Roberts v. Kinnaird

146 S.W. 35, 148 Ky. 75, 1912 Ky. LEXIS 398
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 26, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 146 S.W. 35 (Roberts v. Kinnaird) 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
Roberts v. Kinnaird, 146 S.W. 35, 148 Ky. 75, 1912 Ky. LEXIS 398 (Ky. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

[76]*76Opinion op the Court by

William Rogers Clay, Commissioner —

Reversing.

On March 27, 1905, P. Cornelius executed and acknowledged to Nannie Roberts, of Hyden, Ky., a deed to a tract of 85 acres of land, situated near the town of Berea, Madison County, Ky. The consideration recited in the deed was a check for $500, a one-day note for $500, three notes for $500 each, due respectively March 27, 1906, 1907 and 1908, and one note for $475, due March 27, 1909. The deed was not delivered to Nannie Roberts in person, but it and the notes were left in the custody of a bank at Berea; The deed was never- recorded.

On April 26, 1905, Nannie Roberts borrowed from appellant, W. H. Roberts, wlm is a brother of her husband, the sum of $500, and she and her husband executed their note for said sum payable in 90 days from May 1, 1905, with six per cent, interest from maturity. To secure the payment of the note, they executed and delivered to the appellant a mortgage on the property described in the deed from Cornelius. This mortgage was acknowledged on April 27, 1905, and recorded in the Madison County Clerk’s office on May 11, 1905.

Sometime in December, 1905, J. A. Roberts, the husband of Nannie Roberts, approached H. C. Kinnaird, the father of appellee, with a proposition to rent a portion of the -place. Subsequently, H. C. Kinnaird, who was acting as agent for appellee, his son, agreed to purchase the property from, Nannie Roberts and her hus1band. The. contract between the parties was that appellee, Jesse M. Kinnaird, Avas to convey to Nannie Roberts a tract of four and one-fourth acres of land in Wallace-ton, valued at $1,250, and pay to Cornelius the balance of about $2,000 due on the 85-acre tract. Before closing the contract, H. C. Kinnaird told Cornelius of the trade, and Cornelius agreed, upon the payment of the balance of the purchase price due him, to execute to appellee a deed to the property. Appellee’s father knew at the time that Nannie Roberts claimed to have purchased the land from Cornelius. When the transaction was closed, Cornelius stated that Mrs. Roberts had only a title bond to the property, which she could assign to appellee. The cashier of the bank handed the deed to H. C. Kinnaird. The following assignment was then written on the back of the deed:

[77]*77“I hereby assign the within to Jesse Kinnaird for value received.
(Signed) “Nannie Roberts.”

Thereupon, appellee and wife executed to Mrs. Roberts a deed to the place at Wallaceton. There was about $300 interest due on the notes to Cornelius at that time, and a lien was retained in the deed to secure the payment of this sum. Before the transaction was closed, Mrs. Roberts and husband stated that there was nothing against the property. Sometime later appellee paid' Cornelius the balance of the purchase price, and on August 12, 1907, Cornelius and wife executed, acknowledged and delivered to appellee, Jesse M. Kinnaird, a deed to-the 85 acres of land. In this deed the payment of the full consideration of $3,000 is acknowledged. The foregoing deed was, on February 10, 1909, recorded in the Madison County Clerk’s office.

On April 21, 1909, appellant W. H. Roberts, brought this action against appellee, Jesse M. Kinnaird, and others, to -enforce his mortgage lien on the 85 acres- of land. After setting out the mortgage and note, it was alleged in the petition that Nannie Roberts acquired title' by virtue of the title bond which had been executed and delivered to her by P. Cornelius. Subsequently, by-amended petition, it was charged that the instrument by which she acquired title was not a title bond, but a deed. Appellee, Kinnaird, defended on the ground that he had-no actual notice of the mortgage from Nannie Roberts and husband to appellant. That the deed, or title’bond, as a matter of fact was never delivered to- Nannie Roberts; that she had no title of any kind to the property at the time the mortgage was executed. That the mortgage itself was not a recordable instrument, and, therefore, did not give appellee- constructive notice of the lien.

Appellee’s contention was sustained by tlie trial court, and the petition dismissed. From that judgment, this appeal is prosecuted.

In addition to the foregoing facts, it appears from the deposition of appellant that he loaned Nannie Roberts and his brother the sum of $500. A check given by him for this amount was endorsed by Nannie Roberts and her husband and by P. Cornelius, and was paid by appellant’s bank on May 11, 1905. Nannie Roberts and her husband have never paid anything on the debt. At the time of the purchase by appellee, $1,000 had been [78]*78paid on the land. Appellee did not know that Nannie Roberts and her husband had placed a mortgage on the property. Neither he nor his father consulted the record, because Nannie Roberts represented there was nothing on the property, and the deed had never been delivered to Nannie Roberts, and she had no title of record. Appellant gave his deposition on January 22, 1910. He did not learn of the fact that there was a mortgage on the property until about two years before he testified, or in the early, part of the year 1908. About that time his father received a letter from appellant, stating that he had a mortgage on the land. Prior to that time he had paid the full purchase price for the property, and had secured a deed from Cornelius.

It further appears that when J. A. Roberts, the husband of Nannie Roberts, approached H. C. Kinnaird, appellee’s father and agent, he stated that he was the man that bought the Doc Cornelius farm, and that he had cultivated the property during the past year, but had not made anything out of it. For this reason, and the further reason that his wife was not satisfied in Berea, they preferred to go elsewhere. Roberts first-proposed that appellee’s father rent the place. This the fatter agreed to do. In company with Roberts, he went and examined the place, and agreed to rent a portion of it. The lease was drawn. Subsequently the parties changed their minds, and appellee’s father agreed to purchase the property for him.

Section 2341, Kentucky Statutes, formerly section 6, chapter 63, General Statutes, provides in part as follows :

“Any interest in or claim to real estate may be disposed of by deed or will in writing.”

In construing this section, this court, in the case of Bank of Louisville v. Baumeister, &c., 87 Ky., 6, held that a contract for an option to purchase real estate at an agreed price, within a spécified period, when based upon a sufficient consideration, is enforceable, and being such an interest in real estate as could be sold or assigned, it could also be mortgaged. The court said:

“By section 6, chapter 63, General Statutes, it is provided that ‘any interest in or claim to real estate may be disposed of by deed or will in writing. ’ And that the right to dispose of such interest or claim was intended to include the right to mortgage as well as to sell absolutely is unquestionable: For it is well settled, that [79]*79every kind of interest in real estate may be mortgaged if it be subject to sale and assignment. (Jones on Mortgages, section 136.)”

To the same effect is Davis, et al. v. Wilson, 115 Ky., 639, and Perkins v. J. M. Robinson-Norton & Co., 124 S. W., 310.

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Related

Gayle v. Greasy Creek Coal & Land Co.
60 S.W.2d 599 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1932)
Cornelius v. Kinnard
162 S.W. 524 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1914)

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Bluebook (online)
146 S.W. 35, 148 Ky. 75, 1912 Ky. LEXIS 398, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roberts-v-kinnaird-kyctapp-1912.