Louisville Joint Stock Land Bank v. McNeely

102 S.W.2d 389, 267 Ky. 425, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 338
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedFebruary 26, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 102 S.W.2d 389 (Louisville Joint Stock Land Bank v. McNeely) 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
Louisville Joint Stock Land Bank v. McNeely, 102 S.W.2d 389, 267 Ky. 425, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 338 (Ky. 1937).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Chief Justice Ratliff—

Affirming.

In July, 1916, H. B. McChesney executed his note to S. _ M. Williamson & Co., Inc., of Memphis, Tenn. (hereinafter called' Williamson & Co.) for $1,600 and to secure the payment of same he executed a mortgage on four certain tracts of land located in Caldwell county, Ky. In March, 1922, McChesney executed his note to E. L. McNeely for $416 and to secure the payment of it he executed a mortgage on the same real estate. In October, 1922, McChesney obtained a loan from the appellant, Louisville Joint Stock Land Bank (hereinafter called the Bank) for $2,600, and to secure this loan he executed to the Bank a mortgage on the same real estate. At the time McChesney obtained the loan from the Bank the Williamson & Co. note had been reduced by McChesney to $1,375.74, which sum was paid to Williamson & Co. by the attorneys or representatives of the Bank out of the proceeds of the loan from the Bank to McChesney and the Williamson & Co. lien was released. After the payment of other small debts listed *427 by McChesney in his written application to the Bank for the loan, there was left the sum of $834.38, which was paid to McChesney, but no part of McNeely’s debt, was paid.

It appears that the $2,600 note of McChesney to the Bank was payable on the amortization plan and the-payments were made until about the year 1934 when McChesney defaulted and the Bank filed this suit in the Caldwell circuit court to recover the balance of the note- and foreclose its mortgage lien but failed to make Mc-Neely a party to the action. The Bank obtained judgment, and the land in lien was ordered sold by the court’s commissioner in satisfaction of the balance of' its debt, and the Bank purchased the land at the commissioner’s sale for the sum of $2,000. On the day the-land was sold McNeely filed his petition seeking to foreclose the mortgage he held against the land to secure the payment of his note, asserting that his lien was-prior and superior to the lien of the Bank and asked that he be adjudged priority in lien for the payment of his debt. The two actions were consolidated.

It appears that in order to get the land out of the-possession of McChesney it was agreed by the Bank and McNeely that the report of sale made by the commissioner might stand without exceptions and that the master commissioner execute a deed to the land to the Bank without prejudice to the rights of the Bank and. McNeely on any question at issue between them, and particularly without prejudice to McNeely’s lien against, the land.

The Bank filed its answer to the petition of Mc-Neely denying the allegations of it, and, by paragraph. 2 it pleaded that the alleged mortgage executed by Mc-Chesney to McNeely was never acknowledged by the grantors in the way and manner provided by law, or at all; and further, that the description of the land referred to in the mortgage “is too vague, indefinite and uncertain to enable plaintiff to identify said land and said description as contained in said mortgage is too vague, indefinite and uncertain to afford or impart constructive notice to this plaintiff of its contents, and the recording thereof gave no notice, actual or constructive, to this plaintiff of the contents of said mortgage or of the description of the lands sought to be included therein and plaintiff had no actual knowledge *428 of said mortgage and had no knowledge actual or constructive that the land described in McNeely’s mortgage was the same as that described in plaintiff’s mortgage.”

In paragraph 3 of its answer the Bank pleaded that at the time it made the loan to McChesney, Mc-Neely knew and had knowledge of the fact that it was lending its money to McChesney under the agreement and upon the sworn representations of McChesney that it was getting a first mortgage on the land and with knowledge of these facts McNeely maintained silence as to his mortgage and suffered and permitted it to make said loan to McChesney and that it was the duty of McNeely at the time to notify plaintiff of the existence of his mortgage and that by reason of his failure to do so he is estopped from claiming priority as against the mortgage of the Bank.

In paragraph 4 it pleaded that it loaned the money to McChesney for the purpose of enabling him to pay off and discharge a first lien mortgage held by Williamson & Co. and the money was so used for that purpose and by reason thereof the plaintiff is entitled to be subrogated to the rights of Williamson & Co. as against McNeely and as against him it is entitled to have its mortgage declared to be a first lien on the land described in the petition.

Subsequent pleadings were filed, the issues made and the evidence taken, and upon trial of the case the court found and adjudged, in substance, that out of the proceeds of the $2,600 loan by the Bank to Mc-Chesney the Bank paid Williamson & Co. the sum of $1,378 (the evidence of the representatives of the Bank and the exhibits filed show the exact sum to be $1,375.-74), the balance due on the date of the loan, the payment of which balance being secured by the first mortgage lien of Williamson & Co. debt of July 5, 1916, and under the law of subrogation the Bank was entitled to the benefit of the lien held by Williamson & Co. on the land, or the proceeds of the sale thereof, and that the remainder of said $2,600 loan over and above the Williamson & Co. debt represented an additional loan; nr, in other words, as to the surplus of the loan over and above the Williamson & Co. debt, the Bank occupied the position of a third lienholder, which lien was inferior to McNeely’s lien, and adjudged McNeely *429 a lien on the land or the proceeds thereof, and further-adjudged that the land be sold in satisfaction of MeNeely’s debt, interest, and costs, subject to the Williamson & Co. debt secured by the first lien, to which, the Bank was subrogated by having paid same for Williamson & Co.

It appears that at the time the Bank filed its suitMcChesney had paid to it the sum of $1,177.50, on the principal sum of the $2,600 note, which sum so paid was $198.24 short of the Williamson & Co. debt of $1,-375.74, and the court held that the sum paid on the-note, $1,177.50, should be credited on the Williamson & Co. debt secured by the first lien to which the Bank was subrogated. The Bank excepted to the judgment,, and this appeal follows.

For a reversal of the judgment it is insisted that, the court erred in adjudging McNeely any lien on the-land as against the Bank because, as alleged in its answer, (a) .the description of the land mentioned in the: mortgage was insufficient; (b) the certificate of acknowledgment of the mortgage was also insufficient? and _(c) the court erred in its application of the whole credits of the payments made by McChesney to the: Bank on the $2,600 note by crediting those payments to that part of the note representing the amount of the balance of McChesney’s debt to Williamson & Co.

(a) The description of the land in the mortgage from McChesney to McNeely is as follows:

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In re Isaacs
Sixth Circuit, 2017
In re: Steven Brockman v.
Sixth Circuit, 2011
Cit Group/Consumer Finance, In v. Beverly Burden, Trustee
318 F. App'x 354 (Sixth Circuit, 2009)
Thacker v. United Companies Lending Corp.
256 B.R. 724 (W.D. Kentucky, 2000)
Ranier v. Mount Sterling National Bank
812 S.W.2d 154 (Kentucky Supreme Court, 1991)
Title Insurance Corp. of St. Louis v. United States
432 S.W.2d 787 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1968)
Seale Motor Co. Inc. v. Stone
62 S.E.2d 824 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1950)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
102 S.W.2d 389, 267 Ky. 425, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 338, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisville-joint-stock-land-bank-v-mcneely-kyctapphigh-1937.