Gayle v. Greasy Creek Coal & Land Co.

60 S.W.2d 599, 249 Ky. 251, 1932 Ky. LEXIS 888
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMarch 8, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 60 S.W.2d 599 (Gayle v. Greasy Creek Coal & Land Co.) 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
Gayle v. Greasy Creek Coal & Land Co., 60 S.W.2d 599, 249 Ky. 251, 1932 Ky. LEXIS 888 (Ky. 1932).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Affirming.

This appeal requires a review of the judgment of the circuit court declaring and awarding to Harry E. Murdough, trustee for the use and benefit of the appel-lee Wheeler Boone, and his associates, a prior and superior lien on certain lands to the rights asserted by the appellant, June W. G-ayle.

On March 30, 1920, by a contract executed and delivered by the Greasy Creek Coal & Land Company to June W. Gayle, the Greasy Creek Coal & Land Company, for the consideration of $10,000 cash, and the further consideration of two notes of $2,000 each, due in six and twelve months thereafter, with interest from date, which were executed and delivered by Gayle to the Greasy Creek Coal & Land Company, sold and agreed to convey by deed with covenant of general warranty, to Gayle, 1,000 acres of land and certain timber standing on another tract of land. The writing was *253 not acknowledged by the G-reasy Creek Coal & Land. Company before an office authorized to take the acknowledgment of such an instrument, bnt Gayle caused the-writing to be recorded on June 20, 1930, in the office of the county clerk of the county in which the land and timber were situated. The making of the'agreement to sell and convey the land and timber and the execution and delivery of the contract were participated in by a majority of the members of the board of directors of the Greasy Creek Coal & Land Company. The attorney of the Greasy Creek Coal & Land Company prepared a deed for the corporation to execute and deliver to Gayle-in conformity to its and his contract. The deed was not signed by the corporation or any one for it. In the-latter' part of 1928, Gayle tendered $4,000 in gold as the amount of the two $2,000 notes to W. W. Estill, president of the Greasy Creek Coal & Land Company, and demanded a deed of conveyance of the property. Es-till refused to accept the tender. At the time and place of the execution and delivery of the contract between the parties, and the payment of the $10,000 by Gayle to the corporation, it is claimed by Gayle that its officers represented to him that,' if there were any failure to convey to him by a proper deed, the $10,000 would be returned to him, and that both the corporation and its officers in parol pledged themselves to fulfiill this agreement. Gayle often requested the officers to execute and deliver to him a deed according to the contract.

The corporation at,' the time of the making of the contract with Gayle was indebted to the Phoenix National Bank & Trust Company in the sum of $14,120.60, W. E. Estill, $1,606, and W. W. Estill and Lydia Alexander, H. S. Estill, and ~W: E. Estill in the sum of $5,-946.67, and the $51,000 of the corporation’s mortgage bonds were held by them as a collateral to secure their respective debts against it.

Thereafter they filed suits to sell the bonds to satisfy their respective debts. The bonds were sold by the master commissioner. When sold by him they were purchased by W. W. Estill, W. E. Estill, Howard Estill, and Lydia Alexander. They, by contract, executed and delivered to Wheeler Boone, sold and delivered to him the $51,000 of bonds and 650 shares of the capital stock of the Greasy Creek Coal & Land Company, for the sum of $22,000. The bonds were secured by a mort *254 gage on tlie property of the G-reasy Creek Coal & Land Company, including 1,000 acres and timber which the Greasy Creek Coal & Land Company sold and agreed to convey to Gayle. The Greasy Creek Coal & Land Company had authorized the issuance of 650 shares of the capital stock, of the par value of $100 per share. At the time Gayle and the Greasy Creek Coal & Land Company entered into the contract by which he purchased, and it agreed to convey to him the land and timber, he was informed that it had issued about $50,000 of its bonds, and that.the.same were secured by mortgage on the property of the corporation. At the time Boone purchased and paid for the mortgage bonds and the stock, he had knowledge of the existence of the contract between Gayle and the Greasy Creek Coal & Land Company, and its provisions. At the time of the making of the contract by Gayle and the Greasy Creek Coal & Land Company, the members of the board of directors assured Gayle that the corporation had a good title to the land. They represented to him there would be no trouble, “that the title would be made good personally by them, they would guarantee it.”

It satisfactorily appears that Gayle had such information at the time of the status of the mortgage bonds of the company as would put a reasonably prudent person on inquiry, and, if he had followed up that information, as it was his duty under the circumstances to do, the fact that the creditors of the corporation so held them as collateral security would have been disclosed fully to him. Instead of doing so, accepting his own statements, he relied on the oral assurance and willingness of the members of the board of directors to guarantee to protect him-against the bonds. Boone, by his purchase of the mortgage bonds and stock from the individual holders, did not thereby acquire title to the land which was owned by the corporation. It cannot be doubted that, if he had accepted the title to the land from the corporation, with knowledge of the existence and contents of the contract between it and Gayle, he would be estopped from asserting title thereto as an innocent purchaser, for value, without notice, as against Gayle. Jones & Co. v. Cash, 190 Ky. 97, 226 S. W. 352; Benjamin v. Dinwiddie, 226 Ky. 106, 10 S. W. (2d) 620; Roberts v. Kinnaird, 148 Ky. 75, 146 S. W. 35; Union Bank & Trust Co. v. Ponder, 220 Ky. 365, 295 S. W. 140. To properly consider and determine the equities of *255 Boone and Gayle, it is necessary to observe that this is not a contest between the holders of a junior and senior equity or title from the same vendor. Boone was the purchaser of mortgage bonds and the stock of the corporation, which had been issued by it. The bonds were secured by mortgage on the property of the corporation, including the land and timber which it thereafter sold and agreed to convey by deed to Gayle. The mortgage was recorded in the county of the residence of the corporation and in which the property of the corporation was situated, on the 29th day of October, 1910. Gayle’s contract was dated March 30, 1920. Thus it is shown that at the time he accepted the title bond, paid the $10,000 cash, and executed the $2,000 notes to the corporation, he had constructive notice of the existence and provisions of the mortgage which secured the $51,-000 bonds purchased by Boone. Supplementing this fact, according to the testimony of B. C. Ford, at the time of Gayle’s acceptance of the title bond, his payment of $10,000 and delivery of the notes, Gayle received actual knowledge that the bonds of the corporation were in the hands, of the creditors of the corporation to secure their debts against the corporation. Therefore his acceptance of the title bond was subject to the mortgage. Section 496, Ky. Stats.; Cox v. Guaranty Bank & Trust Co., 199 Ky. 115, 250 S. W. 804.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 S.W.2d 599, 249 Ky. 251, 1932 Ky. LEXIS 888, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gayle-v-greasy-creek-coal-land-co-kyctapphigh-1932.