National Bank of Lima v. Deaton

131 S.W.2d 495, 279 Ky. 606, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 318
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 16, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 131 S.W.2d 495 (National Bank of Lima v. Deaton) 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
National Bank of Lima v. Deaton, 131 S.W.2d 495, 279 Ky. 606, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 318 (Ky. 1939).

Opinion

*607 Opinion op the Court by

Judge Fulton

Reversing in part and affirming in part.

On December 8, 1930, John Gr. Deaton and Ms wife, Elizabeth Deaton, executed to the Lima Trust Company of Lima, Ohio, two notes of $1,350 each, due and payable one and two years after date, respectively, and, to secure the payment thereof, executed a mortgage on three tracts of land in Perry County, Kentucky, the first two of which tracts were originally owned by the Buckhorn Coal and Lumber Company and purchased at decretal sale by appellant and by it conveyed to John Gr. Deaton. The third tract covered by the mortgage was a tract conveyed to Elizabeth Deaton by John Gr. Deaton on March 1, 1903.

In June, 1931, the Lima Trust Company merged or consolidated with the Lima First American Trust Company and, at the time of this consolidation, the notes were endorsed and transferred to the Lima First American Trust Company. This latter company went into liquidation in February, 1933, and the superintendent of banks in the State of Ohio in the year 1934 transferred the notes in question to the appellant, the National Bank of Lima, Trustee, which instituted this action on the notes and sought a foreclosure of the mortgage given to secure them.

These notes were held by the Lima Trust Company-under an agreement and declaration of trust which covered a considerable amount of land in Leslie and Perry-Counties in Kentucky, by virtue of which participation certificates divided into 2,024 indivisible equal shares were issued to a large number of individual holders, and among these holders was Thomas A. "White, who held sixty-one two-thousand- and twenty-fourths. Thomas A. White was also one of three members of an advisory committee designated by the agreement and declaration of trust.

The appellees, by the second paragraph of their amended answer and counterclaim, pleaded that by the transfer of the notes by the Lima Trust Company to the Lima First American Trust Company, they were thereby placed upon the footing of a bill of exchange and appellant’s right of action thereon was barred by the 5-year statute of limitations. By the third paragraph of the answer set off and counterclaim, they pleaded that *608 on March 16, 1935, John Gr. Deaton entered into a written contract with the Southern Stave and Timber Corporation by which he sold to it and the Buckhorn Coal and. Lumber Company 600 white oak trees on the land, which were of the reasonable value of $10 per tree, aggregating $6,000, and that, by the terms of the contract aforementioned, the Buckhorn Coal and Lumber Company, by its agent, Thomas A. White, promised and agreed that out of the purchase price of said timber, the Buckhorn Coal and Lumber Company would credit the notes sued on to an amount not to exceed $3,350. It was further alleged that Thomas A. White was a member of the advisory committee of the Lima Trust Company and an agent for the Buckhorn Coal and Lumber Company and that, by connivance between White and the Lima Trust Company and the Buckhorn Coal and Lumber Company, together with the Southern Stave and Timber Corporation, the 600 trees of the reasonable value of $6,000 were obtained from the appellees and no credit given on the notes therefor.

The contract of sale above referred to was filed as an exhibit with the answer, set-off and counterclaim, and is neither more nor less than a sale of the timber by Deaton to the Southern Stave and Timber Corporation with a provision that payments for the timber sold should be made to the Buckhorn Coal and Lumber Company in the total amount not to exceed $3,350, to apply ■against the mortgage held by the Buckhorn Coal and Lumber Company against John G-. Deaton, by which was evidently meant the mortgage notes sued on in this action with the accumulated interest, although, as above recited, the notes were held by the Lima Trust Company. While the appellees alleged that the timber was sold to the Buckhorn Coal and Lumber Company, such was not the fact, and the only effect of that contract was that the purchaser of the timber agreed that payment therefor would be made in such manner as to satisfy these notes.

The pleadings and evidence are very much involved. As a matter of fact, it is difficult to gather from the evidence that the Buckhorn Coal and Lumber Company had any interest in the notes^ the only evidence thereof being the recitation in the contract that payments for the timber sold should be applied on the notes held by the Buckhorn Coal and Lumber Company. -Testimony for the appellant indicates that the Buckhorn Coal and Lumber Company had no ownership or interest in the *609 notes or the participation certificates held under the declaration of trust above mentioned.

The trial court held that the contract by which Deaton sold the timber to the Southern Stave and Timber Corporation and by virtue of which payments thereunder were to be made by the purchaser on the notes sued on constituted a novation between the holder of these notes and appellees, and rendered judgment setting off the value of timber removed from the land by the Southern Stave and Timber Corporation against the amount of the notes, but denied judgment to appellees on their counterclaim against appellant for the balance of the purchase price of the timber. Prom" that judgment appellant prosecutes this appeal and appellees prosecute a cross-appeal from that part of the judgment denying them judgment on their counterclaim against appellant for $2,650, the balance of the $6,000 alleged value of timber cut over and above the amount of the notes.

It is at once obvious that the trial court was in error in adjudging the contract of sale above referred to to be a novation. It was no more than a sale of the timber with the agreement on the part of the purchaser to apply the purchase price on the payment of the two notes held by appellant. Even though it be conceded that the Buckhorn Coal and Lumber. Company was the beneficial owner of the notes and-consented to this arrangement, this transaction had no elements of a novation. In order to constitute a novation such as will release an obligation, it is necessary that-there be a new contract which, by agreement of the parties, extinguishes the existing contract or obligation, and to this end, it must appear that the creditor unconditionally released the original obligor and accepted the third person in his stead. Daviess County Bank & Trust Co. v. Wright, 129 Ky. 21, 110 S. W. 361, 17 L. R. A., N. S., 1122; 20 R. C. L. 371. In the contract relied on as a novation there is no intimation whatever that this contract was being substituted for the promissory notes. It was only an arrangement by which payments would be made on the notes and appellant was not a party thereto.

.Appellees insist, however,' that even if the trial court was in error in adjudging the transaction to be a novation, yet the circumstances were such as to entitle the *610 appellees to an equitable set-off against the notes to the extent of the value of timber removed from the land. We are unable to give serious consideration to this contention, for the reason that the contract was between appellees and the Southern Stave and Timber Corporation and was in no sense of the word a sale to the Buck-horn Coal and Lumber Company. Thomas A.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
131 S.W.2d 495, 279 Ky. 606, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 318, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-bank-of-lima-v-deaton-kyctapphigh-1939.