Norton & Son's Assignee v. Hope Milling, Mining & Lumber Co.

40 S.W. 688, 101 Ky. 223, 1897 Ky. LEXIS 181
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 1, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 40 S.W. 688 (Norton & Son's Assignee v. Hope Milling, Mining & Lumber Co.) 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
Norton & Son's Assignee v. Hope Milling, Mining & Lumber Co., 40 S.W. 688, 101 Ky. 223, 1897 Ky. LEXIS 181 (Ky. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

JUDGE BURNAM

delivekeu the opinion oe the court.

On the 6th day of July, 1893, Henry Grinninger and others instituted their suit, in equity in the Lee Circuit Court against the Hope Milling, Mining and Lumber Co., a corporation created under the laws of Kentucky, alleging that the defendant company was indebted to them for work and labor performed, under contract, in the erection and construction of a saw mill and building in Lee county, and charging that this work was performed within twelve months before the •filing of the petition, .and that within sixty days after they ceased such labor they filed in the office of the Lee County Co-urt a statement of the amount due them, with a description of the property upon which the labor had been performed, and the name of the owner, and claiming a lien upon the building and all the machinery which went to make up [225]*225the saw mill and asking for an enforcement of their lien by a sale of the property.

Upon the filing of this petition the clerk of the Lee Circuit Court referred the case to the master commissioner of the court, with directions to ascertain the names of all persons who had liens against the property, the character of such liens, the amount of the debts and the order of their priority; and under that order the commissioner, in January, 1894, filed his report to the effect that there were prior liens on the property in favor of laborers for $266.39; that David Davis, as assignee of D. K. Norton & Son, held a lien of equal dignity, and priority with those of the laborers, Grinninger, etc., for $719.29; that the Winchester Bank held an attachment lien on the property for $540.12, with interest and costs; that D. L. Cook, for the Clark County National Bank, held an attachment lien for $529.45, with interest and costs, and the Market National Bank an attachment lien for $321, with interest and cost, etc.

To this report the attaching creditors excepted, because it allowed the assignee of Norton & Son a priority on their debt of $719.29, and the assignee of Norton & Son excepted to- the report because it failed to. allow the whole of their debt as a preferred lien.

The chancellor .sustained the exception of the attaching creditors and held their liens to be prior and superior to the claim of Norton & Son’s assignee, and, the property having sold for only $1,425, a sum not sufficient to discharge all the lien claims, Norton & Son’s assignee brought his appeal to this court, asking a reversal. The record discloses these facts in connection with the claims of the parties to this [226]*226appeal: D. K. Norton & Son, a firm dealing in mill machinery, between the 20th day of June and the 23d of September, 1892, sold and delivered to the Hope Milling, Mining and Lumber Co., a corporation created under the laws of Kentucky, but at that time doing business at Iron City, Tenn., a mill and machinery of the value of $2,119.17, on which they had been paid the sum of $-. In the spring of 1893 this company changed its place of business to Three Forks City, in Lee county, Ky., and transported the mills and machinery whiGh had been sold to them by Norton & Son to this point. After this removal, viz., between the 9th day of May and the 6i'h day of June, 1893, Norton & Son sold to the milling company $719.29 worth of additional machinery, consisting of an engine, boiler, bull wheel,-etc.

On the 23d day of June, 1893, the milling company, through its president, W. S, Holden, executed to Norton & Son a mortgage upon a tract of land described as situated in Lee county, Ky., and containing 1,500 acres, being the property conveyed to the mortgagors by Mrs. Reed, the mortgagors covenanting with the mortgagees that the title to the prop- • erty so conveyed was clear, free and unencumbered, to secure the payment of $1,700 of the indebtedness due by the milling company to Norton & Son. The evidence shows that this 'mortgage was executed in Covington, Ky., and was lodged for record in the office of the clerk of the Lee County Court on the 6th day of July, 1893. On the 7th day of July, 1893, Norton &• Son filed in the office of the clerk of the Lee County Court a statement of the amount due them by the milling company, with the credits thereon and a description of the property sold by them to the milling com[227]*227pany, signed and sworn to, and asserted their statutory lien on the machinery to pay the balance due that firm for machinery furnished td the milling company before its removal from Iron City, Tenn., and also for that furnished after its location at Three Forks City, Ky., and they filed their answer and cross petition in this action setting out the above facts, alleging that upon investigation they had discovered that the defendant company had no title to the land, that it was in litigation; that there was a prior mortgage on it for $1,700, and that upon the discovery that they had been defrauded by the misrepresentations of the officers of the milling company they had filed their lien under the statute against the machinery sold, which was at that time in the mill building of the milling company, and that they had abandoned any claim under the mortgage, so far as looking to it as surety for the payment of their debt, and asserting their right to a prior lien as vendors.

On the 29th day of June, 1893, the Winchester Bank and D. L. Cook, for the Clark County National Bank, instituted their suit in the Clark Circuit Court against the Hope •Milling, Mining and Lumber Co., had attachments sued out and levied by the sheriff of Lee county upon the same property upon which the lien of Norton & Son had been asserted, and on the 5th day of July, 1893, the Market National Bank instituted its suit in the Clark Circuit Court, sued out an attachment and had it levied upon the same property.

At the September term of the Clark Circuit Court these attaching creditors recovered judgments for the amount of their respective claims, the chancellor sustaining their attachments and adjudging them liens on the same saw mill [228]*228and its attachments, and they set up these judgments as the basis of their claims in this action.

The question presented by this appeal is whether the appellant, the assignee of D. K. Norton & Son, or the attaching creditors have the prior lien upon the mill machinery and mill fixtures of the Hope Milling, Mining and Lumber Co. It is contended by the appellees that appellant’s waived their statutory lien by accepting the mortgage upon the real estate from the debtor. This is denied by appellant because the grantor had no title to the mortgaged property, and that they were induced to accept same by fraudulent representations; that it furnished no security for their debt; that the acceptance did not operate as a waiver, and that they had the right to abandon it and assert their statutory lien within the prescribed time.

To sustain their contention appellees rely on the concluding paragraph of section 2467, of the Kentucky 'Statutes, which reads as follows: “Nor shall the liens authorized by this chapter have effect if security shall have been taken for labor performed or materials furnished.”

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Bluebook (online)
40 S.W. 688, 101 Ky. 223, 1897 Ky. LEXIS 181, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/norton-sons-assignee-v-hope-milling-mining-lumber-co-kyctapp-1897.