Wood v. Bank of Kentucky

21 Ky. 194, 5 T.B. Mon. 194, 1827 Ky. LEXIS 132
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJune 16, 1827
StatusPublished

This text of 21 Ky. 194 (Wood v. Bank of Kentucky) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wood v. Bank of Kentucky, 21 Ky. 194, 5 T.B. Mon. 194, 1827 Ky. LEXIS 132 (Ky. Ct. App. 1827).

Opinion

Judge Mills

delivered the Opinion of the Court,

Carter T. Wood filed his hill against Henry K. Lewis, asserting his lien for the purchase money due him for two tracts of land, sold and conveyed by him to Lewis, no part of the price of which was paid, and only secured by promissory-notes.

The Bank of Kentucky also filed a bill to foreclose a mortgage on the same lands, given to them by Lewis, to secure a debt due to them for an accommodation.

Pending these suits, Wood amended his bill, making the Bank a party, and claiming that his lien, was prior in date to that of the bank, and ought to be preferred; and also that the bank had notice that his purchase money was not paid, and that his lien existed before the mortgage was taken.

The hank answered this amendment, denying notice of the lien of Wood, and contending for the su», periority of their lien.

At the hearing, the court below dismissed the bill of Wood, as to all the parties, with costs. From this decree Wood has appealed to this court.

Wood showed beyond contradiction, that the whole of his purchase money was due from Lewis, and that the acquisition of title from him by Lewis, •was a piece of swindling, whereby his'title was gotten from him, for the purpose of securing the bank, who was then a pressing creditor of Lewis. By creating a new debt to Wood, and procuring his title, fair on its face, he was enabled to quiet for a time an old one, then like to fall on him with its consequences, and at the time, being a merchant, he was in a sinking condition, and soon became insolvent. Wood was pressed at the time with debt, and his object in selling, was to relieve himself from his’ [195]*195embarrassment, and Lewis gave to him his obligation to pay his debts, and the same day, after receiving the title, mortgaged it to the bank.

Lien of mortgagee without notice of a purchase on credit, who had obtained the conveyance, has the preference of the lien of thp vendor, for the purchase money. In such case, the condition, of the mortgagee is that of a parchas.er, having the legal advantage of the title. Payment of the consideration acknowledged in the deed. Part of the land conycy ed had been previously sold.

It has been contended that the bank, being only a mortgagee, cannot stand in the place of a purchaser without notice; but that equity will treat their claim under the mortgage only as a pledge, and the equity arising thereupon, will stand and be counted only from its date, when it struggles with other liens. This cannot be admitted. The lien of Wood is purely equitable, and has no remedy in a court of law. The lien of the bank is not only equitable but legal, and if both claims are equally fair and innocent, between their equality, the law, according to a well known principle, must prevail without regard to the age of either. It is on this ground, that subsequent purchasers for a valuable consideration, having completed their purchases, prevail over prior equities. If the purchase is fair, each have equal merit, and the question is on whom the loss must fall, and this is determined in favor of the legal estate.

This case must then be decided by the fact of notice or no notice to the bank, before the mortgage was accepted.

It is contended by Wood, that as his deed to Lewis, does not express a consideration on its face, paid in gross; but only the price of fifteen dollars per acre in hand paid, it communicated the knowledge that the claim had never been liquidated. It is admitted that if the deed did contain any information that any part of the consideration was due, it would bind the bank as constructive notice, whether it had or had not escaped attention. But by a recurrence to the subsequent language of the deed, the quantity of acres is definitively fixed, and an easy calculation fixed the gross sum, and therefore this point fails.

It is also urged that in the deed, by mistake, one hundred acres rvas included, which had been previously sold by Wood to a Mr. Caldwell, and that this fact, of a previous sale of this part to Caldwell, was known to some of the officers and agents of the [196]*196bank, when the mortgage was accepted, and that this rendered the price or consideration expressed on the face of the deed from Wood unliquidated. The proof does show that this quantity was previously sold to Caldwell, find that one of the officers of the bank kneW at the time, that the same piece was included in the conveyance' from Wood to Lewis. But although this knowledge might give to Caldwciil the priority in á controversy between him and the bank; it is not perceived how it can aid Wood as to his lien. It did not render the consideration expressed in his deed to Lewis uncertain and Unliquidated. Retain this hundred acres, or deduct it, and still the whole price at fifteen dollars per acre, is as easily ascertained in one case as the other..

Evidence that the president of the bank knew Lowis was in4 solvtinl. Recent dato of a conveyance of land, after the return of a fieri facias against grant- or, no estate found', is not evidence that the consideration money is not paid, and so notice to a subsequent purchaser.

[196]*196It is further contended that by the return on some two or three executions made by the sheriff to the clerk’s office of the circuit court of the county, before the date of the conveyances from Wood to Lewis, and from Lewis to the bank, it appeared that Lewis was insolvent, and that thdse returns of the Sheriff were recorded by the clerk of the court in his own hand writings and that the clerk was also the President of the branch bank at Hopkinsville, who was actively engaged in procuring the mortgage from Lewis. It is therefore argued that the knowledge of the fact of Lewis’ insolvency j repelled every inference that could have been drawn in favor of the fact, asserted on the face of the conveyance from Wood to Lewis, that the purchase money was actually paid. For it could not be supposed that Lewis, should, just before lie executed the mortgage have purchased the estate from Wood, and paid the whole of the price, when he had not the means of payment by reason of insolvency.

This admits of two answers» it does not folkiw, that a man returned insolvent on a fieri facias, has no money in his pocket, which the Sheriff cannot reach by execution, especially such a character as Lewis, then a merchant in business, whose capital is frequently inaccessible to a writ of fieri facias. But the strongest answer is, it appears in proof that Lewis and Wood had made their bargain for tide [197]*197land, long before the day on which Wood conveyed to Lewis, and Lewis to the bank, and Wood had gone so far as to deliver to Lewis a conveyance for the land, several months previously, which was never attested by witnesses or acknowledged for re - ord, and these facts were known clearly to the same clerk of the circuit court and president of the bank, who was employed in taking the conveyance of mortgage from Lewis i It was therefore reasonable that he should concludes when he saw the conveyance just made by Wood to Lewis, and properly acknowledged for record, that Lewis had just completed his payment and purchase from W ood. We are unwilling to establish the principié that the recent date of the conveyance alone should, per

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Bluebook (online)
21 Ky. 194, 5 T.B. Mon. 194, 1827 Ky. LEXIS 132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wood-v-bank-of-kentucky-kyctapp-1827.