107 Ky. 530 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1900
delivered the opinion oe the court.
In December, 1895, the appellant, Mary A. Mayfield (then Murehead), as administratrix of the estate of J. S. Morehead, her husband, and as his widow, filed a suit for a settlement and distribution of his estate, making parties defendant the heirs at law and creditors — among the creditors being appellee, Wright, trustee, as holder of bonds and coupons for $10,000, secured by mortgage on certain of the realty belonging to the estate, including the home place.
Appellee, Wright, on January 17, 1896, filed an answer ■and cross petition setting up his mortgage and bonds, which were not due, and the second gale of interest which would not be due until January 28, 1896.
In the answer and cross petition the trustee averred that he believed that the mortgaged property was probably
A receiver was appointed for the real estate on February 8, 1896, the order reciting that it was made upon the motion of the defendants, the Warren Deposit Bank, and others. The home place rented during the pendency of the litigation for $1,500, which was adjudged to Wright, as the sale of the property did not realize enough, after payment of a vendor's lien thereon, to discharge the mortgage debt. It is over 'this sum that the question upon this appeal arises, it being claimed that it should have gone to the widow and heirs of Morehead.
By stipulation it appears that Morehead was at the time of his death the owner of the land in fee, and that no allotment of dower had ever been made to the widow. It was, therefore, dowable real estate, and the widow would therefore be entitled to one-third of the rents and profits thereof from his death until dower should be assigned (section 2138, Kentucky Statutes), and the heirs at law to the remaining two--thirds of the rent, unless this right was divested and defeated by the fact of the receivership.
It seems well settled in this State that the right which formerly existed in the mortgagee to take the rents and profits resulted from, and was dependent upon, his right to oust the mortgagor from the possession. That right does not now exist. Collins v. Richart, 14 Bush, 621.
The mortgagor has the right to remain in possession of the mortgaged property until divested thereof by a sale. His rights in regard to the property are exactly the same as those of the vendee of property upon which a vendor’s lien is retained, unless — First, he has by express stipulation of the mortgage' granted a lien upon the rents and
In the former case it was held that the rents can be claimed by the mortgagee only by virtue of his contract with the mortgagor; that they are not an incident to a mortgage pledging the property, and making no reference to the rents.
Except for the provisions of section 299 of the Code, a mortgagor stands in exactly the same position as does the vendee of land subject to a vendor’s lien. See Wilson v. Ewing, 79 Ky., 550.
As for the claim by appellee that the wife’s joinder with her husband in the mortgage and covenant of general warranty estops her from setting up her claim to one-third of the rent, it may be said that by joining in the mortgage she gave up no rights given her by the statute in the dowable lands of her husband, except in so far as those rights were affected by the contract right thereby secured to the mortgagee to enforce his mortgage lien, and have a sale of the land free of her dower, and hist statutory right by proper proceedings under section 299 of the Code to. apply the rents and profits to the payment of the debt.
Unless such proceedings were taken, her right to her share of the rents was unimpaired upon her husband’s death, as his right, had he lived, would have been to rent the land, to dispose of the remts, or to pledge the rents thereafter to become due until a sale should be had.
The only question, therefore, is whether the rents were
When the cross petition was filed, the application for the appointment of a receiver did not justify the appointment under the Code provision. The petition and exhibits show that no part of the debt was due. The condition of the mortgage was therefore not broken.
The section provides that “in an action by a mortgagee for a sale of the mortgaged property, a receiver may be appointed, if it appear that the property is in danger of being lost, removed or materially injured, or that the condition of the mortgage has not been performed, and that the property is probably insufficient to discharge the mortgage debt.”
Admitting that the averment of the cross petition was explicit enough to show that the property was probably insufficient to discharge the debt, neither of the other grounds, one of which is by the section made essential, is shown by the averments.
The order appointing the receiver does not show that it was upon the application of the mortgagee, but, on the contrary, tends to sihow the reverse; nor does it specify the purpose for which the property was to be rented out, nor who should be entitled to the rents. These questions are left open by the order.
It is true that in a few weeks after the filing of the cross petition siome $300 of interest coupons became due, but it seems manifest that, even if the averments of the pleading had been of the existence of that fact, such aver-. ments would not be sustained by the subsequent occurrence.
It is also true that in a pleading filed a year and a half later the trustee alleged that the appointment of a re
As the application was insufficient under section 299 of the Code, we can not presume that the receiver was appointed upon that application under that section, but must presume that the receiver was not a receiver for the benefit of the trustee, but was the court’s receiver to take charge of the property and collect the rents for the benefit of such parties as should be thereafter adjudged to be entitled thereto. This being so, it follows that there was no sequestration of the rents for the benefit of the trus: tee, and that at the date of the judgment they should have been divided between the widow and the heirs at law. -
In response to a suggestion of counsel, it may be said that there would seem to be no difficulty, by proper proceedings, in subjecting that part of the rents which, goes to the heirs at law to the payment pro rata of the debts of the estate.
For the reasons given, the judgment is reversed, with directions to set aside the judgment and enter a judgment in conformity herewith.