Dempsey v. Merchants National Bank

729 S.W.2d 150, 292 Ark. 207, 1987 Ark. LEXIS 2110
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 18, 1987
Docket86-208
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 729 S.W.2d 150 (Dempsey v. Merchants National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dempsey v. Merchants National Bank, 729 S.W.2d 150, 292 Ark. 207, 1987 Ark. LEXIS 2110 (Ark. 1987).

Opinions

Darrell Hickman, Justice.

This case presents a question of priority between a materialman’s lien and a mortgage. The mortgage was filed before work commenced on the building site, but it was filed on the wrong property. A corrected deed and mortgage were later filed on the right property. The trial judge held the mortgage had priority. We disagree and reverse the decree.

The facts are that the landowners, Pat and Charlotte McGowan, obtained a deed to a small tract of land in Fort Smith containing .23 acres and recorded it on May 24, 1984. A construction money mortgage was filed the same day. The McGowans intended to build a duplex on the property. However, the deed and mortgage described the wrong property. The tract they intended to buy was actually located 260.2 feet west of the tract described in the deed and mortgage. Both tracts described were located on a larger parcel of land being developed called the Georgetown Park Condominium Project. Work was commenced on the tract in question on May 29, 1984. The land description error was discovered, and a new deed and mortgage were prepared and filed for record on July 16, 1984. These documents described the intended tract and the place where work had commenced. The owners went bankrupt. Suits were filed to foreclose the mortgage and foreclose the materialmen’s liens. All claims were consolidated in this case.

The question is: who comes first, the materialmen or the mortgagee? The chancellor held the mortgagee, Merchants National Bank of Fort Smith, had priority over the materialmen. Only one materialman appeals, the J & J Plumbing Company. The chancellor should have held the plumbing company had priority, and the decree is accordingly reversed. Because of our decision on priority, we do not reach the question of the language of the construction money mortgage. Other questions raised will be answered after our discussion of the priority question.

Priority is generally determined by the maxim “prior in time, prior in right.” Comment, Priority of Liens on Real Property in Arkansas: Mortgages, and Mechanics’ and Materialmen’s Liens, 12 Ark. L. Rev. 170 (1958). The rights of a materialman are set by statute. Ark. Stat. Ann. §§ 51-601—51-642 (Repl. 1971). This being a case of new construction, any lien a materialman has relates back to the time when work commences. Wiggins v. Searcy Fed. S & L, 253 Ark. 407, 486 S.W.2d 900 (1972). Consequently, such a lien takes priority over any claims perfected after that time. It is settled law that a mortgage filed after work commences will be subordinate to any liens based on the commenced work. Dempsey v. McGowan, 291 Ark. 147, 722 S.W.2d 848 (1987); Lyman Lamb Co. v. Union Bank of Benton, 237 Ark. 629, 374 S.W.2d 820 (1964); Planters Lumber Co. v. Jack Collier East Co., 234 Ark. 1091, 356 S.W.2d 631 (1962). A mortgage becomes a lien at the time it is recorded and not before. Comment, 12 Ark. L. Rev. 170 supra.

It was undisputed that the owners and the mortgagee made a mutual mistake in describing the property in the first instruments. The property the McGowans bought and mortgaged was correctly described in the second instruments.

It was stipulated that the appellant materialman did not know of the first mortgage for this construction. In other words the appellant materialman had no actual notice of the mortgage. In such a case, according to American Jurisprudence, the materialman’s lien has priority. That treatise reads:

Where a mortgage, by mutual mistake, is made on a different tract of land from that intended, and subsequently an improvement is made on the land intended to be mortgaged without notice of the intended mortgage thereon, a lien for the improvement takes priority. 53 Am. Jur. 2d, Mechanics’ Liens, § 274.

This statement is based on the case of Gaines v. Childers, 38 Or. 200, 63 P. 487 (1901), which has similar facts to the case before us. In Gaines the mortgage was filed on the wrong property. Work commenced and eventually a materialman’s lien was perfected on the property intended to be mortgaged. The materialman was successful in its foreclosure suit. A year later, the mortgagee filed suit to reform the mortgage so it would apply to the land intended. Foreclosure of the mortgage was sought as well as a ruling that the mortgagee had priority over the rights acquired by the materialman. The court held the materialman’s lien had priority.

Some assistance in answering the question can be gained from examining cases involving mortgages with “after acquired property” clauses; that is, mortgages which provide they will also cover any property a mortgagor later acquires. Do such mortgages on the newly acquired property relate back to the time the mortgages were executed and filed, or merely become effective against third persons on the date the new property is acquired? What about existing liens? In U.S. v. Westmoreland Manganese Corp., 134 F. Supp. 898 (E.D. Ark. 1955), the court said:

There can be no question that, as a general rule, in cases of mortgages containing after acquired property clauses the liens of such mortgages attach to after acquired property at the time that title thereto vests in the mortgagor; where, however, if the property at the time it comes into the possession or ownership of the mortgagor is burdened with a mechanics or miners’ lien, that lien takes priority over the mortgage lien, although actually subsequent thereto in point of time.

The appellee concedes in this case that the second mortgage cannot relate back to the time the first mortgage was filed, and no effort was made to reform the mortgage.

The appellee makes two central arguments for priority of its mortgage. First, it argues that the materialman’s lien could not attach when work commenced because the McGowans did not have title to the land until the correction deed and mortgage were filed on July 16,1984. Their argument is that Donoho Properties Limited Partnership, the grantor in the two deeds, owned the land at the time work commenced. As authority for the proposition that a materialman’s lien cannot attach unless the owner of the land contracts for the work, Sebastian Bldg. & Loan Assn. v. Minten, 181 Ark. 700, 27 S.W.2d 1011 (1930), and Katterjohn Concrete Products v. Coffman, 264 Ark. 503, 573 S.W.2d 306 (1978), are cited. Neither case is controlling. In Sebastian Bldg., the “owner” of the land simply had an unenforceable oral contract to buy it when work commenced. In Katterjohn the facts were undisputed. First, a mortgage was filed by the bank. Second, the work was commenced. Third, the deed was filed. We upheld the trial court’s decision that the mortgage had priority for two reasons: the law of after-acquired title applied; that is, title later acquired related back to the time the mortgage was filed, and the owner had no title when work commenced.

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Bluebook (online)
729 S.W.2d 150, 292 Ark. 207, 1987 Ark. LEXIS 2110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dempsey-v-merchants-national-bank-ark-1987.