Mortgage Co. of Maryland, Inc. v. Lory

160 S.E. 1, 110 W. Va. 520, 1931 W. Va. LEXIS 119
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 26, 1931
Docket6993
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 160 S.E. 1 (Mortgage Co. of Maryland, Inc. v. Lory) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mortgage Co. of Maryland, Inc. v. Lory, 160 S.E. 1, 110 W. Va. 520, 1931 W. Va. LEXIS 119 (W. Va. 1931).

Opinion

Woods, Judge:

On October 15, 1925, The Mortgage Company of Maryland, Inc., loaned to West Charleston Development Company the sum of $130,000.00, which loan was evidenced by the negotiable note of the development company endorsed by Ed Lory, and further secured by a trust deed of even date therewith, granting and conveying to Charleston Trust Company and R. E. McCabe, Trustees, - approximately 300 unimproved lots situated in the west end of Dunbar, Kanawha county, West Virginia. As additional security, the development company on October 21, 1925, by written assignment, transferred and assigned to the mortgage company seven negotiable promissory notes aggregating $215,466.54, out of a series of eight executed by Poteet & Woodroe, a corporation, on September *522 15,1924, and payable to the order of West Charleston Development Company, all eight of which were secured by a deed of trust of even date therewith on approximately 750 unimproved lots situate in the west end of Dunbar. The two deeds of trust in the order mentioned and the assignment were duly recorded in the office of the clerk of the county court of Kanawha county, on October 22, 1925, and October 22, 1924, and October 28, 1925, respectively. Certain payments were made on the principal indebtedness aforesaid by the development company until said indebtedness was reduced to $85,-862.97 as of November 21, 1927. Pursuant to the assignment aforesaid, the mortgage company advertised the Poteet & Woodroe notes for sale and became the purchaser thereof on May 12, 1930, and is now the owner thereof. The eighth and last note of the Poteet & Woodroe series, in the amount of $8,000.00, payable on or before December 31, 1932, was assigned to W. T. Moore by the development company, as commissions on the sale of Poteet & Woodroe of the lots on which the deed of trust of September 15, 1924, is a lien. This note was assigned by Moore to the Bank of Dunbar before the assignment of the first seven to the mortgage company.

Some time after the recordation of the several instruments aforesaid, the council of the city of Dunbar entertained resolutions which ultimately resulted in the paving of sundry streets in the west end of said city of Dunbar and the cost of said paving, approximately $210,000.00, was assessed against substantially the whole of the lots conveyed to trustees by the two trust deeds hereinbefore mentioned. The mortgage company had no actual notice of said work until many months after the same was completed. Poteet & Woodroe, Inc., and Ed Lory are bankrupts and the development company is totally insolvent, leaving the above described lots the sole security for the payment of the mortgage company’s lien.

The mortgage company, appellant herein, instituted a suit to subject the property of Lory and the development company to the payment of a claim' of $85,000.00. Although primarily a creditor’s suit, the plaintiff, in an effort to advance the priority of its liens, claimed that a number of conveyances *523 were fraudulent .and certain liens of others void. The bill was amended several times and finally took shape in the form of an amended and supplemental bill. This came before this Court on the validity of the order of the circuit court sustaining the demurrer, and this Court sustained the ruling of the lower court, dismissing the bill in so far as it sought to attack the validity of special assessments against the property of Poteet & Woodroe and the development company. Mortgage Company v. Ed Lory et al., 109 W. Va. 310, 154 S. E. 136. After being returned to the lower court, the second amended and supplemental bill was filed. This bill sought to advance the lien of the appellant over the special assessment liens.

The issues of law were raised by exceptions to the commissioner’s report to the effect that the special assessment liens were, under the charter as amended in 1925, subordinate to the trust deed liens, and that the note held by the Bank of Dunbar was entitled to priority over the seven assigned to the mortgage company. The chancellor sustained defendants’ exception to the first finding and overruled plaintiff’s exception to the second.

So much of the statute (chapter 7, Acts 1921, Municipal Charters), incorporating the city of Dunbar, as affects the priority of the paving liens is found in sections 61 and 62. The 'former section, which deals with paving assessments, provides:

“* * * It shall be the duty of the council to immediately certify such assessment to the treasurer for collection as herein provided, and a copy of said order shall be certified by the city clerk to the county court of Kanawha County, who shall record and index the same in the proper trust deed book in the name of each person against whose property assessments appear therein. * * * They (paving assessments) shall be a lien upon the property liable therefor the same as taxes, which lien may be enforced in the same manner as provided for taxes. The lien hereinafter provided for shall have priority over all other liens except those for taxes due the state, and shall be on a parity with taxes and assessments due the city.”

*524 And the latter, after making provision for sewer assessments, concludes with the proviso:

“The liens herein and hereinbefore provided for street paving, macadamizing and sewerage assessments, and assessments for other improvements, shall constitute liens upon the real estate upon which they ■are assessed, as against creditors of the owners thereof, or purchasers for value, and without actual notice of such liens, only from and after the time that the statement thereof certified as aforesaid shall be filed for record in the office of the clerk of the county court of Kanawha County; provided, that in ease any lot of land so assessed in the name of a particular owner shall have been conveyed by him before the lien thereon shall have been certified and fixed with the clerk of the county court, as aforesaid, the said lien shall nevertheless attach to the land in the hands of the subsequent owner, and the same in all respects as if the assessment were made in his name.”

By chapter 29, Acts 1925, the above portion of section 62 of the charter was amended and re-enacted, as follows:

“The liens herein and hereinbefore provided for street paving, macadamizing and sewerage assessments, and assessments for other improvements, shall constitute liens upon the real estate upon which they are assessed, as against creditors of the owners there7 of, or purchasers for value, and without actual notice of such liens, only from and after the date that the contract is made for such work, and shall have priority over all liens placed on said real estate after said contract is made by the city of said work

An identical provision was inserted at the end of paragraph 62-a (a new section) which likewise deals with sewerage.

Before considering the effect of the amendment of 1925, let us look to the general law regarding priority of liens against city property.

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Related

Lively v. State Auditor
1 Ct. Cl. 102 (West Virginia Court of Claims, 1942)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
160 S.E. 1, 110 W. Va. 520, 1931 W. Va. LEXIS 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mortgage-co-of-maryland-inc-v-lory-wva-1931.