Gaines v. Hill

144 S.W. 92, 147 Ky. 445, 1912 Ky. LEXIS 265
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMarch 8, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 144 S.W. 92 (Gaines v. Hill) 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
Gaines v. Hill, 144 S.W. 92, 147 Ky. 445, 1912 Ky. LEXIS 265 (Ky. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

William; Rogers Clay, Commissioner —

Reversing.

On April 14,1893, W. T. Gaines borrowed of tbe Ohio Valley Banking & Trust Company tbe sum of $1,150, for wbicb be executed and delivered bis two promissory notes, one for $400, payable in four months, and one for $750, payable in twelve months from date. To secure the payment of tbe notes, W. T. Gaines and his wife, Mary Gaines, tbe mother of appellants, Morris and Sarah Gaines, mortgaged to tbe Ohio Valley Banking & Trust Company three lots of ground in Henderson, Kentucky. Two of these lots belonged to W. T. Gaines, while the third belonged to Mary Gaines, it having been conveyed to her by Alexander Rankin and wife by deed dated December 1, 1885, and recorded in Deed Book No. 11, page 250, Henderson County Clerk’s office.

[446]*446On August 27, 1896, W. T. Gaines executed to appellee, Eli Hill, a mortgage on his individual property theretofore mortgaged to the Ohio Valley Banking & Trust Company, to secure Hill as surety in two notes to the Henderson Trust Company, of Henderson, Kentucky.

On April 22, 1897, the Ohio Valley Banking & Trust Company brought suit to enforce its mortgage lien, and to subject the mortgaged property to the payment of the two notes executed to it by W. T. Gaines.

In December, 1899, appellee, Eli Hill, alleging that he had paid the indebtedness for which he was surety, brought suit to recover a personal judgment against W. T. Gaines, and to enforce his mortgage lien.

These actions were brought during the lifetime of Mary Gaines, and were afterwards consolidated. On February 26, 1898, and after the death of Mary Gaines, the Ohio Valley Banking & Trust Company, amended its petition, and set forth the death of Mary Gaines and the names of her surviving children, to-wit, Morris C. Gaines, Sarah Gaines, William Gaines, Harris Gaines, Mamie Gaines and Virginia Gaines, all infants, who were thereafter brought before the court by proper process. At that time the ages of the children were as follows: Morris fifteen, Sarah thirteen, William eleven, Harris ten, Mamie seven and Virginia three. Prior thereto certain property belonging to'W. T. Gaines had been sold, and the greater portion of the bank’s debt was satisfied. There remained unsold the lot belonging to Mrs. Gaines and the lot involved in this controversy. On September 13, 1902, it was adjudged that there was still due the bank on its original judgment the sum of $338.58, with interest from July 23_, 1900, and costs, and that the lot belonging to Mary Gaines be sold for the payment thereof. This lot was appraised at $600. It was purchased by Thos. E. Ward, attorney for W. T. Gaines, for the latter, but he having declined to pay for it, it was turned over to the bank.

As a defense to the suit of Eli Hill, W. T. Gaines pleaded a discharge in bankruptcy. Hill charged fraud on the part of Gaines. This contention was sustained, and on January 29, 1904, personal judgment was rendered in favor of Hill. Subsequently it was found that one lot belonging to W. T. Gaines, remained unsold, and the court ordered a .sale of this lot to satisfy Hill’s judgment. The lot was sold, and appellee Hill became the [447]*447purchaser at the price of $510. To this branch of the case the infant children of Mary Gaines were not parties, as their father who was alive was sole owner of the property mortgaged to Hill. After the sale, however, appellants, Morris and Sarah Gaines, filed their petition, asking to be made parties, and that it be taken as an answer, counterclaim and cross-petition against appellee Hill. In addition' to the foregoing facts, the petition alleges that appellants, as children of thetir mother, succeeded to two-sixths interest in their mother’s property on her death, subject to their father’s right of courtesy; that the lot in controversy having been sold to pay their father’s debt, they were entitled to be subrogated to the rights of the bank in the remaining lot owned by their father, and to have the lot -sold to repay them for their lot sold to satisfy his debt. Appellee filed an answer admitting practically all the allegations of the petition, but denied that the debt to the Ohio Yalley Banking & Trust Company was the debt of W. T. Gaines, and alleged that the money was borrowed for the benefit of appellants ’ mother, Mary Gaines. This latter allegation was denied by reply. Upon submission of the case, judgment was entered dismissing appellants’ petition, and confirming the commissioner’s report of sale. From that judgment this appeal is prosecuted.

As the two notes executed to the Ohio Yalley Banking & Trust Company and the mortgage by which they are secured- show that the money was borrowed by W. T. Gaines, we must hold in the absence of evidence to the contrary that the debt was his, and that Mary Gaines, his wife, mortgaged her property merely to secure his debt. With this question eliminated, we have the following case: W. T. Gaines borrowed from the bank $1,150. To secure this indebtedness, he and his wife mortgaged not only his but her property. Her property being pledged as security for-his debt, she, though incurring no personal liability, was in effect his surety to the extent of the property so mortgaged. The mortgage to the bank was duly recorded. Subsequently appellee-Hill took a mortgage from W. T. Gaines in which 1he latter’s wife did not join, covering only W. T. Gaines’ individual property embraced in the mortgage to the bank. Pending the proceedings by the mortgagees to enforce their liens, Mary Gaines, the mother of appellants, died. She [448]*448left six children, appellants and four others, all of whom were infants. Their mother’s property descended to them subject to their father’s right of curtesy. The property descending to them was subjected by the bank to the payment of their father’s debt, leaving unsubjected the lot in controversy, which belonged to their father, the principal debtor. The question is, Are they entitled to be subrogated to the rights of the bank in this lot as against appellee, the second mortgagee? For appellee it is insisted that as he had a lien on the husband’s property only, while the bank had a lien on both the husband’s and wife’s property, he could have compelled the bank, under the doctrine of marshalling, to exhaust the wife’s property before proceeding against the husband’s property. The doctrine of marshalling, however, applies where the two funds or pieces of property belong to a common debtor, and, therefore, has no application to the facts of this case. On the contrary, it is well settled that a creditor who has a claim against two debtors, one a principal and the other a surety, can not be compelled by another creditor of the principal debtor to exhaust his remedy against the surety before proceeding against the principal. (Trentman v. Eldridge, 98 Ind., 525; Garrett v. Burlington Plow Co., 70 Iowa, 697, 29 N. W., 395, 59 Am. Rep., 461; Thompson v. Spittle, 102 Mass., 207; Mason v. Hull, 55 Ohio St., 256, 45 N. E., 632; Stewart v. Stewart, 207 Pa. St., 59, 56 Atl., 323.) For a like reason a second mortgagee having a lien on a husband’s property can not require a prior mortgagee having a lien on the same property, and also on the property of the wife which was pledged merely to secure the husband’s debt, first to exhaust the wife’s property before proceeding to subject the husband’s property. In this case the bank’s mortgage was on record.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
144 S.W. 92, 147 Ky. 445, 1912 Ky. LEXIS 265, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gaines-v-hill-kyctapp-1912.