Morrah v. First National Bank

65 S.W.2d 830, 16 Tenn. App. 104, 1932 Tenn. App. LEXIS 23
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 6, 1932
StatusPublished

This text of 65 S.W.2d 830 (Morrah v. First National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morrah v. First National Bank, 65 S.W.2d 830, 16 Tenn. App. 104, 1932 Tenn. App. LEXIS 23 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

PORTR/UM, J.

The question for review is whether or not the First National Bank is entitled to be subrogated to the first mortgage lien of the Fidelity Trust Company, which was paid and discharged by the bank upon the faith of a written release executed by the payee of the note secured by a second lien, for the purpose of constituting the First National Bank’s mortgage a prior lien, as against the appellant, Mrs. Vivian J. Morrah, who had purchased from the payee the note secured by the second lien prior to the execution of the release.

On the 19th day of September, 1928, Lee H. Battle was the *105 owner of the property involved, located in Highland Addition, in the City of Chattanooga; this property was encumbered with the first mortgage in favor of the Fidelity Trust Company of Knoxville, executed in September, 1923, and securing the sum of $7500, payable in installments of $250 each six months. In September, 1928, the principal sum had been reduced by five payments to the sum of $5250. On the date stated Lee H. Battle sold this property to Mrs. A. W. Leighton in consideration of her assumption of a first mortgage on the property, above described, and the execution to him of thirty-eight notes in the sum of $40 each and one note in the sum of $39, the first payable on November 1, 1928, and one on the first day of each month following, until the entire series were discharged.

Shortly after the delivery of these notes to the payee, and before the maturity of tiie first note, Lee H. Battle sold them, with the exception of three or four, which were the last to mature, to the appellant, Mrs. Vivian J. Morrah (wife of Battle’s employee, who had worked for sometime in Battle’s real estate office), at a discount of twenty per cent of the face of the notes, endorsing them in blank and delivering them to -Mrs. Morrah. Mrs. Morrah placed these notes with the Chattanooga Savings Bank & Trust Company for collection, and when the first four notes matured the maker paid them to ihe trust company, as they matured, and the funds as paid were placed to the savings account of Mrs. Morrah. The maker did not know the notes were the property of Mrs. Morrah.

In March, 1929, Mrs. Leighton, the purchaser of the property, was unable to pay the semi-annual installment of $250 due under the first mortgage to the Fidelity Trust Company; it was necessary that she refinance this first mortgage loan in order to avoid a foreclosure, and she made application to the First National Bank for a new loan to take up and discharge the first loan, or mortgage, and with a view of gaining an extension of time in the payment. On March 18,'the application was allowed and a trust deed drawn securing a loan of $5500, and no part of the principal became due until after the expiration of three years from its date. From this fund the loan of the Fidelity Trust Company was discharged, which amounted at the time to the sum of $5455.27. The Fidelitj^ Trust Company released its lien of record on May 2, 1929.

But in the meantime, and before the First National Bank would make the loan and discharge the first lien due to the Fidelity Trust Company, it required the payee of the second lien notes, and the supposed holder of these notes, to execute a release of any claim to a first lien that might accrue to the payee, because of the payment and discharge of the lien held by the Fidelity Trust Com *106 pany. Battle represented to the bank that he was the holder of these second lien notes, and he executed the release with the express purpose of declaring the second lien inferior to the lien of the bank. Upon the face of this release the first lien was discharged by the payment of the amount due from the funds derived from the loan made by the First National Bank.

This new loan enabled Mrs. Leighton to continue the payments of her monthly notes, secured by the second mortgage, and she paid fifteen of these notes, or $600 on the second mortgage after the first had been refinanced as above detailed, together with the interest which had accumulated on the fifteen notes. But when the next note matured Mrs. Leighton was unable to pay it, and in time the entire series held by Mrs. Morrah were placed in the hands of her attorney for collection. Mrs. Morrah then discovered that the first loan had been refinanced, and that Mr. Battle had executed the release, upon the faith of which the loan had been refinanced, purporting to be the owner of the notes, and without her knowledge or consent.

She then instituted this suit, seeking to have her lien declared a first and prior lien, and a foreclosure of the land. Alleging that her notes were secured by a vendor’s lien, declared so to he, and also by a trust deed of record, and when the first mortgage was paid without her knowledge or consent, her lien, by operation of law, was made superior to a lien thereafter created. She further alleges that her rights were materially and adversely affected by the attempt to constitute the mortgage of the hank a first mortgage, and superior to her lien.

The bank answered and filed a cross-bill, seeking subrogation to the lien of the Fidelity Trust Company, which was discharged under a mistake of fact, or the fraud of Lee H. Battle, which the complainant now seeks to take advantage of. But it is inequitable to permit her to take advantage of the mistake, or Battle’s frand, because she was not injured by it, but it was to her advantage.

The Chancellor granted the equitable relief of Subrogation, or equitable assignment, and held that the loan of the bank to the amount of the sum advanced in discharge of the Fidelity Trust Company’s loan was a superior lien upon the property. Mrs. Morrah has appealed.

There is but one assignment of error, which reads:

“The Chancellor erred in decreeing that the First National Bank was entitled to he subrogated to the mortgage of the Fidelity Trust Company, and that it was entitled to enforce the lien of this mortgage as a claim against the property prior to yo”r anpellant’s lien, and in adjudging the cost against your appellant.”

*107 Subrogation, or an equitable assignment, will be denied when the party seeking it has been guilty of culpable negligence, or where the remedy cannot be granted without doing injustice to other persons. The modern doctrine of subrogation, and its application, is elaborately reviewed in the case of Dickson v. Morgan, 154 Tenn., 389, 285 S. W., 558, and it is not necessary to enter into a discussion of this principle here. We need only to apply the rules of law laid down in the Dickson case to the facts of this case.

We do not think the bank was guilty of culpable negligence in relying’ upon the representation of Battle, the payee in the notes secured by the second lien, to the effect that he was in fact the holder of the notes, and upon this representation securing the release of the asserted claim, or the acknowledgment that the bank’s lien was the superior lien. The bank, and the maker of the notes had no right to demand the production of the notes to verify the representation of Battle.

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

Related

Dixon v. Morgan
285 S.W. 558 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1926)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
65 S.W.2d 830, 16 Tenn. App. 104, 1932 Tenn. App. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morrah-v-first-national-bank-tennctapp-1932.