The Lincoln Savings Bank v. J. William Hayes

671 F.2d 198
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 17, 1982
Docket79-3549
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 671 F.2d 198 (The Lincoln Savings Bank v. J. William Hayes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Lincoln Savings Bank v. J. William Hayes, 671 F.2d 198 (6th Cir. 1982).

Opinion

BATTISTI, Chief Judge.

This is an appeal in a diversity action brought by the plaintiff-appellee, The Lincoln Savings Bank (Lincoln), a New York corporation, against the defendants-appellants, J. William Hayes and twenty-eight (28) other California residents (the fee owners). At issue is the nonpayment of property taxes on real estate located in Leitchfield, Grayson County, Kentucky. For the reasons stated below, we reverse the judgment of the district court.

The pertinent facts, which are not in issue, are as follows. On July 18, 1974, Lincoln and the PN Corporation, a Virginia corporation not a party to this action, entered into a financial transaction in which Lincqln was granted a mortgage on real estate owned by PN in Leitchfield, Grayson County, Kentucky. The mortgaged property consisted of a single tract of sixteen acres improved with a factory building. The mortgage secured a loan of $1,875,000 by Lincoln. Covenant # 6 in the mortgage provided that the mortgagor, PN, would pay all the taxes assessed on the property, and that, in the event PN failed to pay the taxes, Lincoln could pay the taxes and add such payments to the indebtedness secured by the mortgage.

In August 1974, PN conveyed the property to E.I.C., Inc., a California corporation, which is not.a party to this action. 1 The transactions involving Lincoln, E.I.C., and PN were not isolated incidents, but rather were related steps in a more complex financing arrangement.

In September 1974, the appellants, the fee owners, purchased the property from E. I. C. as tenants in common. The appellants did not assume the mortgage, but the property was purchased subject to the Lincoln mortgage.

Lincoln received mortgage payments until April 1976. After that date, no further payments on the mortgage were made by PN, E. I. C., or the fee owners. In May 1976, a bank, not a party to this action, instituted a foreclosure action to enforce a second mortgage it held on the property. In April 1978, the Grayson Circuit Court in Kentucky held that Lincoln’s lien had first priority and that PN Corporation was liable under the mortgage. The property was sold in May of 1978, pursuant to the state court’s order. The judicial sale left Lincoln with a deficiency of $493,000.

*200 During the course of the foreclosure proceedings in 1976 and 1977, the fee owners, the owners of the mortgaged property, failed to pay $44,444.08 in state and local taxes assessed against the property. 2 Consequently, the state court in the foreclosure proceedings ordered that, upon the sale of the property, the proceeds were to be distributed in the following order of priority:

(a) The costs of this action;
(b) The Master Commissioner’s fees and expenses incurred in connection with the sale.
(c) The payment of all delinquent (prior to 1978) city, county, state and/or school property taxes, and special property assessments constituting a lien against the property, together with all interests and penalties thereon;
(e) To the satisfaction of the judgment adjudicated and awarded to Lincoln herein... . (emphasis added)

The priority treatment accorded the delinquent taxes by the court was simply a recognition of Ky.Rev.Stat. § 134.420(1) which provides in pertinent part:

The state and each county, city or other taxing district shall have a lien on the property assessed for taxes due them respectively for five (5) years following the date when the taxes become delinquent, .... The lien . . . shall have priority over any other obligation or liability for which the property is liable.

The tax liability on the property was extinguished when $44,444.08 from the proceeds of the sale of the mortgaged property was paid to the taxing authorities. This payment reduced by $44,444.08 the amount Lincoln would have obtained from the foreclosure sale. Lincoln brought the present action alleging that the failure of the fee owners to pay the 1976 and 1977 property taxes prior to the foreclosure sale caused $44,444.08 of the sale proceeds due Lincoln to be used to extinguish the defendants’ tax debt. Lincoln sought recovery of the $44,-444.08 on the theory that it was equitably subrogated to the claim of the taxing authorities against the fee owners.

The district court, on cross motions for summary judgment, found for Lincoln. The court acknowledged a lack of precedent under Kentucky law. However, the court relied upon a policy asserted in an otherwise unrelated case 3 that property owners should not be allowed to shift their tax obligations onto others. The court held that Lincoln should be subrogated to the claims of the taxing authorities against the fee owners, because $44,444.08 out of the proceeds of the foreclosure sale was used to satisfy the delinquent taxes of the fee owners.

The fee owners appeal from this judgment of the district court. The issue presented on this appeal is whether a mortgagee can recover from a grantee, who did not assume the mortgage, an amount equal to delinquent property taxes, owed by the grantee, but which was deducted from the sale proceeds upon foreclosure of the mortgaged property. The question is one of first impression under the law of Kentucky. 4 However, the issue has generally been dealt with by other jurisdictions. Northern Finance Corp. v. Byrnes, 5 F.2d 11 (8th Cir. 1925); San Mateo Bank v. Dupret, *201 124 CaLApp. 395, 12 P.2d 669 (1932); Citizens Savings Bank v. Guaranty Loan Co., 62 R.I. 448, 6 A.2d 685 (1939); State-Planter’s Bank & Trust Co. v. Pollard & Bagby Inv. Corp., 186 Va. 217, 42 S.E.2d 287 (1947); see generally 84 ALR 1366; and Osborne, Mortgages § 173, at 300 (2d ed. 1970).

The results in these cases follow from certain basic principles of the law of mortgages. Ordinarily, a mortgagor has the duty of paying all taxes on the mortgaged property. However, if the mortgagor fails to pay the taxes, it is well settled that the mortgagee may pay them to protect his security interest in the land. A mortgagee who pays taxes accruing upon the property may add these disbursements to the mortgage debt and foreclose for the total sum thus created. I Glenn, Mortgages § 91.1, at 551 (1943); Osborne, Mortgages § 173, at 298-99 (2d ed. 1970). Kentucky has codified a mortgagee’s right to subrogation, if he pays the delinquent taxes of his mortgagor:

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671 F.2d 198, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-lincoln-savings-bank-v-j-william-hayes-ca6-1982.