Fidelity & Deposit Co. v. Vance

1926 OK 122, 245 P. 578, 135 Okla. 24, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 703
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 9, 1926
Docket16105
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1926 OK 122 (Fidelity & Deposit Co. v. Vance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fidelity & Deposit Co. v. Vance, 1926 OK 122, 245 P. 578, 135 Okla. 24, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 703 (Okla. 1926).

Opinion

ESTES, C.

A. B. Vance and wife owned jointly a certain parcel of rgal estate in Military Park addition to Oklahoma City, subject to a valid mortgage thereon in favor of one Raemer for $2,000, and a valid lien for $127.24, in favor of a brick company for materials furnished. Vance, without being joined by his wife, executed a mortgage on the parcel of land to plaintiff in error, Fidelity & Deposit Company of Maryland, to secure $3,411.82, which he owed said surety company, this mortgage being duly filed for record, but not at the times herein referred to, being numerically indexed in the proper record, said mortgage covering-only his one-half interest in such parcel of real estate. Prior to the beginning of this litigation, and subsequent to the filing of the said surety company’s mortgage, Vance and his wife sold such parcel of real estate to defendants in error, Anna M. and Ed H. Kunz, wife and husband, conveying the title thereto to said wife. As a part of the same transaction, the Kunzes arranged with defendant in error Local Building & Loan Association to procure a loan of $2,-000, with the proceeds of which, and their own funds, they paid the Raemer mortgage and the lien for material and the balance of the purchase price, $3,700, to the creditors of Vance, the assumption of the. Raemer mortgage and said lien being a part of said' purchase price. The Vances furnished to the Kunzes an abstract of title, which was, by the latter, turned over to the attorneys for said loan company. In making said bargain, the Vances had represented to the Kunzes that there were no liens on such real estate, except said Raemer mortgage and lien for material. The abstract so showed, and the attorneys for the loan company rendered a written opinion to their company and to the Kunzes accordingly. The mortgage to the surety company was not shown in the abstract for the reason that same did not appear in the numerical index. Neither *25 the Kunzes nor the. loan company had any actual knowledge thereof, but under the statutes of this state they did have constructive notice because the surety company's mortgage was duly filed with the proper officer for record. Accordingly, the loan company advanced the new loan, the Kunzes paid the Itaemer mortgage, and the lien for material, procuring discharges of both by the proper recorded releases, accepted and recorded the deed to Mrs. Kunz from the Vances, and the loan company recorded its mortgage given to it by the Kunzes. It is unnecessary to relate the circumstances by which defendant in error, Lackey, initiated this action for foreclosure on other property and the issues not here involved, and in which the parties to this appeal were made defendants or brought into court. The issues joined by the parties to this appeal appear from the respective contentions and the findings of the court herein set out.

. In this action to foreclose, the Kunzes and the loan company pleaded and relied upon fraud and mutual mistake of fact, in that the Vances had orally and also by said abstract represented that there were no liens on said property, except said Itaemer mortgage and lien for material, and that they' had no actual knowledge of the surety company’s mortgage which was filed. The court found that the Itaemer mortgage and the lien for material should be revived in favor of Mrs. Kunz, as equitable, assignee thereof, and thus made prior to the mortgage of the bonding company, basing such conclusion on the proposition that the surety company would not sustain any injury or change in its pecuniary position occupied by it prior to such release of the Itaemer mortgage and said lien. Accordingly, the court decreed a lien on the one-half interest of Vance in the realty to the surety company under its mortgage for $3,411.82, but subject and junior to the prior lien of the Kunzes on such one-half interest to secure $1,013.62, being one-half of their payments in discharging the Itaemer mortgage and said lien. Accordingly, also, the decree validated the mortgage of the loan company as a first lien on the entire property, there being no question about its priority as to one-half thereof which had not been mortgaged to the surety company. The surety company appeals.

Did the court err in decreeing such re-vivor and subrogation in favor of the ICunzes?

1. In Kahn v. McConnell et al., 37 Okla. 210, 131 Pac. 682, it is held:

“When the vendee, in payment of the purchase price of real estate, pays indebtedness secured by a first mortgage, he is not subro-gated to the lien of that mortgage as against a second mortgagee whose mortgage is duly recorded at the time of the purchase.”

In the opinion it is said:

“The fact that he assumed the indebtedness to the bank and paid it did not give him the right of subrogation. In the matter of that payment, he was a volunteer. He Was under no duty to buy the land. He was under no duty to pay the first mortgage. 1-Ie was negligent in doing so without examining the records, and cannot escape the consequence of his own negligence by an appeal to the equitable doctrine of sub-rogation.”

The opinion also quotes with approval the following from the Iowa court (Stastny v. Pease, 100 N. W. 482) :

“The purchaser of real property has constructive notice of an existing judgment lic-n; and, where, by agreement with his grantor he discharges prior liens in part judgment of the purchase price, the judgment becomes a first lien upon the property, and neither the doctrine of equitable assignment nor subrogation applies.”

Numerous authorities are cited thereto. In Kiniry v. Davis et al., 82 Okla. 211, 200 Pac. 439, the following from the New York Court is quoted with approval:

“ ‘It is only in cases where the person advancing money to pay the debt of a third person stands in the situation of a surety or is compelled to pay it to protect his own rights, that a court of' equity substitutes him in the place of tils’ creditor, as a matter of course, without any argeement to that effect. In other cases, the demand of a creditor which is paid with the money of a third person and without any agreement that the security shall be assigned or kept on foot for the benefit of such third person, is absolutely extinguished.’ See Downer v. Miller, 15 Wis. 612.”

The Kahn Case, supra, has been followed in Owen v. Interstate Mortgage Trust Co., 88 Okla. 10, 211 Pac. 87, and in other decisions of this court.

2, 3. It thus appears that this court is committed to the doctrine shown in the body of the opinion quoted above from the Kahn Case, that the vendee who assumes an incumbrance on real estate and pays the same, being under no duty to buy rhe land, is a volunteer and is not entitled to subrogation to the extent of such payment against a junior mortgagee of whose lien such vendee has constructive, though not actual, notice at the time of payment. A *26 sequent of this rule is that, although the vendor induces the sale by the fraudulent misrepresentation that no such junior mortgage existed, such junior mortgagee not being a party to such fraud does not, in equity, remove the bar to such vendee’s right to subrogation.

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Bluebook (online)
1926 OK 122, 245 P. 578, 135 Okla. 24, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 703, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fidelity-deposit-co-v-vance-okla-1926.