Mayfield Water & Light Co. v. Graves County Banking & Trust Co.

185 S.W. 485, 170 Ky. 56, 1916 Ky. LEXIS 11
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 9, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 185 S.W. 485 (Mayfield Water & Light Co. v. Graves County Banking & Trust Co.) 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
Mayfield Water & Light Co. v. Graves County Banking & Trust Co., 185 S.W. 485, 170 Ky. 56, 1916 Ky. LEXIS 11 (Ky. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Clarke.

Reversing.

On May 1,1914, Lester Gillum executed and delivered to appellee his note due in six months thereafter for $2,000.00, and to secure the payment of which he pledged as collateral security three $1,000.00 second mortgage bonds of the appellant, Mayfield Water & Light Co.

On February 5,1915, appellee filed suit against Gillum seeking judgment against him upon said note and an enforcement of its lien upon the mortgage bonds.

Upon the third day of the next ensuing term of the Graves circuit court appellant, J. C. Dean, receiver of Mayfield Water and Light Co., filed a petition in this action seeking to be made a party defendant thereto, the material parts of which are as follows:

[57]*57“He gays that bonds sought to be sold in this action against the defendant, Lester Gillum, are the property of the Mayfield Water & Light Company, and as such are legally in his possession as receiver. That said bonds have never been negotiated or sold, but that they were placed by the officers and directors of the company and loaned by them to Gillum, the defendant herein, to be used by him as collateral on the note sued on by plaintiff. He says that said bonds are a part of the assets of the Mayfield-Water & Light Company, and as such they can be subjected to the payment of plaintiff’s debt, only through and by this court in the management of the property of said company by the receiver.
“Petitioner further says that the bonds placed with the defendant, Gillum, as collateral, and which a,re now held by the plaintiff, Graves County-Banking & Trust Company, and which they seek herein to sell, in amount exceed the debt for wljich they are placed as collateral; that the note sued* on is for the sum of $2,000.00 and the amount of the bonds attached as collateral is $3,000.00, and the petitioner says that the plaintiffs, under the law made and provided by the statutes of Kentucky governing corporations, cannot sell these bonds in any amount in excess of the amount of the note sued on, to-wit: $2,000.00.
“Petitioner further says that at the time said bonds were used by the defendant, Gillum, as collateral, the plaintiff bank knew they were not the property of the defendant Gillum, but were the property of the Mayfield Water & Light Company, and the legal title thereto is and has been in the Mayfield Water & Light Company since the time said bonds were-placed by the defendant, Gillum, with said bank as collateral for the note herein sued on. He says that said bonds are a part of the assets, and were a part of the assets of. the Mayfield Water & Light 'Company at the time he was appointed receiver of said company, and that a sale of such bonds, pending the receivership in this court, would materially damage the right of other creditors of the Mayfield Water & Light Company, and would prevent the proper management and application of said company’s assets for tHe benefit of all the creditors of said company.”' i

The filing of this petition was objected to by the appellee, which objections were overruled, the petition filed, appellant made a party defendant and his petition taken as his answer. Hpon the next day thereafter appellee [58]*58moved to submit the cause for judgment, to which appellant objected an4 excepted, but the court overruled appellant’s objection, sustained the motion to submit, and upon submission rendered judgment in favor of appellee against Gillum for the amount of his debt, interest and costs and ordered a sale of the three mortgage bonds to satisfy said judgment, to so much of which as adjudged a lien upon and ordered sale of the bonds appellant excepted and prayed an appeal to this court.

The first error complained of by appellant is that this action was prematurely submitted by the court for trial over his objections and exceptions. This is an equitable proceeding and was submitted at the first term of the court ensuing after the filing of the petition and upon the next day after appellant had filed his intervening petition. Under section 364 of the Civil Code of Practice, this being an equitable action, it would not stand for trial .until a term commencing sixty days after the pleadings had been or should have been completed, unless the appellee had consented of record that the statements of the answer should be taken as true as provided in section 366 of the Civil Code. This consent of record was not given and the submission was forced over the objection of appellant. Therefore if appellant’s petition, which was taken as his aqswer, raised an issue of fact it was reversible error to have submitted the case at the appearance term as was done. Gruell v. Smalley, 1 Duval 359 and Board of Councilmen of City of Frankfort v. Brislan, 126 Ky. 484.

That appellant’s pleading did raise an issue of fact, is quite apparent, as it denied ownership of the bonds by Gillum, and asserted title thereto in himself, and further alleged that the appellee had taken said bonds as collateral security, knowing that they were not the property of Gillum and that they were the property of the Mayfield Tater & Light Company. This certainly was a denial of the right'of Gillum to pledge, or the bank to accept, the bonds- as collateral for the payment of said note, and it also denies appellee’s lien upon the bonds,- or any'right to have them subjected to the payment of the judgment against Gillum. Appellee was no doubt proceeding upon the theory that the statement in-the intervening petition that the bonds were loaned by appellant to Gillum for the purpose of pledging them with appellee as collateral security for the payment of this [59]*59note was an avoidancé or estoppel of appellant’s right' to deny Gillum’s ownership or to stay the sale of the bonds in satisfaction of the judgment; but this is not correct. The Mayfield Water & Light Company since it. loaned these bonds to Gillum had been placed in the hands of a receiver, Mr. J. C. Dean, who is the appellant here, representing the stockholders and creditors of said company. As such he is entitled- to the custody and control under the supervision of the court of all the property of the Mayfield Water & Light Company, and it is his duty and right to take all steps necessary to protect the assets of said company for its stockholders and creditors that they could have taken. ;

If the loan of the bonds to Gillum by the Mayfield Water & Light Company to be used by him as collateral security was illegal and appellee knew that said bonds did not belong to Gillum and did belong to said company,' appellee did not receive said bonds in good faith in due course, and the receiver representing the stockholders and creditors is not estopped from asserting his title, and to deny the lien of appellee upon these bonds. We' therefore conclude the chancellor erred in submitting and trying the case at the appearance term.

2. Appellant next urges the judgment is erroneous even had the submission been proper. Section 193 of our Constitution is as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
185 S.W. 485, 170 Ky. 56, 1916 Ky. LEXIS 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayfield-water-light-co-v-graves-county-banking-trust-co-kyctapp-1916.