Schroath v. Pioneer Building Ass'n of Newport

119 S.W.2d 1113, 274 Ky. 685, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 314
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 13, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 119 S.W.2d 1113 (Schroath v. Pioneer Building Ass'n of Newport) 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
Schroath v. Pioneer Building Ass'n of Newport, 119 S.W.2d 1113, 274 Ky. 685, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 314 (Ky. 1938).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas

Affirming.

The appellee and plaintiff below, The Pioneer Building Association of Newport, Ky., is a building and loan corporation with its chief office in Newport, Ky. On December 3, 1927, it loaned to the appellants and defendants below, Martin Schroath and wife, $5,000 to be paid by the maturity of building and loan stock in plaintiff, then and there subscribed for and taken by the borrowers — the dues and assessments upon which were stipulated, and payable monthly, with the proviso that upon certain defalcations in such payments the whole amount of the note executed for the borrowed amount might be declared to be due by plaintiff and enforced. Payments of the dues and assessments were thereafter made by defendants, but on May 26, 1934, defaults existed and plaintiff declared the entire amount of the balance of the debt due, which, after crediting all payments, amounted to $3,753.63, and it filed this equity *687 action in the Campbell circuit court against defendants to recover judgment for the debt and the enforcement of a mortgage to secure it on some real estate in Campbell county that defendants executed simultaneously with the borrowing of the money.

An amended petition was later filed manifesting the fact that on the same date of plaintiff’s note and mortgage defendants had given a second mortgage on the same property to Phillip Schroath, the father of Martin Schroath, to secure a $1,500 indebtedness that the son owed to the father; but which lien was expressly made inferior to the one of plaintiffs, and the executors of Phillip Schroath (he having died testate) were made parties to the action and were called upon to assert their secondary rights in and to the mortgage premises. Subsequent pleadings filed by defendants revealed the fact that plaintiff’s mortgage did not contain 2.23 acres of the entire farm owned by them, and for which reason they contested the right of plaintiff to assert a lien on that omitted parcel; whereupon plaintiff filed a second amended petition in which it averred that it was the intention of all parties at the time the mortgage was executed to include all of the unit farm then owned by defendants — which embraced the 2.23 acres not contained or described in the mortgage to plaintiff — and that the failure to embrace it therein was through oversight and mutual mistake, and it sought a reformation of the mortgage so as to make it conform to such alleged intention of the parties at the time it was executed.

Summons was served on defendants upon'the filing of that amendment, and they later appeared and denied its averments, which made the exclusively litigated question one of the right of plaintiff to reformation it sought by its second amended petition. A considerable amount of testimony was taken on that issue and upon final submission the court reformed the mortgage in accordance with plaintiff’s prayer therefor, and held that its lien attached to the 2.23 acres, and proper orders were made to enforce it - by sale. To reverse that judgment defendants (mortgagees) prosecute this appeal; but the executors of Phillip Schroath to not join therein.

The answer of defendants not only denied the oversight or mistake relied on by plaintiffs by which the 2.23 acres was not embraced in its mortgage, but they *688 also pleaded negligence in failing to embrace that omitted parcel of land and likewise interposed a plea of limitations, as prescribed in section 2515 and 2519 of' our present Statutes. Following pleadings and motions, made the issues, which the court disposed of in the' manner indicated.

The proof developed these uncontroverted facts:That on June 14, 1895, Phillip Sehroath acquired by-purchase a tract of land containing 53 acres in Campbell county (with some small exclusions therefrom) which was bounded on the southeast by Pond Creek: road, which intersected with the Licking pike a short distance from the southeast corner of the tract, and which prevented that tract from reaching or touching-Licking pike. On May 28, 1912, Phillip Sehroath purchased from William Gr. Walker and wife — who owned, the land adjoining him on the southeast — a small triangular parcel of land fronting on Licking pike which, was and is the 2.23 acres in contest, thereby acquiring-a frontage on that pike for his farm, and he then annexed that triangular strip to his larger and first acquired tract, and continued thereafter to use the combined parcels as a unit farm until sold by him 10 years-before his death, occurring in 1933.

On the 9th day of August, 1923, Phillip Sehroath. (his wife having died) executed a deed, conveying to his son, the defendant Martin Sehroath, all of his unit farm, (embracing both the larger 53-acre tract and the later-acquired smaller tract of 2.23 acres), and in it he described the land so conveyed by him in two parcels — the larger tract on the first page of the deed that he so-executed, and the smaller tract on the same sheet but on the back of that page. The consideration agreed to be paid to the father by his son, the defendant, was $7,000' —only $500 of which was paid — leaving $6,500 as a vendor’s lien on the entire unit farm. The father, Phillip Sehroath, was anxious to obtain some cash on the debt, due from his son, and negotiations began, looking to the latter procuring a loan for the amount needed by the father, which was $5,000, resulting in plaintiff agreeing-to lend that amount to the son on condition that a first, mortgage would be given on the farm to secure it, and that the balance of the father’s debt of $1,500 would be-subordinated to plaintiff’s $5,000 debt. All parties-agreed to that, and Hon. W. C. Buten — who was then *689 county judge of Campbell county and attorney for plaintiff — was called upon to draw the mortgage.

Prior thereto plaintiff sent two appraisers to inspect the farm before it agreed to make the loan, and they did so and testified that they took into consideration the entire unit farm — there being no separation of the two tracts by any visible line of any kind — -and that they never knew that it was composed of two separately acquired tracts. Upon the occasion of the "drafting of the mortgage, defendant, Martin Schroath, produced his deed executed to him by his father with the descriptions contained therein as above stated, and Mr. Buter, who was then busy with his duties as county judge, directed his stenographer to fill in a blank mortgage prepared by plaintiff for universal use. The stenographer in describing the land intended to be incumbered, by oversight and mistake, copied only the description of the larger tract contained on the first page of that deed and failed to observe the description on the back of that same sheet of the smaller tract, and the mistake was never discovered until it was manifested in this suit in the manner hereinbefore described; but which was slightly more than seven years after the execution of the mortgage.

That such mistake was so made by which the smaller tract was not embraced in plaintiff’s mortgage is overwhelmingly established by the proof. It is practically admitted by defendant, Martin Schroath, and is not contested by the executors of Phillip Schroath, who held a second mortgage on the 'entire unit farm for the balance of his debt embracing the smaller tract of 2.23 acres.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
119 S.W.2d 1113, 274 Ky. 685, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 314, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schroath-v-pioneer-building-assn-of-newport-kyctapphigh-1938.