Mercer v. Federal Land Bank of Louisville

188 S.W.2d 489, 300 Ky. 311, 1945 Ky. LEXIS 548
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 22, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 188 S.W.2d 489 (Mercer v. Federal Land Bank of Louisville) 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
Mercer v. Federal Land Bank of Louisville, 188 S.W.2d 489, 300 Ky. 311, 1945 Ky. LEXIS 548 (Ky. 1945).

Opinion

*313 Opinion op the Court by

Judge Latimer

Reversing.

The appellee, Federal Land Bank of Louisville, instituted this action in the Hopkins Circuit Court against Dow Mercer seeking cancellation of a sales contract to, certain land sold the appellant, and a writ of possession therefor, and further asking that the initial payment made by the defendant below be treated as rent for the use of the land and/or liquidated damages for breach of the contract. From an adverse judgment rendered therein, the appellant is prosecuting this appeal.

By deed, bearing date October 23, 1942, the land involved herein was conveyed to the appellee by the Master Commissioner of the Hopkins Circuit Court pursuant to judgment obtained by the appellee Bank as plaintiff against Clyde Herring et al., defendants, wherein the Bank had foreclosed a mortgage lien upon the land. Shortly afterwards, an agent of the Bank, engaged in selling real estate for it, showed this land to the appellant, his wife, daughter and son, for the purpose of selling same. On December 3, 1942, the appellant, on a form prepared by the Bank, executed and delivered to it a written offer to purchase this land upon the terms and conditions set out therein, which offer the Bank accepted on December 10, 1942. By this instrument the Bank contracted to convey to Mercer “a farm known as the Clyde Herring farm — containing 582 acres more or less.” The pertinent provisions of this contract about which this litigation arose are as follows: “(1) Mercer agreed to pay $8,500.00 for the land, $850.00 of which he was to pay in cash on the signing of the contract; (2) the Bank contracted to deliver a deed to Mercer on March 1, 1943, upon delivery of which Mercer was then to pay an additional sum of $850.00, and to execute a mortgage for the balance of the purchase price; (3) the Bank was to deliver to Mercer possession of the premises not later than upon acceptance of the contract, subject to tenant’s rights for 1942; (4) if Mercer failed to comply with the terms of the agreement, the Bank might cancel it without notice and re-possess the premises, ‘in which event all payments made by the offeror upon this contract shall be deemed rental for the use of said property and/or liquidated damages.’ ”

*314 On the date of the acceptance of the contract, Mercer made his first payment. On or about March 1, 1943, the Bank tendered Mercer a deed to the land, which Mercer contended did not convey to him all the land in the Herring farm which the Bank owned and Mercer had purchased. Mercer had been further complaining that under the contract he was to have possession at the date of the acceptance of the contract; that the Bank did not attempt to deliver possession to him at that time; that it made no attempt to evict Herring and deliver possession to Mercer until sometime in January, 1943, and that it did not notify Mercer that he might have possession until on or about February 1, 1943. and then did not deliver possession of all of the land, and had not delivered all of it to him even at the time the Bank filed its petition herein, or at the time of the trial. He had further complained that at the time he was first shown the Herring tract of land, the agent for the Bank, a Mr. Short, had represented to him that a 12 or 13 acre tract of land known herein as the millsite tract, which afterwards was learned did not belong to the Bank, was pointed out to him as being a part of the land proposed to be sold. Because of this shortage, and because the Bank had not delivered possession of all the land of which it could deliver possession, Mercer refused to accept the deed and refused to pay the Bank the second payment. It is claimed that at that time Mercer informed a Mr. Melton, representative of the Bank, of the shortage and failure to deliver possession. The Bank continued to demand payment, which was refused, and in November 1943, filed this action. Certain demurrers were filed which were overruled. The matter was tried and a judgment rendered in favor of the Bank.

The grounds upon which Mercer seeks a reversal are: (1) The petition was demurrable on two points and the demurrer should have been sustained; (2) the Bank itself was in default in failing to deliver possession of all the land to Mercer and in failing to tender a proper deed; (3) the Bank has waived any default of Mercer; (4) the alleged inability of Mercer to pay the second installment is not ground for cancellation; (5) the Bank has no right to retain payments made as liquidated damages; (6) the evidence-is not of such character as to warrant cancellation; and (7) the judgment for liqui- *315 dated damages exceeds the amount prayed for in the petition and the amount of the proved damages.

At this point we are confronted with a motion of the appellee, made pursuant to sections 757 and 758 of the Civil Code of Practice, to dismiss the appeal for the reason that appellant has no right of appeal, since by his own voluntary acts he has estopped himself from prosecuting an appeal from the correctness of the judgment rendered against him. The motion is predicated on the fact that the appellant entered into a lease contract after the judgment was rendered and before the appeal was taken, whereby at the appellant’s instance and request, he leased the farm involved from the appellee for the year ending December 31, 1944, thereby recognizing the validity of the judgment. In support of its motion, the Bank filed a copy of the lease and affidavit of R. Y. Robinson, an employee of the Bank. Response and reply to the above motion was filed by appellant, supported by affidavit in which Mercer stated that pursuant to the judgment of the court, he would be evicted from the farm by writ of possession to be issued on or after July 15, 1944; that in the Spring before the judgment was rendered, he and his son, Thomas Mercer — Thomas being the only one of three sons at home (the other two being in the armed services) — had planted 30 acres of corn, 4/10 acre of burley tobacco; that he had leased 90 acres of corn land to a tenant who had that acreage of corn planted and growing; that he had 50 head of hogs, 16 head of cattle and 8 horses; that at the time the judgment was rendered, he was faced with a loss of all of his growing crops if he could not execute a supersedeas bond; that he made effort to execute supersedeas bond, but that he was unable so to do, and that the only reason he entered into the lease contract was because he was unable to execute the necessary supersedeas bond to prevent eviction, and that he had no other farm or place to which he could move his livestock and family at that time of the year.

Supplemental motion was filed by appellee supported by affidavits to which appellant filed a response supported by affidavits.

The appellant takes the position that when the judgment was rendered by the trial court, there were only *316 three possible courses open to him, namely: (1) He conld supersede the judgment, (2) he could fail to supersede and be evicted from the land, or (3) he could enter into the lease contract, remain on the land for the remainder of the crop year and thus save at least 2/3 of his crop.

The challenging question to be decided here is whether or not the appellant by entering into the lease contract waived his right, and is thereby estopped from prosecuting this appeal.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
188 S.W.2d 489, 300 Ky. 311, 1945 Ky. LEXIS 548, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mercer-v-federal-land-bank-of-louisville-kyctapphigh-1945.