Reversing on original and affirming on cross-appeal.
On March 20, 1926, Talton Combs, and his wife, Gracie Combs, mortgaged certain real property in Hazard to the Commonwealth Life Insurance Company to secure an indebtedness of $7,000, represented by several notes. Thereafter Combs became indebted to the First National Bank of Hazard for approximately $6,700, the First State Bank of Vicco for $1,500, to the Perry County State Bank for $600, and to the Hazard Bank Trust Company for $300. Billie Baker, French Evans, and D.Y. Wooten were sureties on the various bank notes. On October 25, 1926, Combs and wife executed to the sureties a second mortgage on the same property theretofore mortgaged to the Commonwealth Life Insurance Company to indemnify them against loss. Thereafter the sureties became insolvent, and Combs became delinquent in his payments to the insurance company and the bank. On August 10, 1927, the insurance company brought suit against Combs and wife, the sureties on the bank notes, and the three banks to enforce its mortgage lien on the property, alleging that the property could not be divided without materially impairing its value, that it would sell for more money as a whole, and that it would be beneficial for all parties concerned to have the property sold as a whole. Process was issued, and the return of the sheriff shows that it was served on Talton Combs and Gracie Combs, his wife, and others. The banks filed answers and cross-petitions, setting up the mortgage to the sureties, and asserting a lien on the property by way of subrogation. Process on the answers and cross-petitions was likewise served on Combs and wife. On September 27, 1927, Combs and wife filed what is called a special demurrer, which was overruled, and which will hereafter be considered. *Page 542 On December 16, 1927, the court adjudged the insurance company a first lien to secure the sum of $7,253.71, and second liens of equal dignity in favor of the four banks for $9,100, and ordered a sale of the property. The property was appraised at $15,000, and was sold on January 8, 1928, to the First National Bank of Hazard for $11,000. Two bonds were executed by the bank for $5,500 each, with Jesse Morgan as surety, payable in six and twelve months, respectively, after date. The sale was confirmed, and the master commissioner was directed to convey the property to the First National Bank of Hazard. In the meantime D.H. Goodlette had been appointed receiver of the property, and on April 24, 1929, Combs and wife filed a motion to discharge the receiver and to set aside the sale. The motion to set aside the sale was overruled, but the motion to discharge the receiver was sustained. At the September term, 1929, the commissioner conveyed the property to the First National Bank, and it was awarded a writ of possession.
On August 15, 1930, Combs and wife brought this suit against the Commonwealth Life Insurance Company and the different banks to set aside the judgment rendered in the previous action and all proceedings thereunder on the ground that Gracie Combs was not served with process; that they were entitled to a homestead in the property; that Gracie Combs had been forced by her husband to sign and execute the mortgage, was a married woman at the time; that the First National Bank was in liquidation at the time it filed its petition, and Combs and wife were in adverse possession of the property at the time it was sold by the commissioner. Joseph A. Gamble, who on March 18, 1930, was appointed receiver of the First National Bank of Hazard, intervened in the action and made certain claims which will hereafter be considered. The chancellor, after adjudging that Gracie Combs was not before the court, set aside the judgment and all proceedings thereunder, and allotted to Mrs. Combs a homestead in a portion of the property free of all liens and incumbrances. From that judgment the insurance company appeals, and the receiver has prosecuted a cross-appeal.
The first question to be determined is whether the trial court ruled correctly in holding that Gracie Combs *Page 543
was not before the court in the original action. Unless in a direct proceeding against himself or his sureties, an officer's certificate, such as a return on a summons, cannot be called in question except upon an allegation of fraud on the part of the party benefited thereby, or mistake on the part of the officer. Section 3760, Kentucky Statutes; Tackett v. Mayo,
The several contentions made by the receiver of the First National Bank will be considered in the following order:
(1) Even if the property should have been sold in separate tracts, and not as a whole, this did not render the judgment void. At most it was a mere error available only on appeal, and not in an independent action brought by the receiver for the purpose of having the sale set aside.
(2) The claim that the bank is not bound because the sale bonds were not found in the record is without merit. The record discloses that the bank made the purchase, and that two sale bonds for $5,500 each were executed by the bank with Jesse Morgan as surety, and there can be no doubt that, if the sale bonds have been lost or misplaced, they may be supplied by the court.
(3) The contention that the bank is not bound because the property was sold on six and twelve months' time, and the deed was made to the bank before the purchase money was paid, and under an arrangement by which the bank was to pay for the property at the rate of $50 a month, is equally without merit. The arrangement, which was mutually agreed to by appellant and the bank, was more advantageous to the bank than the terms on which the property was sold, and furnishes no ground for complaint on the part of the receiver.
(4) The purchase by the bank was not an ultra vires transaction, or invalid because it was made by the cashier without formal authority from the board of directors. Under the federal statute,
As the sale to the bank was valid, it follows as a matter of course that the receiver is not entitled to recover from the insurance company the payments made by the bank on the purchase price.
Wherefore the judgment is reversed on the original appeal and affirmed on the cross-appeal, and cause remanded, with directions to dismiss the petition of Combs and wife, and the answer and cross-petition of the receiver, and for such other proceedings as may be necessary to restore the rights of appellant. *Page 546