Kirkpatrick v. Work

183 So. 708, 134 Fla. 245, 1938 Fla. LEXIS 1101
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedOctober 13, 1938
StatusPublished

This text of 183 So. 708 (Kirkpatrick v. Work) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kirkpatrick v. Work, 183 So. 708, 134 Fla. 245, 1938 Fla. LEXIS 1101 (Fla. 1938).

Opinion

*246 Per Curiam.

The appeal brings for review final decree in' foreclosure proceedings.

Appellant poses six questions for our consideration, as follows:

“Where an elderly woman in poor health delivers to her son-in-law money to invest for her, leaving it entirely to his discretion as to how it shall be invested, and he thereafter has a note and first mortgage made by himself and wife to a third party, assigned to his mother-in-law, he paying the holder of the mortgage therefor, can a second mortgagee who took its mortgage with actual and constructive knowledge of the existence of the first mortgage successfully contend that the first mortgage was cancelled as to it by reason of the payment by the fnortgagors to the holder of the mortgage, where the property covered by the mortgage is the constitutional homestead of the mortgagors?”

Question No. 2: “Where a husband and wife give a mortgage on their constitutional homestead to a bank to secure the indebtedness' of the husband, reciting in the mortgage that it is subject to a prior mortgage, and the husband pays certain amounts to the holder of the prior mortgage, instructing the holder not to credit the same on the mortgage indebtedness, and, upon payment of the entire amount, takes an assignment to another debtor, of his, can the holder of the second mortgage have such mortgage declared a, first mortgage by reason of the payments made?”

Question No. 3: “If a mingled fund is reduced to a sum below the amount of a trust fund, can the trustee subsequently add sums to the fund from other sources with the intent of restoring said trust fund and thereby make the same whole?”

Question No. 4: “Is the burden of proving the allegations of fraud, upon which the complainant bases his right *247 to relief,-upon saiid complainant, and will fraud be presumed or must it be proved?”

Question No. 5 : “Does not the evidence adduced in this case and set forth in the Bill of Exceptions show that the money paid by the appellee, C. W. Cobb, to the holder of the first mortgage on his homestead, was money belonging to his mother-in-law, the appellant to whom the mortgage was assigned ?”

Question No. 6: “Even if the holding of the lower court in this case to the effect that the bank’s mortgage was prior in dignity to the mortgage held by Mrs. Kirkpatrick, was it not error to dismiss the suit as to Mrs. Kirkpatrick where both the mortgagors admit that her mortgage was in full force and effect?”

The _ appellee, not being satisfied with the questions as stated by appellant, says there is presented here one main question, as follows:

“Where 'a mother-in-law delivers- to her son-in-law in whose home she lives as a member of his family, a sum of money which he deposits in his personal bank account and promptly checks out for his own purposes and later, after the account has been overdrawn for a long time, pays off two mortgages on his home from funds of his own, most of which he has deposited in the same bank account, and one of the mortgages is paid in small installments over a period of years, and he causes assignments of the two mortgages when fully paid to be made to his mother-in-law, which assignments he keeps in his own possession for a long time and withholds one assignment from record • for several years and the other assignment is of only part of the mortgage indebtedness and is made at the time of the last payment on the indebtedness, is the Chancellor justified in holding that such mortgages are discharged as against a third mortgage on the same property, notwithstanding the *248 assertion by the sori-in-law that his mother-in-law had delivered said money to him for investment for her and that he had invested it for her in said two mortgages ?”

And one subsidiary question, as follows:

“If the Chancellor has correctly held in a proceeding to foreclose a mortgage that two other mortgages sought to be foreclosed by cross bill have been paid by the mortgagor with his own funds and discharged, and it appears in addition that the property involved was worth less than amount of the decree upon the mortgage held under the main bill to be a first lien, would the Chancellor be justified in dismissing the cross bill without prejudice to cross-complainant’s rights against the mortgagor?”

The history of the case may be succinctly stated as follows : This is a suit for the foreclosure of a mortgage given by C. W. Cobb and his wife to the First National Éank of Milton upon his homestead in the town of Milton, securing a principal indebtedness of $4600.00. While the mortgage foreclosed was made in 1933, it was a renewal of a mortgage between the same parties upon the same property and securing the same indebtedness, which had been made in October, 1927.

Mrs. E. M. Kirkpatrick, the appellant, was made a party defendant to the foreclosure because she was the apparent record owner of two other mortgages upon the same property, each given by C. W. Cobb and wife to Mrs. E. M. Golson, one for $600.00, dated June 9, 1925, and the other originally for $2800.00, dated December 19, 1923. The bill alleges that the mortgage sought to be foreclosed (which we shall call the bank’s mortgage) was a first lien on the land covered by it, that the two mortgages to Mrs. E. M. Golson had been discharged by payment, and that the purported assignments of them to Mrs. E. M. Kirkpatrick as shown by the record were in fraud of the rights of the bank *249 and were void. By her answer Mrs. Kirkpatrick asserted that she held the two Golson mortgages undischarged and that their liens were prior to the lien of the bank’s mortgage. By cross-bill she sought to foreclose these two mortgages. Mrs. Kirkpatrick, the appellant, is the mother-in-law of the defendant, C. W. Cobb, and has lived in his home, which is the land under foreclosure, since about 1925. In 1929 she had $2100.00 on deposit as a savings account in The First National Bank of Milton, of which bank C. W. Cobb was then and remained until 1933, the cashier. On October 4, 1929, Mrs. Kirkpatrick delivered this money to her son-in-law, the defendant, C. W. Cobb, by' a check on her savings account and on the same day Cobb deposited’it in his personal checking account in the same bank. During all of the transactions involved in this case, this was Cobb’s only bank account except a small inactive one in Pensacola which was closed in 1930. Kenneth Kirkpatrick, a son of Mrs. E. M. Kirkpatrick; testified that he had recommended that his mother place this fund in Cobb’s hands for investment and Cobb testified that she delivered it to him for that purpose. Cobb’s bank account was overdrawn when he made this deposit in it. He immediately began to use this money for his own purposes by drawing checks on this account, and within thirty days after the deposit all of it was withdrawn and the account was left overdrawn in a substantial amount. He continued to use his bank account in the ordinary way, making deposits and withdrawals from time to time until the bank closed in March, 1933; but’the account was overdrawn during the greater part of the time, sometimes for months at a time and usually in large amounts'. He kept no record of Mrs.

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183 So. 708, 134 Fla. 245, 1938 Fla. LEXIS 1101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kirkpatrick-v-work-fla-1938.