Sandy Hook Bank's Trustee v. Bear

67 S.W.2d 972, 252 Ky. 609, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 828
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedFebruary 2, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 67 S.W.2d 972 (Sandy Hook Bank's Trustee v. Bear) 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
Sandy Hook Bank's Trustee v. Bear, 67 S.W.2d 972, 252 Ky. 609, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 828 (Ky. 1934).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Perry

— Affirming.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the Rowan circuit court, denying appellant the equitable lien it *610 sought to have adjudged and enforced against appellee’s property and dismissing its petition with costs.

The- facts as disclosed by the record, upon evidence sharply conflicting as to certain points, appear to be as follows: The appellee, Johnnie Bear (defendant below), in August, 1919, purchased a farm in Elliott county, described in; the record as the Yencil farm, for which he agreed to pay some $8,000/

In buying this farm, it is admitted¡ Bear borrowed from the Sandy Hook Bank the sum of $4,000, with which to make the initial payment on it, and for which amount he executed his note, dated October 17, 1919, payable one year thereafter. For the remainder of the agreed purchase price, he executed to vendor deferred interest-bearing lien notes, payable at the rate of $1,000 a year.

The uncontradicted evidence is that, at the time of his purchase of this Yencil farm, Bear was a man who owned considerable property and whose business standing and responsibility were good; also that, at about this time and shortly following, he sold certain properties for a consideration of some $4,300, and that his wife inherited $1,000, all of which — cash, lien notes, and inheritance — he deposited to his account in the appellant bank. Also it is admitted that in October, 1921, upon becoming dissatisfied with the Yencil farm previously purchased in 1919, Bear sold it for some $7,500, upon which price, he testifies, he received from vendee a down payment of $4,000 and deferred lien notes for the remainder. It appears uncontradicted that he deposited with the appellant bank this cash payment also and left with it for collection these deferred lien notes, which were duly collected by the bank and placed to his' credit.

It is further admitted that in the December next following this sale he bought a second farm, described in the record as the Hogge farm, at a price of $3,500, upon which he made a down payment of $1,000, with the money inherited by his wife, and that he also paid the remaining lien notes, aggregating $2,500, out of other private funds, secured by him independently and exclusively of the sale proceeds of the Yencil farm. Bear, in his evidence, very definitely and specifically points out just how these funds, required for the payment of *611 these lien notes, were raised and paid by him thereon, and positively asserts that no part of the sale proceeds of the Yencil farm was used by him in their payment.

On the other hand, the appellant bank contends, and by its officers testifies, that Bear, before his purchase of the Vencil farm in 1919, arranged with it to secure the $4,000 required for making the cash payment on it, and that it was expressly agreed and understood between the bank and Bear that, in consideration of the bank’s lending him this requested amount for his use in purchasing the farm, he would, upo.n its purchase, execute hiá note in said amount, payable one year after date, to it, and that he and his wife would further secure its payment by giving the bank a mortgage upon the farm when conveyed him. Both V. H. and M. M. Redwine, officers of, and witnesses for, the bank, testified that, pursuant to such agreement, the bank advanced the money to Bear, which was used by him in the purchase of that farm, but that he thereafter failed and refused to execute it the promised mortgage to secure the $4,000 advanced him. Also they testified that, some two years later, in October, 1921, Bear, becoming dissatisfied with the Vencil farm, again camel jto the bank and sought its consent to his selling this farm and using its sale proceeds for purchasing another farm, and that the bank then agreed to his keeping the sale proceeds of this Vencil farm, claimed then subject to its equitable lien, and using it for purchasing a second farm, upon the condition of his agreeing to execute the bank a mortgage upon such farm as he might purchase with such funds or have the deed taken thereto recite a lien given appellant upon the land thus bought to secure it in the payment of this $4,000 advancement made Bear, upon his earlier purchase of the Vencil farm.

Appellant contends that, pursuant to such claimed second agreement, Bear, in the December following, purchased what is described in the record as the Hogge farm, with the sale proceeds of the Vencil farm; while, on the other hand, Bear testifies' that he bought the Hogge farm without having any agreement whatever with the appellant as to its purchase and without using any part of the Vencil farm sale proceeds in buying it.

It is admitted that appellee’s $4,000 note was executed the bank in. 1919 for the loan made him for buying the Vencil farm, and that it was annually thereafter *612 renewed, with interest, six times, or until 1925, during which period the appellee carried a deposit account with-appellant which at times amounted to as much as $3,500' or more.

In 1925, upon the bank’s affairs becoming badly involved, it was turned over to Wick Strother, a deputy banking commissioner, for liquidating, when he, as such, filed suit against Bear in the Rowan circuit court upon this note, recovering judgment against him thereon for its amount of $4,988.76, interest and costs. This judgment, it appears, remains now in full force and effect, it having never been appealed from, modified, or vacated.

Upon Strother’s liquidation of the bank (and payment of all its depositors in full), its assets and control were turned back to it, when Gl. W. Prichard was appointed by it as trustee for its continuing operation and management. In February, 1929, G-. W. Prichard, as such trustee, filed this suit in equity upon this same note against Bear, by his petition alleging the facts as here-inabove testified to by appellant’s witnesses, and averring that there was thereby created, in. favor of the bank, an equitable lien upon defendant Bear’s farm, which it was entitled to have adjudged and enforced against it for the satisfaction of its note sued on, and for which relief it prayed.

Bear answered, denying the allegations of the petition, and further pleaded, as later testified, that no part of the funds derived from the sale of the Vencil farm had been used in the purchase by him of the Hogge farm (which he continues to own and against which plaintiff seeks to assert its alleged equitable lien), and further denied that he had ever made the alleged, or any, agreement with the appellant when originally securing from it the $4,000 loan: — or at any time — to give it a mortgage upon the farm purchased in part therewith, or that he had later asked appellant’s consent to ■ his sale of the Yencil farm, or to his use of any part of its ,sale proceeds in the purchase, of the Hogge farm, or had agreed that its alleged equitable lien claimed against the Yencil farm, or its sale proceeds, should be transferred to or imposed upon the later purchased Hogge farm, or that for such or any purpose he would give it a mortgage or other lien thereon, securing it in the payment of such earlier loan made him, but states that' same was made only as a personal loan to him.

*613

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Related

Hutchins v. Foley
111 S.W.2d 586 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1937)
Mays v. Mays
92 S.W.2d 827 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1936)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
67 S.W.2d 972, 252 Ky. 609, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 828, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sandy-hook-banks-trustee-v-bear-kyctapphigh-1934.