American Pulverizer Co. v. Cantrell

694 S.W.2d 714, 42 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 747, 1985 Ky. App. LEXIS 547
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMarch 29, 1985
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 694 S.W.2d 714 (American Pulverizer Co. v. Cantrell) 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
American Pulverizer Co. v. Cantrell, 694 S.W.2d 714, 42 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 747, 1985 Ky. App. LEXIS 547 (Ky. Ct. App. 1985).

Opinion

DUNN, Judge.

This appeal is from the Magoffin Circuit Court Judgment which determined that ap-pellees’, the Cantrells’ and the Salyers’, so called liens on certain personal property were superior to that of the security interest of the appellant American Pulverizer Company in the same personal property. We reverse and remand.

This appeal arises from a dispute over the priority of the proceeds of the sale of equipment for a coal tipple located at a rail site. As a part of this rail site a coal washing and preparation plant was constructed on real estate owned by appellees at one time.

The following chronological order of the transactions concerning the property is recited to hopefully expedite an understanding of this opinion:

1. June 14, 1975, real estate in question purchased by appellees;
2. June 18, 1975, they leased it to Energy Klenzing Systems;
3. Appellant American loaned $250,-000.00 to Energy Klenzing to build a coal washing and preparation plant on the real estate;
4. Having retained a security interest in certain equipment and machinery that Energy Klenzing was to use in the coal washing and preparation plant, on December 11, 1975, American filed a financing statement pursuant to KRS 355.9-402 with the Secretary of State and with the Magoffin County Clerk;
5. May 15, 1978, appellees sold the real estate to George Breathitt by an unre *716 corded deed that retained a vendor’s lien pursuant to KRS Chapter 382;
6. April 30, 1979, Breathitt sold the real estate to Energy Klenzing by an unrecorded deed obligating Energy Klenzing to assume Breathitt’s debt to the appel-lees;
7. June 15, 1979, through a series of transactions Royalton Coal Processing Co. obtained the right to conduct coal preparation on the real estate;
8. July, 1980, appellees sued Breathitt and Energy Klenzing to recover $53,-000.00 due on the original purchase price of the sale of the real estate to Breathitt;
9. October 29,1980, judgment for appel-lees entered adjudging them to have a vendors’ lien on the real estate for $53,-000.00 and ordering the real estate to be sold by the Master Commissioner;
10. December 1, 1980, appellant American filed a continuation of its financing statement with the Secretary of State and with the Magoffin County clerk;
11. December 18, 1980, Royalton Coal Processing files suit to enjoin the master commissioner from selling the real estate and the trial court entered an order adjudging appellant American’s security interest in the personal property to be inferior to appellees’ vendors’ lien on the real estate for some unexplained, illogical reason; and,
12. December 23, 1980, judicial sale of the real estate by the master commissioner is confirmed on appellees’ bid of $29,000.00, leaving $24,000.00 of their $53,000.00 judgment unsatisfied.

Thereafter appellees’ case was consolidated with the suit filed by Royalton. Eventually, on October 5, 1982, the trial court entered an order which determined that appellees had an uncharacterized lien on the coal preparation plant fixtures and equipment located on the real estate and ordered their sale to satisfy the $24,000.00 balance remaining on the October 29, 1980, original judgment and order of sale based on the vendor’s lien on the real estate.

Appellant American intervened as a party defendant in November, 1982. Shortly thereafter, appellees successfully moved the trial court to order the sale of the weight scales located on the real estate to further satisfy the original vendors’ lien judgment. The sale of the scales brought $17,000.00, leaving a deficiency judgment balance of $7,000.00.

In January, 1983, appellees filed an amended complaint, claiming $55,000.00 that they demanded the master commissioner tax as costs for the rental value of the real estate due to them by Energy Klenzing while the equipment in question had remained on the real estate pendente lite since its judicial sale. In the amended complaint appellees also demanded $28,-582.34 due them from Energy Klenzing for labor and material used by appellees to prepare the property for the installation of the coal preparation plant. Having been ordered sold at judicial sale pursuant to the amended complaint, the equipment was purchased by appellant American for $54,-000.00. The trial court on January 6, 1984, entered judgment ordering these proceeds to be paid to the appellees rather than to the appellant American. It is from this judgment this appeal was taken.

Appellant American in first arguing that the judgment of January 6, 1984, is invalid, maintains that the trial judge signed it on December 5, 1983, but that the clerk did not enter it until January 6, 1984, two days after the trial judge left office. It further concludes that the judgment is invalid because it was signed by a judge who was not in office at the time of its entry. We disagree.

CR 58(1) provides that the clerk, upon receipt of the signed judgment, shall note it in the docket as provided by CR 79.01. The notation constitutes the entry of the judgment which shall become effective at the time of notation. Here, the judgment was duly signed by the trial judge when he was in office and became effective when entered by the clerk, albeit after the judge left office.

We shall next consider the issue arising from the uncharacterized lien entered on *717 October 5,1982. Its nature escapes us, but since it is based on appellees’ contention that it resulted from the improvements they made on the real estate before they sold it — 2 dams built and grading work— pursuant to a contract with Energy Klenz-ing, the only evidence of which is appellee Paul Salyer’s testimony, they and the trial court think it a mechanic’s lien.

The trial court erred when it determined the appellees had a lien on the basis of the improvements they made while they still owned the real estate. This concept is a stranger to the law. Even if it were not, the lien would have been on the real estate and so much of the personal property as had become fixtures by attachment to the land. As such they became part of the land and were already sold at its judicial sale. Finally, if the above reasons are not valid ones, the appellees failed to comply with the provisions of KRS Chapter 376 in asserting a mechanic’s lien. The appellees’ reimbursement for these improvements was in the purchase money they received when they sold the land to Breathitt.

Appellees are entitled to no priority as a result of the October 5, 1982, uncharacter-ized lien. The only priority they might have as far as encumbrance on the personal property in question is concerned, would be as a result of the resolution of appellant American’s other arguments, the next of which is not readily resolved.

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Bluebook (online)
694 S.W.2d 714, 42 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 747, 1985 Ky. App. LEXIS 547, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-pulverizer-co-v-cantrell-kyctapp-1985.