South Kentucky Building & Loan Ass'n v. Robinson

118 S.W.2d 766, 274 Ky. 425, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 287
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 24, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 118 S.W.2d 766 (South Kentucky Building & Loan Ass'n v. Robinson) 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
South Kentucky Building & Loan Ass'n v. Robinson, 118 S.W.2d 766, 274 Ky. 425, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 287 (Ky. 1938).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Perry-

-Affirming.

This equitable action was originally begun on September 14, 1933, in the Christian circuit court by the South Kentucky Building & Loan Association against Jodie Robinson and his wife, Willie Lee Robinson, seeking a foreclosure of its mortgage lien against a certain house and lot in Hopkinsville, Ky., of the defendants, which they had in September, 1927, mortgaged to the plaintiff to secure the payment of a loan it had then made them in the sum of $800.

Befault having been made by the defendants in the installment payments of the loan, precipitating its maturity, as so provided for by the terms of the note, executed therefor, this suit to enforce its mortgage lien was instituted to collect the unpaid balance owing, together with accrued interest, amounting to the sum of $553.40.

At the time this suit was instituted, the defendant mortgagors had become nonresidents of the state, it is averred in the verified petition setting out that:

“The defendants, Jodie Robinson and Willie Lee Robinson, his wife, are non-residents of the State of Kentucky, and have been- for more than four months next before the filing of this action, and that they are residents of Rochester, in the County of Monroe, and State of New York, and that No. 4 Marietta Street, Rochester, New York, is the name of the place wherein a post .office is kept nearest to the place where defendants reside.”

Both of the defendants being thus shown to be nonresidents, they were proceeded against by warning order. No separate affidavit was attached to the petition, setting out the fact, but such fact of their non- *427 residence was alleged and set out in the petition, which was duly verified by an officer of the company. When this petition was filed, a warning order was issued by the clerk and a warning order attorney duly appointed.

At the following February, 1934, term of the court or more than sixty days after the warning order was made, report was filed by the warning order attorney and bond executed for the nonresident defendants, as required by section 410, Civil Code of Practice, and a judgment was duly entered, adjudging that there was owing by the nonresident defendants to the plaintiff corporation the amount sued for of $553.40, with interest from December 1, 1933, and directing the enforcement of the plaintiff’s mortgage lien against the nonresidents’ house and lot, as described in the mortgage, by its sale to be made by the master commissioner for the satisfaction of such amount adjudged owing and the costs of the action.

Thereupon the cause was referred to the master commissioner, who had the property appraised, by which its value was fixed at $850, and a judicial sale of it followed, in which the plaintiff became the purchaser at the sum of $575. Thereafter, the commissioner having made report of the sale, which was duly confirmed, a deed, duly acknowledged, was made by the commissioner and approved by the court, which was delivered to the plaintiff conveying the property to it.

The plaintiff then paid the court costs, amounting to some $87.66, and took possession of the property in April, 1934, which it then listed for sale with a real estate agency of the city, by which it was on June 5, 1934, resold to Ernest Norfleet and Carrie Norfleet, his wife, for a cash purchase price paid of $900, and conveyed by the company’s special warranty deed to them.

It appears that these purchasers, finding the property^ purchased as a home, was in a badly run down condition, they, in order to make it habitable, did at once expend a very substantial amount or some $1,400 (less the amount included therein of certain taxes owing and due upon the property, which they paid) upon repairs to the house. Upon the completion of such repairs, the Norfleets moved into the property and have since occupied it as their home.

Along about the same time that this property was sold by the appellant building and loan association to *428 the Norfleets and improved by them, the Robinsons, its former nonresident owners and mortgagors of it to the association, re-appeared on the scene and shortly thereafter, on August 31, filed their petition in the Christian circuit court, claiming title to and seeking to recover possession of this property, which had been purchased, improved and then occupied by the Norfleets. Both the building and loan association and the Norfleets were made parties defendant.

In their petition the Robinsons, as plaintiffs in this second suit, alleged that the former judgment rendered against them in the suit brought by the building and loan association against them, was null and void, for which reason they moved the court to vacate and modify the judgment upon various grounds assigned, one of which was that the warning order made in the former foreclosure action against them was fatally defective; that the clerk of the court was therefore without authority to issue the warning order made thereon against them or to appoint the warning order attorney, and for such reason, they alleged that the trial court never acquired jurisdiction, in that there was no proper constructive service or warning notice given them, as by the law required, in the suit, and the judgment rendered in the action was therefore void and should be set aside and held for nought.

In their petition the plaintiffs referred to the records, pleadings and proceedings in said former action brought by the building and loan association against them and made the whole of that record a part of their proceeding, which they asked to be heard and considered upon the trial of their cause.

The court treated this Robinson petition as a motion to set aside the original judgment and consolidated their suit with the original action brought by the building and loan association to foreclose its mortgage lien against them.

By appropriate pleadings the building and loan association set out in an amended petition all the facts hereinabove enumerated and further alleged that the plaintiffs, Jodie Robinson and Willie Lee Robinson, were indebted to it, including accrued interest, in the amount of $794.74, by virtue of the original note and mortgage executed by them. Further, both it and the Norfleets then alleged in a separate paragraph that the *429 building and loan association and Ernest Norfleet and wife, Carrie Norfleet, had been occupying claimants of said property in good faith ever since April, 1934, and that while they were such occupying claimants, they had improved the property in good faith by expending large sums in making permanent and lasting improvements thereto, which had greatly enhanced the salable value of the property to the extent of $2,000 and they asked that the property immediately be sold for the purpose of satisfying, first, the original mortgage lien of the building and loan association and, second, the lien for the enhanced value of the property brought about as the result of the permanent improvements made thereto by the Norfleets while occupying claimants of the property as purchasers in good faith of it.

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118 S.W.2d 766, 274 Ky. 425, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 287, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/south-kentucky-building-loan-assn-v-robinson-kyctapphigh-1938.