Bratcher v. Ashley

243 S.W.2d 1011, 1951 Ky. LEXIS 1197
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedNovember 30, 1951
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 243 S.W.2d 1011 (Bratcher v. Ashley) 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
Bratcher v. Ashley, 243 S.W.2d 1011, 1951 Ky. LEXIS 1197 (Ky. Ct. App. 1951).

Opinion

CAMMACK, Chief Justice.

On February 23, 1950, Rossie D. Ashley was arrested by the sheriff of Butler County and charged with unlawfully having, for the purpose of sale, intoxicating liquor in his possession in local option territory. This liquor was found in Ashley’s automobile. On February 24 Ashley pleaded guilty to two charges of this offense and received on each charge a fine of $100 and a sentence of thirty days in jail. The fines were paid and the concurrent sentences served without an appeal.

On March 23, 1950, the appellants, the county attorney of Butler County and the Commonwealth’s attorney of the 38th judicial district, suing in the name of the Commonwealth under the terms of KRS 242.320(1), instituted an action against Ashley in the Butler Circuit Court to have the automobile forfeited to the Commonwealth. The Universal C. I. T. Credit Corporation (hereinafter spoken of as the Credit Corporation) intervened in the action, alleging that it was the assignee of a conditional sales contract under which the automobile had been sold to Ashley and that there remained an unpaid balance of the purchase price. The Credit Corporation prayed that it be awarded title to and possession of the automobile under the terms of the contract, or be adjudged the holder of a purchase money lien superior to that of the Commonwealth; and if the latter, that the balance due be paid to it from the proceeds of the forfeiture sale.

The appellants filed an answer to the intervening petition in which they alleged they had no actual notice of this contract. They asserted further that it had not been recorded properly, hence neither the appellants nor the Commonwealth had notice of the lien, and therefore the intervenors were not entitled to share in the proceeds of the forfeiture sale. The Credit Corporation filed a reply denying the allegations of the appellants’ answer. The chancellor [1013]*1013ordered that the automobile be sold and adjudged that the Credit Corporation had a prior lien which, under KRS 242.330(2), should be satisfied from the proceeds of the sale. From this judgment the appeal is prosecuted.

The stipulated facts show that Ashley had at all times pertinent to this case lived at his mother’s home in Butler County, within one-half mile of the Butler-Grayson County line. On September 28, 1949, Ashley purchased an automobile, the subject of this controversy, from the Summers-Hermann. Company of Louisville, entering into a conditional sales contract as security for the unpaid balance of the purchase price. On the face of the contract Ashley’s address was listed as Caney-ville, Kentucky. Mail is delivered to Ashley’s home by an R.F.D. carrier operating out of the post office in Caneyville, a town in Grayson County. The contract was assigned by the Summers-Hermann Company to the Credit Corporation, which, apparently relying on the address shown on the contract, had it recorded in the office of the county clerk of Grayson County on October 25, 1949.

KRS 242.330 provides in part:

“(1) Upon a judgment of forfeiture under KRS 242.320, the court shall direct the sheriff to sell the property. * * *
“(2) The sheriff shall pay first out of the purchase money any valid recorded liens on the property so sold. The court may in its discretion order a sale subject to the liens.
“(3) No lien on any property so sold shall be paid unless it is recorded prior to the committing of the nuisance and unless the lienor can establish he had no knowledge of the nuisance.”

It is now the contention of the appellants that the words “valid recorded liens”, as used in subsection (2) above, made it incumbent upon the Credit Corporation to record the conditional sales contract in Butler County, the residence of the purchaser, as provided in KRS 382.670, and that the failure to so- record rendered the lien of the Credit Corporation ineffectual against the claim of the Commonwealth as Ashley’s attaching creditor without actual notice under KRS 382.270. This latter section provides: “No deed or deed of trust or mortgage conveying a legal or equitable title to real or personal property shall be valid against a purchaser for a valuable consideration, without notice thereof, or against creditors until such deed or mortgage is acknowledged or proved according to law and lodged for record. As used in this section ‘creditors’ includes all creditors irrespective of whether or not they have acquired a lien by legal or equitable proceedings or by voluntary conveyance.”

The words “valid recorded liens”, as used in KRS 242.330(2), do not alone, where the Commonwealth is not a creditor and no other claims to the property have been made, require that a creditor asserting a lien shall, if he is to share in the proceeds of the forfeiture sale, have recorded the lien in strict compliance with the statute designating the proper county of recordation. It is the policy of this and other courts to construe forfeiture statutes strictly against a forfeiture and liberally in favor of the person whose property rights are to be affected. 37 C.J.S., Forfeitures, § 4, page 8. This was done in Froedge v. Commonwealth, 289 Ky. 168, 158 S.W.2d 426, and Rickman v. Commonwealth, 204 Ky. 848, 265 S.W. 452. A reading of KRS 242.310 to 242,330 inclusive, and particularly KRS 242.330(2) and (3), manifests that it was the intention of the Legislature to protect the interests of innocent parties in the property to be forfeited and sold. KRS 242.310 was not intended by itself alone to place the Commonwealth in a better position than, or give it a right superior to, an innocent creditor who unquestionably held an interest in the property prior to the arrest of the wrongdoer. The requirement that the lien be recorded, and that this be done prior to the violation of KRS 242.310, was not necessarily intended to give notice to the Commonwealth in the proper county that there exists an outstanding equitable interest in the property, [1014]*1014but was primarily intended to insure against the falsification or fabrication of claims to the property and to establish the order in which bona fide liens are to be satisfied from the proceeds of the sale.

It should be remembered that the validity of an instrument or a lien, as between the parties to the instrument, does not depend upon its proper recordation. Middendorf v.

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Bluebook (online)
243 S.W.2d 1011, 1951 Ky. LEXIS 1197, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bratcher-v-ashley-kyctapp-1951.