Calhoun v. Federal Land Bank

20 S.W.2d 72, 230 Ky. 460, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 108
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 14, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 20 S.W.2d 72 (Calhoun v. Federal Land Bank) 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
Calhoun v. Federal Land Bank, 20 S.W.2d 72, 230 Ky. 460, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 108 (Ky. 1929).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas

— Affirming.

The appellee, G-. H. Nantz, and W. 0. Barr jointly and equally owned the fee-simple title 'to a tract of land *461 in Daviess county, Ky., near Owensboro, containing 140 acres. On January 29,1918, they borrowed $10,000 from the appelle and plaintiff below, Federal Land Bank of Louisville, Ky. (hereinafter referred to as the bank), and executed a mortgage on the entire tract to secure the notes executed in evidence thereof. Those notes extended over a long period of timé, but they and the mortgage executed to secure them contain what is ordinarily known as “precipitating” clauses through and by which the owner of them may declare all of them due upon default of payment of any of them or any installment of interest. On January 1,1920, Nantz sold his one-half undivided interest in all the tract to his co-owner, W. O. Barr, in consideration of the latter assuming the debt due to the bank, and the further payment to Nantz of $10,000, evidenced by ten notes of $1,000 each, and with a second lien on the entire tract to secure them. Barr paid two of them, leaving the other eight unpaid, and on January 3, 1922, Barr sold to Nantz by written contract to convey (usually designated as a title bond) 40 acres of the tract in consideration of the cancellation by the vendee of the eight notes held by him against the vendor, and which cancellation was then and there made and Nantz was put in possession of the 40 acres contracted to be conveyed to him by Barr.

In the written contract, and as a part of its terms, the latter agreed with Nantz to remove the lien of the bank from the 40 acres so agreed to be sold, and to shift it to the remaining 100 acres, and which, of course, was to be accomplished, either by paying that debt or reducing it to such an amount as that the bank would agree to release its lien on the 40 acres and look only to the remaining 100 acres, or in such other manner or fashion as he saw proper to employ. That agreement, of course, was not binding on the bank, but was obligatory as between the two contracting parties, Barr and Nantz, or any acquirer of subsequent rights through either. The contract between those two also required the release of the lien from the 40 acres to be made within two years from the date of the contract, but it was not so done, and on April 29, 1925, appellant and defendant below, Mrs. William Calhoun, loaned to Barr $10,000’, evidenced by his note and secured by a second mortgage on only the . 100 acres retained by him after deducting the 40 acres agreed to be sold to Nantz. In that mortgage to appel *462 lant there was inserted this written exception: “There is excepted from the above-described tract of land (the whole tract of 140 acres) a tract containing 40 acres sold by the said W. 0. Barr and Ora L. Barr (his wife) to Gr. H. Nantz, by bond dated January 3, 1922, and leaving in the tract hereby mortgaged one hundred acres more or less. The tract sold to the said Gr. H. Nantz is described as follows,” etc.

It is therefore clear that appellant, when she made the loan and took her mortgage, possessed actual knowledge of the title bond previously executed to Nantz for the purchase of the 40 acres, and, having such knowledge, she must also be charged with the contents of that writing (Virginia Iron Coal Co. v. Combs, 186 Ky. 261, 216 S. W. 846), and because thereof it is expressly stipulated by the parties in this cause that she actually did possess knowledge of such contents. Matters ran along with Barr defaulting in his payments to the bank, and on December 3, 1927, it filed this equity action against him in the Daviess circuit court to recover judgment for the balance of its debt, amounting to $8,855.32, with interest, and for a foreclosure of its lien on the entire 140 acres, and Nantz and appellant, Mrs. Calhoun, were made parties to or came into the cause and set up their respective claims. Upon final submission the court rendered personal judgment against Barr in favor of the bank for the balance of its debt, interest, and costs, and in favor of appellant against him for her debt, interest, and cost and directed that so much of the 100-acre tract as was necessary to satisfy the judgment in favor of the bank be first sold by the master commissioner and the proceeds applied to the payment of its judgment and that appellant’s lien attached only to the surplus of that tract that was not soid, if any, or to the surplus proceeds of the sale of all of it, if all of it should be sold over and above an amount sufficient to satisfy the debt of the bank. It was further adjudged that, if the 100 acres did not bring enough to satisfy the bank’s debt, then enough of the 40 acres should be sold for that purpose, and appellant was adjudged no interest in the latter tract.

From that judgment appellant appeals and through her counsel insists here, as he also did in the court below, that the well-established equitable doctrine of “marshaling of assets” has no application to the facts of the case, because the rights of more than two creditors are involved, and which is the only situation, as he con *463 tends, for the application of that doctrine. On the contrary, he argues with much force that under the minority rule, as applied by this court in the recent case of Bronaugh v. Burley Tobacco Company, 212 Ky. 680, 230 S. W. 97, and other cases referred to in that opinion, his client was entitled to a judgment directing a sale of the two tracts, i. e., the 100 acres and the 40 acres, separately, and that the bank should be required to make its debt pro rata with appellant out of the separate proceeds of the two tracts, and that what was left of the proceeds of the 100-acre tract after both debts were so prorated should be paid to her, and what was left of the proceeds of the 40-acre tract should be adjudged and paid to Nantz. The court, however, as we have seen, adopted the insistence of learned counsel for Nantz to the effect that under the facts of this case his client was entitled to have the proceeds of the 100 acres mortgaged to appellant first applied to the existinguishment of the bank’s debt, and that appellant would then be entitled to the excess proceeds, if any, but in no event was she entitled to require or demand a sale of the 40 acres agreed to be purchased by him, although the bank would have such right as against Nantz if the 100 acres did not bring enough to pay its debt. •

The Bronaugh case, which is the chief one relied on by learned counsel for appellant, discussed the doctrine of marshaling of assets, although there were involved the rights of more than two successive creditors, and in the opinion therein, and also in the citations therein referred to, as well as the text in 18 B. C. L. 456, sec. 4, and 38 C. J. 1366, sec. 3, it is pointed out that the marshaling-doctrine emanates only from a promulgated equity rule for the accomplishment of substantial justice where the-existing conditions call for its application for that purpose, and it does not arise to the dignity of a lien, nor to-the level of contract acquired rights. Neither may the one entitled to invoke it thereby displace or to any extent impair a prior acquired lien, or contract right, so as to deprive such prio-r possessors of any of their rights under their contracts. 38 C.-J. 1367,1368, secs. 5, 6, and 18 B. C. L. 456, sec. 3.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 S.W.2d 72, 230 Ky. 460, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/calhoun-v-federal-land-bank-kyctapphigh-1929.