Midland-Guardian Co. v. McElroy

563 S.W.2d 752, 1978 Ky. App. LEXIS 490
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMarch 10, 1978
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 563 S.W.2d 752 (Midland-Guardian Co. v. McElroy) 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
Midland-Guardian Co. v. McElroy, 563 S.W.2d 752, 1978 Ky. App. LEXIS 490 (Ky. Ct. App. 1978).

Opinion

GANT, Judge.

This is an appeal from an order of the Boone Circuit Court confirming the sale of certain real property and distributing the proceeds thereof, by which distribution the court directed that tax claims of Boone County and the City of Walton had priority over a vendor’s lien and a recorded mortgage, both recorded some three years prior to the tax claims, the bulk of these tax claims apparently being against tangible personal property owned by the same parties who owned the realty sold. This priority was accorded even though neither the county nor city was a party to the action and no proof was taken concerning the amount of the tax claim attributable to the personal property tax.

The grantees of a 2.106-acre tract of land executed to the grantors a promissory note on April 25, 1972, for which a lien was retained in the deed. At the time of this purchase, grantees owed appellant a large sum of money on another note and appellant took a mortgage on the same property at the time it was acquired, which mortgage was inferior to the purchase money lien. The deed and mortgage were recorded in April of 1972. The grantees operated a mobile home sales center on the property and on September 25, 1975, failed to make payment on the purchase money note to the grantors who then instituted this proceeding to foreclose on their lien. The action was brought against the grantees, the appellant, the Commonwealth of Kentucky, Department of Revenue (because grantees owed delinquent withholding, sales and use taxes) and the Commonwealth of Kentucky Department of Unemployment Insurance (because grantees owed delinquent unemployment insurance).

On October 18, 1976, the Master Commissioner recommended that the property be sold and the court, in its judgment and order of sale, ordered the property sold and the proceeds applied first to the costs of the action, second “[t]o the taxes due on said property to the City of Walton, Kentucky; to the County of Boone; and to the State of Kentucky.” Then followed the lien of the grantors, the mortgage lien of the appellants, and the various tax liens of the Commonwealth of Kentucky. The property was sold for $58,100.00, the appellant objecting to the sale, motion for order of distribution, final report, order confirming the final report, and now appeals on the ground that the county and city taxes assessed for the years 1974,1975 and 1976 were paid prior to his mortgage lien and were either totally or partially on personalty and not on the property itself.

*754 The law in Kentucky is quite clear that a recorded mortgage takes priority over any subsequent creditors. KRS 382.-270, KRS 382.280. It is equally clear that the legislature may create statutory liens and establish the priorities thereof. However, as stated in 51 Am.Jur.2d Liens § 57, “In the absence of a statute giving precedence to a statutory lien, its relative rank is determined under the general principle of first in time first in right . . . ” This was echoed in the case of Indiana Truck Corp. v. Hurry Up Broadway Co., 222 Ky. 521, 1 S.W.2d 990 (1928), in which the court adopted the rule that:

In the absence of statutory regulation to the contrary, a lien which is prior in time gives a prior claim and is entitled to satisfaction, out of the subject-matter it binds, before other subsequent liens binding the same property. (Citing authority). But although it is within the power of the Legislature to give a statutory lien priority over other liens, as a general rule a statutory lien does not take precedence over a prior contractual lien, unless the statute clearly shows or declares an intention to cause the statutory lien to override the prior lien. (Citing authority). See also Adkins v. Carol Mining Co., 281 Ky. 328, 136 S.W.2d 32 (1940).

Thus we must examine the applicable statutes, KRS 134.420 and KRS 92.650. Actually, there is only one statute which applies, as KRS 92.650 is made subject to and must be read in conjunction with the provisions of KRS 134.420. KRS 134.420(1) reads, in pertinent part, as follows:

The state and each county, city or other taxing district shall have a lien on the property assessed for taxes due them, respectively, for five years following the date when the taxes become delinquent. . This lien . . . shall have priority over any other obligation or liability for which the property is liable.

This section simply means, as applied to this case, that any taxes by the City of Walton or by Boone County assessed against the particular real estate would have a priority over the recorded mortgage.

KRS 134.420(2) provides that the lien for taxes other than those upon the property assessed “shall accrue at the time the liability is fixed.” The section goes on to specify that this includes “any property tax, license tax, inheritance or estate tax, excise tax, income tax, or other tax” not included in Subsection (1). It is quite obviously the import of this paragraph to protect “a holder in due course” or “any person taking the property or a lien thereon for value without actual or constructive notice.” The lienholders in the instant case certainly could have neither actual nor constructive notice of personal property taxes accruing two, three and four years after the lien. Any portion of the tax bills of the City of Walton or Boone County on real or personal property other than the property assessed would be subject to the general principle of “first in time, first in right.”

The appellees urge that the part of KRS 134.420 which gives the city or county a first lien “also on any real property owned by a delinquent taxpayer when the sheriff offers the tax claims for sale as provided in KRS 134.430 and KRS 134.440” pertains to this case and would give the city and county a lien on the real property of the grantees. This is simply not the fact. In the first place, there was no sale of tax claims by the sheriff.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
563 S.W.2d 752, 1978 Ky. App. LEXIS 490, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/midland-guardian-co-v-mcelroy-kyctapp-1978.