Oglesby v. Prudential Insurance Co. of America

82 S.W.2d 824, 259 Ky. 620, 1935 Ky. LEXIS 358
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedApril 26, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 82 S.W.2d 824 (Oglesby v. Prudential Insurance Co. of America) 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
Oglesby v. Prudential Insurance Co. of America, 82 S.W.2d 824, 259 Ky. 620, 1935 Ky. LEXIS 358 (Ky. 1935).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Thomas

Affirming.

*621 On June 7, 1929, tbe appellant and defendant below, C. M. Oglesby, borrowed from tbe appellee and plaintiff below, Prudential Insurance Company of America, tbe sum of $11,000, for wbicb be executed bis note and secured it by a mortgage on some real property in Louisville, Ky., consisting of a double apartment bouse. Under tbe borrowing agreement, wbicb was incorporated in tbe note and mortgage, defendant agreed to pay tbe interest on tbe principal sum borrowed semiannually beginning on? tbe date of tbe loan, June 7, 1929; but he was not to pay any part of tbe principal until June 7, 1932, when be agreed to pay a semiannual payment .of $275 and a similar amount each six months thereafter until June 19, 1939, when tbe balance of the principal would become due and payable. Defendant later borrowed $800 from tbe Liberty Fire Insurance Company and secured it by a second mortgage on tbe same property. Before tbe first installment payment on tbe principal became due, be defaulted in the interest payments, thereby creating tbe right in plaintiff to precipitate the payment of tbe entire debt and to proceed to collect it and to enforce its lien against tbe mortgaged property; but, instead of pursuing that course at that time, defendant agreed to turn tbe property over to tbe Franklin Title & 'Trust Company, a real estate corporation in Louisville, and to have it look after and manage the property and keep it in repair and to apply tbe net rents to defendant’s indebtedness to plaintiff, Wbicb then exceeded tbe principal of tbe debt because of defaults in payment of interest and defaults in tbe payment of taxes and insurance and other items that defendant agreed to pay; but, if-not paid by him, then to be paid by plaintiff, wbicb it bad done pursuant to- such understanding.

Defendant on October 3, 1931, wrote and signed this authority to tbe Franklin Title & Trust Company: “You are hereby authorized- to collect the rents accruing on my properties at 2710-12-14 Shippen. Road and 126 North Longworth Avenue, upon which the Prudential Insurance Company have loans, and apply the same payments on said loan, taxes, insurance or any other legal assessments wbicb may become due and also' make necessary repairs and further to apply any surplus to tbe loan of tbe Liberty Fire Insurance Company. You are further authorized to pay to your Agent 5% of any amount so collected, as compensation for bis services *622 This assignment shall in no wise prevent you from instituting a foreclosure' lien of the Prudential Insurance Company on 'said properties, ¡should such action be authorized by them.”

Instead .of personally discharging the duties therein ■conferred, it delegated the right to do so to three other corporations engaged in a similar business covering different periods of time, but the net proceeds from the property so realized were insufficient to meet the payments demanded by the terms of the loan, and on August 19, 1932, 9 months and 16 days from the date of the appointment of the Franklin Title and Trust Company as agent, plaintiff, under the right of precipitation given it, filed this equity ¡action in the Jefferson circuit court, .setting out the various amounts constituting its total indebtedness under the terms of the loan, which aggregated $13,216.27. The petition set out in_ detail each item composing the aggregated sum, and its authority for the' charges so made, but it did not expressly state their total amount, although its prayer asked for the enforcement of the lien for each of the items.

The first paragraph of the original answer denied plaintiff’s right to precipitate the due date of the debt under the terms of the loan, but did not state the reasons why. However, the second paragraph thereof attempted to state such reasons, and which were, that the Franklin Title & Trust Company, to whom defendant had turned over the property for management, had violated its duties in the premises by reducing the rent, extravagant expenditures', and other defalcations, whereby the net proceeds of the property were reduced to a point where it did not meet defendant’s obligations as they became due, and but for which there would have been none, and no ground for the precipitation of the payment .of the debt. In that paragraph he also averred that the agent, or mutually agreed receiver to whom he had turned over the property, was the exclusive agent of plaintiff, although its authority was expressly conferred by the writing, supra, executed exclusively by defendant. That answer was controverted by reply, and the cause was referred to the master commissioner, without objections, and with authority for him to take proof upon the matters stated in the second paragraph of the answer. While the record was in that condition, ¡defendant filed an amended answer and cross-petition, *623 as he designated it, and in it he set out the three other corporations whom the Franklin Title & Trust Company deslignated to look after and manage the property and made his pleading a cross-petition against each of them, charging them with the same derelictions that he had previously preferred against the Franklin Title & Trust Company, and asked that each of them render an accounting.

They each answered and filed a statement of their respective accounts, but the aggregate of all of them was not sufficient to meet the obligations of defendant so as to prevent the precipitating right authorizing plaintiff to file the action. Various demurrers, motions to strike, and counterpleadings were filed, including time given by defendant to take and present his proof, but which 'he never did, and on July 1, 1933, defendant, by and through his third attorney employed by him since the beginning of the litigation, filed his second amended answer and counterclaim, as he styled it, in which he reiterates the matters contained in his two former defensive pleadings, and seeks to Charge plaintiff with the alleged defalcations of the agents who looked after the property for about 9% months after the Franklin Title & Trust Company was appointed agent, and he further alleged in one of its paragraphs that such mismanagement and defalcations as above referred to had slandered the standing of the property in the community where it was located, and thereby damaged and reduced its value to the extent of $10,000, for which .sum, with the other items enumerated because of such defalcations, he sought credit on his indebtedness. At the time of filing that pleading, defendant’s given time to take his proof had about expired, but he had taken none, and on July 28, 1933, his third employed counsel, who filed his third answer, moved a transfer of the issues to the common pleas branch of the Jefferson circuit court “for the trial of the issues raised by defendant’s pleadings”; they having been denied by plaintiff and by the cross-defendants.

'On August 4 thereafter the cause was submitted and the court heard oral evidence on the issues raised by defendant’s pleadings; one of the witnesses who voluntarily testified being defendant himself. That testimony was transcribed and made a part of the record, and from it we are thoroughly convinced that the de *624

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
82 S.W.2d 824, 259 Ky. 620, 1935 Ky. LEXIS 358, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oglesby-v-prudential-insurance-co-of-america-kyctapphigh-1935.