Kollmann v. Latonia Deposit Bank & Trust Co.

121 S.W.2d 721, 275 Ky. 347, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 429
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedNovember 11, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 121 S.W.2d 721 (Kollmann v. Latonia Deposit Bank & Trust 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
Kollmann v. Latonia Deposit Bank & Trust Co., 121 S.W.2d 721, 275 Ky. 347, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 429 (Ky. 1938).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas

Reversing.

On August 25, 1928, appellants, Henry Kollmann and wife, Josephine Kollmann, entered into a contract with W. R. Davis and H. B. Salter, a promoting partnership doing business under the name of “Harmony Development Company,” by which Kollmann and wife agreed to convey to the partnership or its members certain described suburban land to the City of Covington, for the consideration of $22,200, $200 of which was then paid, and $7,200 was agreed to be paid when conveyance was made pursuant to that contract. The balance of the *349 consideration was divided into notes of equal amounts, due in one, two and three years from the date of the execution of the future deed.

About a month thereafter, Davis and Salter took into their partnership Dr. R. Lee Bird, who was then and had been for sometime prior thereto president of the Latonia Deposit Bank and Trust Company. The partnership contract by which Bird was taken into the firm was in writing, and it contemplated the admission of Bird as an equal partner in the development of the lands proposed to be conveyed by Kollmann and wife under their contract with Davis and Salter of August 25, 1928.

On October 4, 1928, following the agreement to convey, the parties met in the law office of Omer C. Stubbs, an attorney in Covington, for the purpose of carrying into execution the prior agreement, except Dr. Bird was not then present, but he was represented by his other two partners. On that occasion and at that meeting, not only were the notes executed pursuant to the prior agreement, but two other writings were also prepared, one a deed from Kollmann and wife to appellee “Latonia Deposit Bank and Trust Company, Trustee” (our italics), and another one defining the terms of the trust created by that deed, which latter we will refer to in this opinion as the “trust agreement.”

The deed stated as a consideration therefor the sum of “one ($1.00) dollar and other good and valuable considerations,” but no mention was made therein of the terms of the trust, or the power and authority to be exercised by the trustee. The notes executed simultaneously with the deed were signed by the three partners in the partnership, although it appears that Dr. Bird was then absent, and, of course, he signed them at a later date. The trust agreement was signed by Davis and Salter, as well as Kollmann and his wife, on the date it bears — corresponding with the dates of the notes and the date of the deed to the bank — with indicated blank lines for its signature by Dr. Bird, the other partner, and by the trustee named in the deed. But it seems that Dr. Bird never signed it, nor did he procure his bank to sign it. At the time the agreement to convey was executed by Kollmann and wife, the partners paid to them the $200 provided for in that agreement, and on October 4, when the deed, the trust agreement and the notes *350 were executed, they paid to the Kollmanns the balance of the cash consideration, amounting to $7,200.

The trust agreement so prepared and signed — as well as so unsigned — set forth the terms of the trust, a part of which says: “That the Third Party, as Trustee, shall under the trust deed hereinbefore referred to, sell and dispose of the whole or any part or parts of said property, for the amounts and upon the terms agreed upon by Second Parties (the partners) and in so doing shall execute and deliver as Trustee, good and sufficient deeds of special warranty, and shall retain out of the sums received, sufficient amounts to pay off the promissory notes of Second Parties (to the Kollmanns who were the first parties) as same shall fall due, or to pay off said notes before maturity if so directed by Second Parties.” (Our emphasis.)

Further provisions with reference to the duties of the trustee, as such, prescribed for its paying the taxes upon the property, and that when the obligations of the partnership to the Kollmanns should all be paid, then the trustee, at the election of the members of the partnership, might continue to hold the title and sell what portion of the land remained unsold, or reconvey it to the members of the partnership.

Following the date of the notes — the deed and the trust agreement, in its unfinished condition — and after the papers had all been delivered to the proper parties, development proceedings were begun by the partnership platting the ground conveyed by the trust deed, and by improving the lots into which the land had been divided in the way of building streets, sidewalks, and the construction of sewers.

The members of the partnership were not possessed of sufficient funds for that purpose, and it seems that a doubt arose between the members of the partnership and the trustee as to whether the latter could advance the necessary funds to make such improvements and obtain a lien upon the land superior to that of the Kollmanns to secure the amounts thereof, if made. Consequently, the members of the partnership (including Dr. Bird, who was president of the bank) applied to Mr. Stubbs, who had drawn all of the former papers, and he informed them, in substance, that the trust agreement— in which he had expressed the intention of the parties *351 as told to him at the time he prepared it — forbid the bank to obtain a superior lien over that of the Kollmanns in satisfaction of their unpaid notes.

They then had Mr. Stubbs to prepare (on several different occasions) substitute trust agreements, whereby the clause in the one signed by the Kollmanns, saying, “and shall retain out of the sums received, sufficient amounts to pay off the promissory notes of second parties (meaning members of the partnership who had executed the notes) as same shall fall due, or to pay off said notes before maturity if so directed by second parties, ” was cancelled and eliminated as a part of the terms of the trust. But no one subscribed any such substituted agreements, nor Avere they ever presented to appellants, nor did they ever have any knowledge of any such efforts to make the change in the original trust agreement as signed by them on October 4, 1928 and by Dams and Salter.

However, on December 7, 1928 — in the absence of either appellant or a representative of either — an agreement was prepared by Davis, Salter and Bird, of the first part, and the trustee, Latonia Deposit Bank and Trust Company, of the second part, whereby they agreed to “cut the melon” put into their hands by appellants under the trust deed of October 4, 1928, and to divide it largely between the partnership on the one hand, and the trustee on the other — and all Avithout the knowledge or consent of either of the Kollmanns, or anyone representing them. That agreement prescribed for the members of the partnership to handle the sales of lots as a part of the subdivision project, and which was to be done according “to sales contract to be agreed upon and to become a part of this agreement.” It was then provided therein that the trustee should collect the purchase price of the lots, and pay the members of the partnership 25% thereof; that it should finance the improvement of the lots, and out of the remaining 75% of the proceeds of sales, the trustee might retain 4% for its services as trustee.

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Bluebook (online)
121 S.W.2d 721, 275 Ky. 347, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 429, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kollmann-v-latonia-deposit-bank-trust-co-kyctapphigh-1938.