Hornback's Admr. v. Hornback's Admr.
Hornback's Admr. v. Hornback's Admr.
Opinion of the Court
Opinion oe the Court by
Whatever may in fact have been the mental capacity of John Hornback after he had been adjudged to be a lunatic, upon an inquisition held to inquire into the state of his mind, and his brother, Adam Hornback, at his own request, was appointed his committee, and proceeded to act in that character, neither he, nor his representatives, can escape responsibility for such estate of John, as came to his hands as his committee, on the ground that John was sane, and capable to manage his own affairs.
It is contended that the land purchased by Adam Hornback from William Holladay was paid for with the money received from Heed, for the land which John Hornback had sold to him, whereby a trust resulted to John, and that his heirs are consequently entitled to the land. If it be conceded that Adam used the money of John in paying for said land it would not follow that a trust resulted to John. As the committee of John, Adam was not
It appears that Samuel Homback, the father of John and Adam, had conveyed to the former 100 acres of land in Bourbon county at one time, and at another time an interest in a grist and saw mill. On the 11th of September, 1819, John Hornback and wife conveyed the 100 acres of land to John Beed in consideration of $2,500, all of which the grantors acknowledged to have been paid to them in land at the time the deed was made, and on the 24th of September of the same year, John Homback conveyed to Beed his interest in the mill, in consideration of $200, acknowledged in the deed then to have been paid. Then conveyances were made, nearly three years before the appointment of Adam as committee of John, and there is no direct evidence that any portion of the price of the land or mills ever came into the hands of Adam. The jury, who found John a lunatic, stated in the verdict that his estate consisted of claims in the hands of those who had improperly gotten his property from him, and which they find to be worth about $1,850. Subsequently, actions were brought in the Bourbon Circuit Court for some slaves, to whom John had some claim, valued at even more than the amount of the claims referred to by the jury, but those suits were decided adverse te his claim and he got nothing.
Several witnesses, some four perhaps, testify to conversations had wdth John Homback some thirty or forty years before the
Cottingham states that Adam Hornback came 'to him before he purchased the land from Holladay, and requested him to take a part of the land, saying he was not able to pay for all of it, but afterward told him he had concluded to buy all the land, that his brother John had some $1,800 or $2,500, which would come into his hands, and he would thereby be able to pay for all of it. This must have been, from the date of the purchase of the land, some three years before an inquisition was held on John, and it is not accounted for how Adam knew three years before the thing transpired that he would become John’s committee.
The remoteness of the transactions from the period at which the witnesses testify, and the unsatisfactory character of the evidence, envelopes the whole claim in too much doubt and uncertainty to authorize judicial action.
Wherefore, the judgment is affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.