Foor v. Mechanics Bank & Trust Co.

139 S.W. 840, 144 Ky. 682, 1911 Ky. LEXIS 693
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 5, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 139 S.W. 840 (Foor v. Mechanics Bank & Trust Co.) 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
Foor v. Mechanics Bank & Trust Co., 139 S.W. 840, 144 Ky. 682, 1911 Ky. LEXIS 693 (Ky. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Nunn

— Eeversing.

Appellant, Lula Foor owned about one hundred and eleven and three-fourths acres of land about seven miles from Owensboro, Daviess County, Kentucky. She and her husband placed mortgages on this property amounting to about $1,800. On March 10th, 1910, appellee, Mechanics Bank & Trust Company brought an action to enforce the mortgage liens. On March 8, 1910, two days prior to the institution of that action, one D. C. Benton, of Cloverport, Kentucky, prepared and signed a written proposition which he sent to J. A. Harris, a real estate agent in ‘ Owensboro, who represented both appellants and Benton, for the purchase of the land. This proposition, in so far as it applies to the question at issue, is as follows:

“March 8th, 1910.
“J. A. Harris:
“I propose and agree .to trade my property located in Cloverport, Ky., being the same property purchased of the Illinois Life Insurance Company, and more particularly described as follows: The main lot where the large house stands is 100 by 100 feet on the corner of Houston and Third streets in said town, and 20 by 20 ft. running from Third street back 200 ft. for the farm of Mrs. Lula [683]*683Foor, wife of J. M. Foor, said farm being located about two and one-half miles from Ensor, and where Mrs. Foor now lives. Being the same farm this day shown to me by yourself and Mr. Foor containing 111 3-4 acres, this includes about one acre used as private cemetery by the Oillim family. I agree to give you my property above mentioned clear of all encumbrance with a good and sufficient deed for $1,900, payable, $100 cash, and $1,800 in five equal annual installments of $360 each, due and payable on or before one, two, three, four and five years from this date with 6 per cent, interest per annum, payable semi-annually and you are to deliver to me a .good and sufficient deed clear of all encumbrance upon my delivery to you of deed to my property, $100 in cash and the five ■ notes referred1 to. ”

Lula Foor and her husband accepted this proposition in writing on the day it was made, and immediately signed a deed for the farm and tendered it to Benton, but he refused to accept it and to convey his property t.o them. Mrs. Foor and her husband then filed an action to enforce specific performance of the contract. They alleged that Benton knew of the mortgages upon the farm at the time he made the proposition; that they were ready and willing and had been at all time theretofore to comply with their part of the contract, and would remove the mortgage lien in favor of the Bank & Trust Company from the farm. The contract also provided that possession of the farm was to be given Benton within ten days from the date of the writing, and it was alleged that the farm was turned over to Benton on March 14, 1930, and he had been in the possession of the farm from that time to the date of the filing of the petition, May 25, 1910. The contract also provided that Benton was to remain in possession of the Cloverport property from that date to the end of the year, if he desired to, paying $15 a month rent, and it was alleged that Benton was in possession of both pieces of property and had paid no rent therefor. The lower court sustained a demurrer to this petition, but we do not understand why it was done. Benton’s counsel contend that the contract was within the Statutes of Frauds and Perjuries, as the property was not sufficiently described to make the contract binding, and that Benton could not have been forced to perform his part of the contract because of the mortgage liens on the farm. Counsel is in error as to the first proposition. The writ[684]*684ing gives the dimensions of the lots in Cloverport and says they are located on the corner of Houston and Third streets, and that they were purchased from the Illinois Life Insurance Company. The farm is. described as containing 111 3-4 acres which include an acre used as a private cemetery by the G-illim family, as being the farm shown to Benton by Mr. Poor and the agent, J. A. Harris, on the day the 'proposition was made, and as the place where Mrs. Lula Poor and her husband, J. M. Poor now live, that is, lived on March 8, 1910. In our opinion, the means of locating the houses and lots in Cloverport and the farm were given in the writing, that is, the writing so described the properties as to enable one to locate them without trouble. See the cases of Campbell v. Preece, 133 Ky., 572; Bates v. Harris, 144 Ky., 399, 138 S. W., 276, and Price v. Hays, opinion delivered September 26th, 1911.

With reference to the other question, Benton admits by his demurrer that he knew of the mortgage liens, on the farm when the trade was made and that he purchased it with this knowledge, but it seems to have been his understanding that appellants were to remove the mortgages. This contract required simultaneous action on the part of both parties; one was to convey property to the other and do certain other things which were required by the contract to be done at one and the same time. The demurrer admits that appellants were ready at that time to have the liens removed. The purchase money which Benton was to pay amounted to more or at least to as much as the liens. In 36 Cyc., 639, in speaking of specific performance, said:

“Mortgages or other encumbrances which can be discharged out of the purchase money do not constitute a bar to the action. ’ ’

On page 745 of the same book it is said:

“In a suit either by vendor or vendee, where the encumbrance can be discharged by mere payment thereof, and are not larger in amount than the purchase money due, the court in its decree may direct the payment of a sufficient part of the purchase money for the purpose to the holders of the encumbrances instead of to the vendor, even though such holders are not before the court.”

This action was consolidated with an action of the Bank & Trust Company to enforce the mortgage liens, [685]*685therefore, we conclude that the court erred in sustaining a demurrer to appellant’s petition.

The court rendered a judgment in favor of the Bank & Trust Company for its debt, interest and cost, and directed the commissioner to sell the farm or so much of it as was necessary to pay the Bank & Trust Company’s debt and the cost of sale. The Band & Trust Company’s debt amounted to about $1,900 at the time of the sale, and when the farm was sold it was purchased by H. A. Birkhead at that price, being the only bid made. Appellants ask that the sale be not confirmed for several reasons, but we need to mention but one. Appellants claim they were prevented from being at the sale and bidding the property in for their protection, by casualty, misfortune and inadvertance. The testimony shows that Mrs. and Mr. Foor were in town on-the day of the sale; that just before the sale Mr. Foor asked the commissioner who was to make the sale, at what time he would begin and he told him at about eleven o ’clock. He then asked him how much time he would be given within which to execute the bond, but the commissioner did not answer, but referred him to the attorney, Mr. Iglehart, and he asked him the same question and received as an answer that he would not be given five minutes. Mr. Foor then went immediately to J. A. Bell’s office just across the street from the court house, and got him to agree to go on his bond.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
139 S.W. 840, 144 Ky. 682, 1911 Ky. LEXIS 693, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/foor-v-mechanics-bank-trust-co-kyctapp-1911.