and she testified with reference to this telephone conversation as follows:
“I could tell from her answers what he said almost, and he asked her if she thought the title was all right, and she said she thought it was, and if I had any other property, and she said yes, I had other property, and from her answers I could tell what he was asking, and asked her did- she think it would be safe for her to buy this in for me, and she said she thought it would be perfectly safe because she knew all about the house and she-knew pretty much when I bought it and she thought it would be all right if she bought it in for me, and so she talked over the phone for quite a length of time. I could tell the conversation word for word if I would.
It was agreed between them at that time that appellant was to get up all her papers, receipts, &c., to ascertain if the amount of the judgment was correct, and for the purpose of getting the proper credits thereof if it was not. Thus affairs stood until Sunday about seven o’clock P. M., when appellee and her husband arrived at the home of appellant. One Williams, who operated the moving picture show for appellant, and a colored man by the name of Geo. Ehodes, were at the house and in the front room when appellee and her husband arrived, and when appellant saw appellee and her husband •she remarked “here comes my friend now,” and these two men went into an adjoining room and left the door •open. Appellee went into the house immediately upon arriving but her husband remained at the gate until he was invited in by one of the colored men. Appellant swears that appellee at this meeting again spoke of the fact that she was going to buy the property in for her own name for the benefit of appellant. Both of the colorod men swear that they heard appellee say that she was going to buy the property for appellant; that she asked •appellant for her receipts and papers which they had ■spoken of on Saturday before; that appellant handed them to her and she looked over them and said she could not tell anything about them and asked her if she had any more and appellant said she did; that appellant then told her to get all her papers up and have some lawyer to ■examine them. Appellee remained at the house for an hour or two. The next morning appellant went to appellee’s store, and appellee advised her that they must go to the sale together; that she must not tell anybody that she was going to buy the property for her; that she must not talk to-her at the place of sale, because some person might make the property bring more if they thought she was buying it in for her. They left the store together and went to the place of sale, but appellee left appellant at a certain place to go get her lawyer to do the bidding for her. They all arrived some little time before the commissioner began to cry this particular sale. Appellant says that she did not talk
For these reasons the judgment of the lower court is reversed and remanded for further proceedings consistent herewith.