Baird v. Read

288 S.W. 1014, 217 Ky. 71, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 6
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 7, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 288 S.W. 1014 (Baird v. Read) 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
Baird v. Read, 288 S.W. 1014, 217 Ky. 71, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 6 (Ky. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Sampson —

Affirming.

Two mortgages, one field by appellants and tfie otfier field by appellee, are asserted against a garage and lot in Fountain Run, Kentucky, a village in Monroe county, and we are called upon to determine wfiiefi sfiall take precedence under tfie facts and circumstances wfiiefi surrounded tfie parties and attended tfie execution and tfie assignment of eaefi instrument. Tfie Bank of Fountain Run failed wfiile Ed Grooms was its president and Hugfi L. Grooms was casfiier. About tfie same time tfie First National Bank of Scottsville, Allen county, was experiencing financial difficulties and was in tfie fiands of a liquidating agent. Tfie mortgage under wfiiefi appellants claim bears date tfie 15tfi day of July, 1921, and was executed by Hugfi L. Grooms and wife, of Fountain Run, to Ed Grooms, father of Hugfi L. Grooms, of tfie same town, and purports on its face to be for $10,550.00, for wfiiefi sum it says tfiat tfie first party lias “granted, bargained and sold and by these presents do bargain, grant and sell to tfie second party, all of tfie following described real estate: a certain tract of land lying on tfie east • side of Main street and being tfie same land bought from Howard Bros. & Grooms and B. W. Downing, now occupied as *73 a public garage.” And two or three other parcels of real property are also described. The mortgage under Avhich appellee claims bears date of January 14, 1923, and was executed by H. L. Grooms and wife io Ed Grooms, to protect Ed Grooms as surety upon a $3,000.00 note executed by H. L. Grooms with Ed Grooms as surety to the First National Bank of Scottsville, which mortgage is and was for the use, benefit and protection of the First National Bank on the note for $3,000.00, and the mortgage was attached to the note and held by the Bank of Scottsville. Clearly the mortgage under which appellants claim is prior in time to the mortgage under which appellee claims, and if valid must prevail, as both mortgages were recorded. Appellee, however, assails the validity of the mortgage under which appellants claim of date July 15, 1921, at least as to its priority over the mortgage held by him, because the mortgage under which appellants claim did not, at the time it was executed and recorded, recite that it was executed to. secure notes amounting to $10,550.00, or any sum, and hence was not constructive notice to appellee, or sufficient to put appellee on notice as to what notes were intended to be embraced and protected by the mortgage, for which reason the so-called mortgage was not a recordable instrument. This contention is based upon what appellee insists was an alteration made in the face of the original mortgage after it had been executed and recorded, and an alteration made on the record book in the office of the clerk of the Monroe county court, where the mortgage had been recorded on July 10, 1922, almost a year after its execution. The instrument was prepared upon a blank form styled “Mortgage.” The blanks are filled in by typewriting. Omitting the date and names of the parties, the printed form reads:

“Witnesseth: That the party of the first part for and in consideration of his indebtedness to the party of the second part, as follows:”
Here follow five blank 'lines, on the first of which is written, immediately following the printed part above copied, these words and figures:
“Said party of the first part has executed his $10,5.50.00 notes to said second party, and to secure the payment of them or any part of them, has granted, bargained and sold, and by these *74 presents do grant, bargain and sell to the party of the second part, etc.”

Appellee insists that the figures “$10,550.00,” which are partly on the margin of the right-hand side of the blank form, were placed there after the mortgage had been executed and recorded, and this contention is based upon the appearance of the original instrument, which is now before us, and upon the interlineations appearing upon the record book in the office of the clerk of the county court of Monroe county. If these figures be left out of the mortgage, then it would read: “Witnesseth: That the party of the first part, for and in consideration of his indebtedness to the party of the second part, as follows: Said party of the first part has^ executed his notes to said second party, and to secure the payment of them, or any part of them, has granted, bargained and sold, and by these presents do grant, bargain and sell to the party of the second part, . . . ,” and does hot express any amount or consideration for which the mortgage was given, and would come'clearly within the rule announced by this court in the case of Cin. Leaf Tob. Warehouse v. Combs and Others, 109 Ky. 21, where it was, in substance, held that a mortgage reciting that it was executed to secure “a certain sum of money” advanced to the mortgagee under a contract entered into on a day named, and that a note was executed therefor, is so uncertain as to amount that it does not, though recorded, operate as constructive notice to purchasers or creditors, and was invalid. In that opinion we quoted from Pearce v. Hall, 12 Bush 209, this sentence: “The spirit of our statutes upon this subject requires not only that such conveyances shall be lodged for record but that they shall show for themselves, and without the aid of extrinsic evidence to be obtained by inquiry, the nature of the lion, and with a reasonable degree of certainty the amount of the debts they are intended to secure. If the amount be ascertained, as in this case, it ought to be stated. , . . Unless this much is done, the public record does not show the state of the title, and room is left for the substitution of fictitious and fraudulent claims, and the prime object of the recording system is subject to be defeated.”

The learned circuit judge who decided the case below and in whom we have great confidence expressed the *75 opinion, from an examination of the original document and the testimony of witnesses, that the figures “$10,550.00” were interlined in the original paper with a typewriter after that paper had been executed and recorded, and gave expression to this view in an opinion delivered at the time the judgment was entered. On examination of the original document with the aid of a magnifying glass we are able to discern that the figures “$10,550.00” were not written at the same time and with the same typewriter ribbon as the balance of the instrument, and are somewhat out of line with the other typewritten words immediately preceding it. That these figures were and are interlined can not be doubted from an examination of the original paper. However, it can not be said from an examination of the original paper that this interlineation was made after the delivery of the instrument. On this point there is other evidence to show that some time after the instrument was recorded in the office of the clerk of the county court it was examined by two witnesses who say that the figures “$10,550.00” were not then on the record although the balance of the instrument was properly of record. The county clerk says that the figures “$10,550.00” were interlined on the record, and this is manifest, because the record in the office of the clerk was made with a book machine, while the interlineation was made with pen and ink.

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Related

Furst & Thomas v. Smith
133 S.W.2d 941 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1939)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
288 S.W. 1014, 217 Ky. 71, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baird-v-read-kyctapphigh-1926.