Patterson v. Pope

35 Ky. 241, 5 Dana 241, 1837 Ky. LEXIS 48
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 27, 1837
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 35 Ky. 241 (Patterson v. Pope) 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
Patterson v. Pope, 35 Ky. 241, 5 Dana 241, 1837 Ky. LEXIS 48 (Ky. Ct. App. 1837).

Opinion

Judge Marshall

delivered the following Opinion of the Court in this case, on the 31st of October last; but a petition for a rehearing was afterwards presented, by which the decision was suspended, and the case remained under advisement until this day, when the petition being overruled, the Opinion became final.

In 1807, Mrs. Chinn, afterwards Mrs. Hughes, sold and conveyed to Asa Wilgus, about ninety-six acres of land, and took a mortgage on the same, for securing the payment of the purchase money, which was to be completed in 1813.

In 1812 and 1816, Wilgus sold and, by two deeds, conveyed the whole of the land to Richard Patterson; who paid a fair price for it as unincumbered, took possession, and has ever since used and improved it as his own. All of these deeds were duly recorded.

In 1818, Wilgus having failed to complete the payment due from him for the land, and having replevied the judgments obtained for the balance remaining unpaid, filed his bill in chancery, praying to enjoin the collection thereof, and to rescind his purchase from Mrs. Chinn, and his sale to Patterson. An injunction was granted, agreeably to the prayer of the bill, and John Pope became the security of Wilgus in the injunction bond, which was made payable to Hughes and wife and Patterson.

Patterson, who was a defendant to this bill, opposed the rescission of the contracts, alleging his satisfaction with the title, and that he had fully paid the price of the land to Wilgus: which fact is also to be inferred from, if it is not directly admitted by, the bill.

The injunction was finally dissolved, and the bill dismissed; and, on the appeal of Wilgus to this Court, the decree was affirmed, in 1820.

In 1826, judgment was obtained on the injunction [242]*242bond, in the names of Hughes and wife and Patterson, and against Pope alone, for so much of the original purchase money as remained due, together with the accumulated costs, interest, and damages; and in 1826, an execution on this judgment, was levied on the property of Pope. An arrangement was then made between Pope and Christopher Chinn, who had the benefit and control of the judgment, whereby Pope, in discharge of the judgment, became the security of Chinn, in a note to the Bank of the Commonwealth of Kentucky, for a sum equal to the amount of the execution, on which he was to pay the calls and discounts until the debt was extinguished; and he was allowed the privilege of seeking his indemnity by prosecuting, at his own costs, a suit for the foreclosure of the mortgage, in the name of the mortgagee.

The bill &c.

Under this arrangement, the present suit was brought, in the name of Mrs. Hughes, then again a widow, but in fact for the indemnity of Pope; who, shortly after its commencement, relieved Chinn from the debt to the Bank of the Commonwealth, by substituting his own note for it. The administrators of Hughes were afterwards joined as complainants, and the answer of Patterson, which was made a cross bill, brought Pope and Christopher Chinn before the Court.

By the final decree, the land was decreed to be sold, for the satisfaction of the entire amount of the judgment against Pope.

It appears that, at the time of obtaining the injunction, and at the time of its dissolution, Wilgus was solvent, and the debt might have been made out of his property; but before the appeal was determined, he became insolvent, and is since dead, leaving nothing for the satisfaction of his debts. The security in the replevin bond also became insolvent in the interval; and Pope, having no prospect of indemnity from Wilgus is seeking to throw the loss upon Patterson, by means of the mortgage; and has succeeded in doing so if the decree can be sustained. This is attempted to be done on the ground: first — that Pope having paid the debt as security to the mortgagor, is entitled to the lien which the creditor had by virtue of [243]*243the mortgage; and, second — that if any thing more were wanting, the arrangement by which he was allowed to prosecute this suit, secures to him the benefit of the lien.

A surety who has paid the debt, has, has to the person and property of the debtor, a right to take the place of the creditor, so far as to have the same preference over general creditors that the creditor would have had, and may have the benefit of any mortgage, lien, or other collateral security, that the creditor has; and, in general, a court of equity will require the creditor to transfer all such securities to the surety who pays the debt, or permit him to use the creditor’s name to make them available. But this principle will not be applied to defeat an interest acquired and held by a third person, when that interest, tho’ subordinate to that of the creditor, is prior in date, to the undertaking of the surety—as where property is mortgaged for a debt, then sold by the debtor ; the debt afterwards replevied, and paid by the replevin surety; the latter cannot use the mortgage to defeat or affect the rights of the purchaser. Sureties, in such a case, come in trusting to the principal debtor, and can take the place of the creditor so far only as the person and property of the debtor alone may be affected.

It is contended in support of the decree, “that, in equity, a surety who has discharged the debt, is entitled to stand in the shoes of the creditor as to all liens securing the debt.” If this be so, and can be applied to this case, the surety who pays the debt may, under any and all circumstances, stand as the assignee and purchaser of all liens for securing it, and his title would, of course, overreach all intermediate interests in the pledged property, arising subsequently to the date of the lien, though prior to the commencement of his obligation. The authorities referred to do not support the position to this extent. Nor can we admit that the doctrine, to this extent, has any foundation in equity or reason. Some of the elementary writers upon the subject, have stated the principle as broadly as it is now contended for, and in some of the adjudicated cases, dicta may be found which seem to countenance it to nearly the same extent. But these are cases in which the right was presented in its simplest form, and discrimination was not necessary. We have seen no case in which it has been decided, either in terms or in effect, that a surety becoming so by entering into an obligation taken in the prosecution of the ordinary coercive remedies against the person of the debtor, can, by -paying the debt, acquire such an interest in the mortgage or other lien of the creditor, as will enable him to displace any pre-existing, specific interest in the mortgaged property, derived from the debtor after the date of the mortgage.

In the case of Lidderdale vs. Robinson's Executor (12 Wheaton, 594,) referred to in argument, the question was, whether a co-acceptor of a bill of exchange, who had paid more than his portion, should be so far substituted to the creditor’s rights, as that his demand against the estate of the other acceptor, should be considered to be of the same dignity, and entitled to the same priority, [244]*244as the debt itself which he had paid, and this question was determined in the affirmative.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
35 Ky. 241, 5 Dana 241, 1837 Ky. LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patterson-v-pope-kyctapp-1837.