Union Joint Stock Land Bank of Louisville v. Knox County

97 S.W.2d 842, 20 Tenn. App. 273, 1936 Tenn. App. LEXIS 24
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 28, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 97 S.W.2d 842 (Union Joint Stock Land Bank of Louisville v. Knox County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Union Joint Stock Land Bank of Louisville v. Knox County, 97 S.W.2d 842, 20 Tenn. App. 273, 1936 Tenn. App. LEXIS 24 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

PORTRUM, J.

This is a suit by the bank to recover a deficiency-judgment in the sum of $3,480.47, representing the sum the security failed to realize at a foreclosure sale upon an original obligation of $11,500. A short time after the foreclosure of the farm securing this obligation, the bank resold the property for the sum of $11,500, and this sum was sufficient to cover the bank’s entire obligation, since the original sum had been reduced by payments upon the principal.

The complainant bank seeks in a court of equity a windfall in. the amount of $3,500; the bank’s legal right has been often recognized, and enforced, but in the instant case the bank has only a. legal right, for there is not a shadow of equity favorable to it.

The bank seeks to require Knox County, perhaps the only solvent defendant, to pay in the sum of $1,900 as a credit upon this claim, and it bases this right upon the following facts:

*275 The mortgage was executed in 1923 and covered a 600-acre farm in Knox County, and was payable in semi-annual installments on the amortization plan of about $400 each. In 1927 Knox County and the State Highway Department acquired a right of way for a new concrete road through a portion of this farm. The county instituted condemnation proceedings against tenants in common or owners of the farm, namely, Thomas N. Brice and others, but the county failed to make the trustee in the trust deed a party, or to bring the beneficiary or mortgagee, the bank, before the court by process or notice. This proceeding was allowed to remain in court without action until the latter part of 1930, and the county and the owners were about to get together upon the value of the right of way taken, when the husband of one of the tenants in common took action, namely, J. C. Day, who had signed the note secured by the mortgage in the capacity of a maker, but in fact he was an accommodation indorser signing along with his wife, Annie B. Day, and the four other Brice children. When Day learned that the county was about to pay over this sum of money directly to the tenants in common, he consulted an attorney to ascertain if he had signed the note and was liable thereon, and, if so, to request that the bank require the payment of the funds upon the obligation.

His attorney, on the 5th day of December, 1930, wrote the complainant bank asking if the name of J. C. Day appeared upon the note as a maker, and notifying the bank of the pending condemnation proceedings, and the prospective settlement, and requesting the bank to take steps to protect Day against a deficiency judgment by requiring the payment of this fund upon the obligation. The attorney suggested that the bank write the county judge and the county attorney in reference to the matter.

The bank replied to this letter, stating that, when application was made to it for release of the lien, it would require the payment of the sum upon the obligation.

The bank then wrote the Knox county attorney, Mr. James G. Johnson, in reference to the payment of this sum directly to the bank to be applied upon the bank’s obligation. Mr. Johnson replied to this communication at length, stating that Knox County and the owners were about to settle the controversy, by the parties executing to the county a deed in consideration of the payment of $1,900. He stated that the bank had no interest in this, since the land had been taken for more than a year, and the statute of limitation had run against the bank. And he stated that the bank’s security was far in excess of the amount of the obligation, and for this reason the bank should not interfere with the compromise of the controversy between the parties. Mr. Johnson went further and assured the bank that he would find a bidder who would buy in the property 'for the bank debt and requested the bank, if it *276 should become necessary to foreclose the lien, to notify him in order that be might find a bidder to protect the bank against any loss that might grow ont of the adjustment of the right of way between the parties. This was the substance of the communication.

Mr. Day continued to write, and wrote four or five letters to the bank in regard to his liability, and to induce the bank to require the payment of the compromised sum upon the obligation-. This correspondence was carried on from the 5th of December through January and up until February. In the latter part of January, 1931, Knox County and the Brice heirs agreed upon a price for the right of way, and the heirs made Knox County a 'deed for the strip, of land taken, in consideration of $1,900 paid direct to them. After the execution and delivery of this deed, and in the early part of February, Knox County apepared in court and voluntarily dismissed the condemnation proceedings.

Mr. Day continued his persistence in insisting upon the bank requiring the payment of this fund upon the obligation, and in protection of him against a deficiency judgment. After the correspondence between Mr. Johnson, county attorney, and the bank, the bank then turned Mr. Day’s correspondence over to its attorney, and on February 2, 1931, the bank’s attorney wrote the following letter to Mr. Day:

“In connection with the above numbered loan, Mr. Gibson, President of The Union Joint Stock Land Bank, has handed me your letter of January 24 in regard to the highway taking part of the land covered by the above numbered loan for road purposes and asking that the bank take steps to have this fund paid on the loan. I wish to state that you are interested as much, if not more, in this matter as the Land Bank due to the fact that we have a note secured by a deed of trust plus personal security, and I would advise that as you are indirectly interested that you take this matter up with your attorney.

“For your further information will state that today the Land Bank received the amortization payment which was due February 1 on this loan, and so far as it is concerned, at present the loan is in good standing unless there are delinquent taxes of which it has no knowledge.”

From this letter it appears that the bank had adopted the views given by Mr. Johnson, and the bank dismissed the defendant Day with the statement that he go and take care of himself, and that the loan was satisfactory to it. Now, it has changed its position and is calling on Day and the county to produce and pay over the $1,900 with interest.

It is upon this state of facts that the bank seeks a recovery against’ the county. The bank acquiesced in the position taken by Mr. Johnson, and delayed taking steps to require the payment *277 of this sum realized from its security upon its obligation. As one result of tbis delay, the county paid the funds over to the tenants in common, and they used $400 of this sum in making the payment of a semiannual installment, and, if the county must again respond and pay to the bank $1,900, then the bank will have received from the county $1,900 plus $400, or the sum of $2,300. The bank, by acting promptly, could have protected itself against loss and could have protected the indorser Day against loss, and the payment of the deficiency judgment in the sum claimed from the county. It could have intervened in the condemnation proceedings and had its rights adjudged, and have resisted and prevented the dismissal of the condemnation proceedings by the county.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
97 S.W.2d 842, 20 Tenn. App. 273, 1936 Tenn. App. LEXIS 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-joint-stock-land-bank-of-louisville-v-knox-county-tennctapp-1936.