Mortgage Co. of Maryland v. Lory

154 S.E. 136, 109 W. Va. 310, 1930 W. Va. LEXIS 65
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 27, 1930
Docket6711
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 154 S.E. 136 (Mortgage Co. of Maryland 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 v. Lory, 154 S.E. 136, 109 W. Va. 310, 1930 W. Va. LEXIS 65 (W. Va. 1930).

Opinion

*311 Maxwell, Judge.

On October 15, 1925, plaintiff, the Mortgage Company of Maryland, loaned to West Charleston Development Company the sum of $130,000, evidenced by the Development Company’s note, indorsed by Ed Lory, and secured by a deed of trust of the same date upon several hundred residence lots in the municipality of Dunbar, Kanawha county. As additional security for the said note, the Development Company transferred and delivered to plaintiff certain notes of Poteet & Woodroe, Inc. These notes which were payable to the Development Company were secured- by deed of trust dated September 15, 1924, on certain other real estate likewise located in Dunbar, which had been purchased from the West Charleston Development Company by Poteet & Woodroe. Both of these trust deeds were properly recorded on the date they were executed.

In April, 1926, the council of the city of Dunbar gave consideration to the matter of paving and sewering certain streets within the city, and such proceedings were thereafter had that the paving and sewering were done and the cost thereof was assessed against the abutting lots which comprised substantially the whole of the various lots of land embraced by the trust deeds above mentioned. On November 21, 1927, plaintiff recovered a judgment against the Development Company and Ed Lory upon its $130,000 note -for $85,682.97, being the unpaid balance thereof, with interest.

The date on which .the present chancery proceeding was instituted does not appear in the record, but the amended and supplemental bill was filed on the 17th day of December, 1928. The plaintiff sued on behalf of itself and all other lien creditors of Ed Lory and the Development Company. There are many defendants.

The trial chancellor sustained demurrers to the plaintiff’s bill in so far as the bill sought to attack the validity of the paving and sewering assessments against the property of Po-teet & Woodroe, Inc., and the Development Company, and to have said special assessments and the lien thereof declared void on the ground that they are eonfiscatory. It is from the ruling of the trial chancellor sustaining the demurrers in the *312 above particulars that plaintiff appeals. In assigning error, plaintiff reiterates the allegation of its bill that the paving assessments did not benefit the lots and that they were in fact confiscatory, and claims that by their demurrers defendants admit these allegations of fact. Plaintiff further says that such assessments, being confiscatory, are void and can be attacked at any time by any one, and hence the demurrers should have been overruled.

By legislative enactment, Acts of the Legislature of 1921 (Municipal Charters), chapter 7, the municipality of Dunbar was granted a charter, section 61 of which authorizes the council whenever it shall deem it expedient “to cause any street or alley in said city or portion thereof to be paved, curbed, or macadamized, or otherwise improved in a permanent manner. * * *” By section 63 the resolution for paving must be published at least once a week for two successive weeks; by section 64, a copy of such resolution must be served upon the owner of each piece of propertjr to be assessed ; by section 67, council must sit for the purpose of hearing' any property owner so affected, and, if council decides to proceed with the improvement, an ordinance must be passed to that effect; thereafter, by section 90, the caption or title to such ordinance must be published distinctly stating the import of the ordinance.

The bill does not allege that any requirement of the charter was not complied with, nor is it contended that any of the property owners affected by the assessments appeared before the council of the city of Dunbar and objected. But plaintiff says that it did not have notice of this proposed paving and sewering. The record nowhere discloses that actual notice was given to plaintiff, but in the deed of trust of September 15, 1924, given by Poteet & Woodroe, Inc., to secure the notes given to the Development Company in purchase of land from it, which deed of trust along with said notes had been assigned to plaintiff as additional security at the time of the loan, there is this clause: “The Grantor covenants that as long as the trust hereby created shall continue, it will pay all taxes, liens, assessments and other governmental charges now, or hereafter, assessed or imposed by any lawful authority upon the property *313 hereby conveyed or any part thereof. * * *” It cannot be gainsaid that plaintiff was warned by this provision in the trust deed to be on the lookout for paving assessments. Whether the same provision appeared in the trust deed of October 15, 1925, is not disclosed by the record as printed.

Was it necessary for the plaintiff to have notice? The charter does not require that notice be given to lien-holders. It is true that a grantee in a deed of trust to secure a debt is a purchaser for valuable consideration, Bailey v. Hudkins, 103 W. Va. 556, 138 S. E. 118, and eases cited, but we fail to see wherein that principle changes the status of plaintiff from that of a lien creditor. As such lienor, therefore, was the plaintiff entitled to notice? “Mortgagees and other lien holders, or persons simply having such interest in the property that they may possibly be affected by the enforcement of a special assessment against it, are not entitled to notice and an opportunity to be heard in assessment proceedings. The reason for this is that a mortgagee takes his lien subject to the rights of the state, or of any municipal authority to which the power is properly delegated, to impose on the property in accordance with law not only general taxes, but special assessments. He is not the owner of the property, but a lien holder merely; and the fact that incidentally the value of his lien may be impaired by the enforcement against the property of general or special taxes does not give him a constitutional right to be notified of the proceedings under which such taxes are imposed: the possible impairment of his lien does not amount in such cases to a taking of property -without due process of law.” 25 R. C. L. § 77, p. 165. “In general, only the true owner of the property assessed is entitled to notice and hearing, and mortgagees or lien holders, or other persons having an interest in the property that may be affected by an assessment, are not entitled to notice and hearing.” 44 C. J. § 3058, p. 630. These authorities and the cases on which they are predicated indicate plainly that plaintiff has no just complaint because of its failure to receive notice of the proposed paving. Note particularly the ease of Fitchpatrick v. Botheras, 150 Iowa, 376, 130 N. W. 163, 37 L. R. A. (N. S.) 558.

The proposition mainly relied on by plaintiff is the “arbi *314 trary, oppressive, capricious, unjust, unwarranted and unreasonable action” of the council of Dunbar in passing a confiscatory paving and sewering ordinance, the assessments under which, therefore, it is alleged, are void.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
154 S.E. 136, 109 W. Va. 310, 1930 W. Va. LEXIS 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mortgage-co-of-maryland-v-lory-wva-1930.