Ashland National Bank v. Conley

22 S.W.2d 270, 231 Ky. 844, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 367
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 6, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 22 S.W.2d 270 (Ashland National Bank v. Conley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ashland National Bank v. Conley, 22 S.W.2d 270, 231 Ky. 844, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 367 (Ky. 1929).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Jud.ge Dietz,man

Reversing.

In the year of 1925, the city of Ashland was experiencing a rapid growth. The demand for money to finance real estate and building operations was very acute and greater than the supply forthcoming from that community. Sensing the situation, a number of prominent gentlemen of Ashland organized the appellant Southern Securities Corporation, with a capital stock of $300,000. The powers of the corporation under its articles were very broad, including the right not only to act as broker for others in the procurement of loans, but also the right to lend its own money. After its organization, the corporation entered into a -contract *845 with the Security Trust Company of Lexington, Ky., whereby the latter agreed to buy from the Southern Securities Corporation all bonds offered for sale by the Southern Securities Corporation on the principal and interest being guaranteed by the Southern Securities Corporation and the National Surety Company. Under the contract, the Southern Securities Corporation agreed to sell to the Security Trust Company all bonds which it should thereafter offer for sale. The contract by its terms was to continue until December 31, 1925, and thereafter until terminated by either party upon written notice. The Security Trust Company was.to pay for the bonds in cash but at a discount of 2 per cent, from their face value. After these arrangements had been made, the Southern Securities Corporation proceeded to advertise in the local papers, inviting applications for loans, and in these advertisements it was stated that the interest was based on 6 per cent., 10-year plan, and that no brokerage was to be deducted.

Some time in the fall of 1925, the appellee A. S. Conley and Mary Noyes Conley, his wife, who were then in Florida, having seen the advertisement of the Southern Securities Corporation wrote to the Company that they desired to raise a loan of $6,000 on some property they owned in Ashland. On receipt of this letter, the Southern Securities Corporation sent the Conleys an application blank.

In skeleton'outline the application reads: “The undersigned hereby applies through Southern Securities Corporation to procure for the undersigned a loan of $6,000 with interest at the rate of 6% per annum payable semi-annually and offers as security therefor a first mortgage on the following property.” Here follows a description of the Conley property, together with certain information concerning the property not here pertinent.

Then follows: “The undersigned hereby agrees to pay the Southern Securities Corporation the following items of expense.” Here follows a list of such expenses, including attorney’s fee for examining the title, the cost of an appraisal of the property and survey, fire and tor-, nado insurance premiums, and certain other expenses.

The application continues: “All of said expenses are to be payable upon demand but not later than the date when the proceeds of the loan are paid over to me. *846 I also agree to pay the Southern Securities Corporation the sum of $1,017 to cover, first, amounts charged by the National Surety Company and Southern Securities Corporation for their respective guarantees of the payment of the principal of bonds evidencing said loan and the interest coupons thereto attached as they severally become due secured by said mortgage of deed of trust. Second, the payment of all other costs and expenses incurred by the Southern Securities Corporation in connection with obtaining this loan, including its charges and fees thereof, said amount to be evidenced by my note or notes and to be secured by mortgage on said premises subordinate, however, to the mortgage or deed of trust securing the bonds and the interest coupons hereinbefore referred to” (viz. the $6,000 loan) “and in order to provide a fund with which to retire and pay said bonds with the interest coupons thereto attached and the note or notes executed for the expenses and fees hereinbefore stated, I agree to pay to the Ashland National Bank, trustee, Ashland, Kentucky, the sum of $- on the --day of each and every month after the making of said loan and during the period therefor. Said loan is to be for the period of ten years payable in the manner stated.”

The Conleys signed this application and sent it back to the Southern Securities Corporation. The loan being approved, the bonds and mortgage were prepared, and in the middle of December, 1925, the transaction was closed. In the mortgage indenture the appellant Ash-land National Bank was made the grantee as trustee for the bondholders, and the bonds mentioned in the deed of trust and mortgage were made payable to bearer. The series of bonds aggregating $6,000 principal amount was secured by a first lien on the property, and the series of bonds aggregating $1,017 principal amount was secured by a second lien on the property. The papers had been prepared with the date of December 1, 1925, and, as the transaction was not closed until the middle of December, in order to avoid the redrafting of the documents, the Southern Securities Corporation gave to the appellees its check on its bank account for the accrued interest from December 1st to the date of the closing of the transaction. At the same time it gave to the Conleys its check on its own bank account for the $6,000 evidenced by the *847 bonds secured by the first lien. The Conleys paid in cash at that time for the expenses first mentioned in their application; that is, the cost of the title examination, survey, etc. The Southern Securities Corporation, after placing its guaranty on the bonds representing the $6,-Ü00 part of the transaction, at once transmitted them to the National Surety Company in New York, which placed upon these bonds its guaranty, and then delivered them to the New York correspondent of the Security Trust Company of Lexington. This correspondent received for the Security Trust Company these bonds as thus guaranteed, and debited the trust company’s account by the accrued interest on the bonds and their face value, less the 2 per cent, discount provided for in the contract between the Southern Securities Corporation and the Security Trust Company, and credited the account of the Southern Securities Corporation by the amount thus debited. It is shown in the record that the Security Trust Company relied entirely on the guaranty of the National Surety Company, and made no inquiry concerning the solvency of the makers of the bonds sold them by the Ashland Company or the value of the security back of the bonds. It is also shown in the record that the amount of the premium which the Southern Securities, Corporation agreed to pay to the National Surety Company for its guaranty on these bonds plus a like amount, which the Southern Securities Corporation says is a reasonable compensation for its guaranty of these bonds and the 2 per cent, discount at which these bonds were sold to the Security Trust Company of Lexington, consume almost all of the $1,017, secured by the second lien. It is also shown that the balance of this $1,017 barely if at all covers the overhead expense of the Securities Corporation incurred in the printing of these bonds, their marketing, and the services rendered incident to the monthly payments of the Conleys on their indebtedness.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
22 S.W.2d 270, 231 Ky. 844, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 367, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ashland-national-bank-v-conley-kyctapphigh-1929.