Community Trust Bank of Mississippi v. First National Bank of Clarksdale , 2014 Miss. LEXIS 445 ( 2014 )


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  •                     IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI
    NO. 2013-CA-01840-SCT
    COMMUNITY TRUST BANK OF MISSISSIPPI, AS
    SUCCESSOR IN INTEREST TO THE MADISON
    COUNTY BANK
    v.
    FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF CLARKSDALE AND
    KAREN K. WHITE
    DATE OF JUDGMENT:                         10/11/2013
    TRIAL JUDGE:                              HON. HOLLIS MCGEHEE
    TRIAL COURT ATTORNEYS:                    TIMOTHY JAMES ANZENBERGER
    ROBERT COFFMAN RICHARDSON
    WILLIAM H. LEECH
    GENE D. BERRY
    KATHLEEN SHORKEY COOK
    MICHAEL D. SIMMONS
    COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED:                LAFAYETTE COUNTY CHANCERY
    COURT
    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT:                  ROBERT COFFMAN RICHARDSON
    WILLIAM H. LEECH
    TIMOTHY JAMES ANZENBERGER
    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEES:                  GENE D. BERRY
    KATHLEEN SHORKEY COOK
    NATURE OF THE CASE:                       CIVIL - OTHER
    DISPOSITION:                              REVERSED AND RENDERED - 09/04/2014
    MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
    MANDATE ISSUED:
    BEFORE RANDOLPH, P.J., LAMAR AND KITCHENS, JJ.
    KITCHENS, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:
    ¶1.    First National Bank of Clarksdale (FNB) secured a loan of more than $800,000 with,
    inter alia, a deed of trust on real property in Oxford, Mississippi (the “Oxford property”),
    with the understanding that the bank would become the primary lien holder on the realty.
    FNB acquired title insurance from Mississippi Valley Title Insurance Company (“Mississippi
    Valley”), to insure itself against the risk of an undiscovered superior lien holder. No formal
    title search on the property was performed, although Mississippi Valley’s agent did discover
    the existence of another deed of trust on the property held by Community Trust Bank (CTB).
    However, he never relayed this information to FNB or to Mississippi Valley and issued the
    policy without regard to this prior recorded lien. Years later, CTB’s loan went into default
    and CTB initiated foreclosure proceedings, which alerted FNB to the existence of CTB’s
    deed of trust on the Oxford property. FNB instituted this suit in the Chancery Court of
    Lafayette County seeking to be subrogated to the primary lien holder position on the property
    in the amount that it had paid to satisfy the original primary deed of trust. After a bench trial,
    the chancellor found that the doctrine of equitable subrogation applied and granted primary
    status to FNB. CTB appealed.
    ¶2.    We reverse the judgment of the chancery court and render judgment in favor of
    Community Trust Bank. Based upon the facts presented, subrogation is not equitable.
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    ¶3.    In 2003, Abner’s Inc., owned by Abner White, executed and delivered a deed of trust
    on an Abner’s Chicken Fingers restaurant property in Oxford, Mississippi (the Oxford
    property), with the First National Bank of Oxford in the amount of $272,922.17. This
    instrument was filed for record with the Chancery Clerk of Lafayette County. In 2005,
    another of Abner’s business entities executed a deed of trust with CTB, formerly Madison
    County Bank, on the same realty in the amount of $361,616.00. This deed of trust likewise
    2
    was recorded by the Chancery Clerk of Lafayette County. When CTB made the loan, it was
    well aware that First National Bank of Oxford was in the primary lien holder position.
    ¶4.    In 2007, Abner White and his wife, Karen White, divorced. As part of the Whites’
    property settlement agreement, Abner transferred legal title to the Oxford property to Karen.
    CTB was unaware of this transaction. Under the terms of the Whites’ agreement, Karen was
    obligated to pay off all debts on the Oxford property in exchange for its being deeded to her.
    She also received through the divorce one other property on which she was obligated to pay
    debts.1 To consolidate her debts, Karen approached Ben Bolton at FNB 2 for a large loan to
    pay off the debts on the properties she had acquired through the divorce.
    ¶5.    FNB’s policy regarding nonresidential real estate loans required either a title
    commitment and a title insurance policy or an abstract with an attorney’s opinion on the state
    of the title. Bolton testified that, in the case of loans over $250,000, it generally was the
    policy of FNB to obtain the extra security provided by a title commitment and insurance
    policy.3 When FNB was considering whether to offer this loan, Ben Bolton asked attorney
    1
    Abner was to deed the properties to Karen and then lease them from her, paying to
    her rental income on the two properties.
    2
    First National Bank of Clarksdale does business in Oxford as the Bank of Oxford.
    Bank of Oxford and First National Bank of Oxford are separate entities.
    3
    A title insurance policy insures a lender against the risk of one or more undiscovered,
    intervening lien holders on the property. The title commitment is drafted to set out the terms
    and conditions under which a policy will be issued. According to Brad Jones, vice president
    and claims counsel of Mississippi Mississippi Valley Insurance Company, a title
    commitment is not a substitute for a certificate of title and is not intended to be a
    representation of the status of the title to the lender.
    3
    Matt McKenzie to “provide . . . a title insurance policy and to act as settlement agent.” 4
    McKenzie performed due diligence on the Oxford property and, as an authorized agent for
    Mississippi Valley, drafted the title insurance policy. During the course of his research,
    McKenzie discovered the existence of the CTB lien on the Oxford property. According to
    McKenzie, Abner White told him that he was going to move the CTB deed of trust “to a
    separate piece of collateral.” This never was done. As to any discussion with CTB about its
    deed of trust on the Oxford property, McKenzie said that he could not recall anything,
    although there were notes indicating that he knew how much was needed to pay on the CTB
    loan in order for CTB to relinquish its primary lien position to FNB. McKenzie’s title
    commitment ultimately did not list the CTB lien on the Oxford property, and the title
    insurance policy was issued without reference to that lien.
    ¶6.    Based on the title commitment, and insured to be the primary lien holder on the
    Oxford property, in 2007, FNB lent Karen White $808,893.16. The loan was secured, in part,
    by a deed of trust on the Oxford property.5 The terms of the loan documents made it clear
    that FNB anticipated having a primary lien holder position on the Oxford property and
    indicated that FNB had paid off First National Bank of Oxford’s deed of trust on the property
    in the amount of $205,448.71 from the proceeds of the new loan. There is no mention of
    CTB’s deed of trust. For the next three years, both loans were paid regularly, although CTB
    4
    Both FNB and McKenzie deny that McKenzie was FNB’s attorney. Rather,
    McKenzie claimed that he represented “[t]he transaction.”
    5
    FNB also secured the loan with a deed of trust on a second Abner’s Chicken Fingers
    restaurant property in Starkville, Mississippi.
    4
    was unaware that Abner had transferred ownership of the property to Karen,6 or that FNB
    now had a lien on the property. During a period of about three years, Karen paid
    approximately $560,000 on the FNB loan, paying it down from approximately $800,000 to
    $240,000.
    ¶7.    In 2010, the CTB loan went into default. During the course of its collection
    proceedings, CTB became aware of FNB’s lien on the property. McKenzie, the closing
    attorney whom CTB alleges represented FNB, attempted to work with CTB and convince it
    to take a junior lien position, but to no avail. When CTB attempted to foreclose, FNB, at the
    behest of Mississippi Valley, filed the present subrogation action. During the bench trial,
    FNB argued that it was entitled to equitable subrogation, claiming that it never had “actual
    knowledge” of the CTB deed of trust,7 and that equitable subrogation would not prejudice
    CTB, as it still would be in the secondary position on the property, the position for which it
    originally had bargained. CTB argued that McKenzie’s actual knowledge of the CTB lien
    transferred to FNB, and that its position was prejudiced because it was now behind a larger
    loan than the one to which it initially had agreed.
    ¶8.    The chancellor ultimately sided with FNB and applied equitable subrogation, stating:
    The law as it relates to Community Trust Bank is as follows: If a junior
    lienholder would not be prejudiced and would essentially be put in the same
    position he held upon his obtaining judgment, or here the case is deed of trust,
    equitable subrogation may be applied. To allow the junior lienholder to benefit
    6
    As Abner’s, Inc., still was the obligor on the loan between itself and CTB, Abner’s,
    Inc., continued to pay the CTB loan, despite the fact that the property had been deeded to
    Karen.
    7
    FNB argues that only actual knowledge, not constructive or imputed knowledge, is
    a bar to equitable subrogation.
    5
    from the other’s mistake is inconsistent with the principals [sic] of equity and
    justice.
    The chancellor noted that CTB did very little in relation to its taking of the secondary lien
    on the property: it did not get title work, title insurance, or do an appraisal, and it “attributed
    little or no value to the subject property.” The chancellor determined that FNB did not have
    actual notice of the CTB lien, that McKenzie was not FNB’s attorney in the transaction, and
    that, even if he was, his knowledge of the CTB lien would be imputed or constructive
    knowledge for FNB, neither of which is a bar to equitable subrogation. The chancellor
    awarded equitable subrogation to FNB in the amount of $205,481.71, the amount that it had
    paid to become the primary lien holder. After the judgment, FNB filed a motion pursuant to
    Rule 59 of the Mississippi Rules of Civil Procedure 8 to alter or amend the judgment to
    include five percent interest on the amount originally awarded to it. After a hearing, the
    chancellor agreed and amended the judgment to include interest. CTB appealed.
    ANALYSIS
    ¶9.    This Court reviews questions of law de novo, and it reviews the factual findings of the
    chancery court under an abuse of discretion standard. Matter of Estate of Mason, 
    616 So. 2d
    322, 327 (Miss. 1993).
    ¶10.   Mississippi is a race-notice jurisdiction. “Every conveyance, covenant, agreement,
    bond, mortgage, and deed of trust shall take effect, as to all creditors and subsequent
    8
    “On a motion for a new trial in an action without a jury, the court may open the
    judgment if one has been entered, take additional testimony, amend findings of fact and
    conclusions of law or make new findings and conclusions, and direct the entry of judgment.”
    M.R.C.P. 59.
    6
    purchasers for a valuable consideration without notice, only from the time when delivered
    to the clerk. . . .” Miss. Code Ann. § 89-5-5 (Rev. 2011). The priority of all instruments filed
    for record on a piece of real property is “governed by the priority in time of the filing of the
    several instruments. . . .” 
    Id. In other
    words, when it comes to the order in which the holders
    of several liens on a property may collect on their loans, it is first recorded, first served.
    ¶11.   Subrogation is an equitable doctrine whereby a court may circumvent the race-notice
    principles and substitute a later-filed lien into the primary lien holder position on a tract of
    real estate, such that the substitute creditor “succeeds to the rights of the other in relation to
    the debt or claim, and its rights, remedies, or securities.” First Nat’l Bank of Jackson v.
    Huff, 
    441 So. 2d 1317
    , 1319 (Miss. 1983). This Court has recognized and encouraged the
    application of equitable subrogation. See Prestridge v. Lazar, 
    132 Miss. 168
    , 
    95 So. 837
    , 838
    (1923) (“The courts should rather incline to extend than restrict the operation of the
    doctrine.”). FNB seeks to be subrogated to the primary position that CTB occupied under
    our statutory race-notice scheme. In effect, FNB is asking us to ignore our race-notice
    statutes in the interest of what it perceives to be fairness.
    ¶12.   When determining whether equitable subrogation should apply, “[t]he controlling
    consideration is the actual facts. The question is: What is natural justice under the actual facts
    of the situation?” Prestridge v. Lazar, 
    132 Miss. 168
    , 
    95 So. 837
    , 838 (1923).9 Ultimately,
    determining whether equitable subrogation applies is done on a case-by-case basis. See Huff,
    9
    The parties have separated the main argument regarding subrogation into several
    subparts. We discuss subrogation as one issue, as it is a matter of balancing the facts and
    circumstances of the case to reach an equitable outcome, rather than any one dispositive
    factor’s being determinative.
    
    7 441 So. 2d at 1319
    . Above all, subrogation must be equitable to the parties involved. “The
    determination of whether subrogation is applicable is a factual determination of each
    particular case with consideration of fairness and justice as its guiding principles.” 
    Id. “The doctrine
    of subrogation is one of equity and benevolence; its basis is the doing of complete,
    essential, and perfect justice between the parties, without regard to form, and its object is the
    prevention of injustice. It does not rest on contract, but upon principles of natural equity.”
    
    Prestridge, 95 So. at 838
    (internal quotation omitted). Accordingly, although certain factors
    may weigh more heavily for or against subrogation, ultimately it is awarded only after
    carefully weighing all of the facts and circumstances and deciding what the fairest result
    would be.
    ¶13.   The relevant facts we must consider are as follows. FNB lent Karen White
    $808,893.16, secured in part by a new deed of trust on the Oxford property, with the
    expectation that it was now in the primary lien holder position. FNB paid $205,448.71 to
    satisfy First National Bank of Oxford’s primary lien on the Oxford property. The loan to
    Karen White was made with the assurance by Mississippi Valley that no other liens
    encumbered the Oxford property, despite Mississippi Valley’s agent’s being aware of the
    CTB lien on the property, and despite the fact that a timely and appropriate title search was
    not conducted by anyone. Over the next three years, Karen paid back more than $550,000
    of her loan from FNB. When FNB discovered CTB’s lien on the property, it instituted this
    suit for subrogation in the amount it had paid to satisfy the original primary lien on the
    property, $205,448.71. Given that Karen White had paid down her FNB loan from more than
    $800,000 to $240,000, this subrogation amount would largely cover the remaining amount
    8
    of the loan. The chancellor granted subrogation in the amount of $205,448.71 and later
    amended the judgment to include interest from the date the payment was made, thus
    awarding an even greater subrogation amount to FNB. We must analyze these facts and
    consider the factors that weigh for and against subrogation.
    ¶14.   Because FNB is subrogated only to the principal amount it paid to obtain primary
    status, it argues that CTB is behind the same loan it was behind all along. This is consistent
    with the general consensus of most commentators on the subject. For example,
    Subrogation will be recognized only if it will not materially prejudice the
    holders of intervening interests. The most obvious illustration is that of a payor
    who lends the mortgagor more money than is necessary to discharge the
    preexisting mortgage. The payor is subrogated only to the extent that the funds
    disbursed are actually applied toward payment of the prior lien. There is no
    right of subrogation with respect to any excess funds.
    Restatement (Third) of Property: Mortgages § 7.6 cmt. e. (1997). FNB’s position is that,
    when it made the $800,000 loan to Karen White, it was subrogated to the primary lien holder
    position only in the principal amount of $205,000, the portion of the $800,000 that it used
    to pay off the original primary lien. Since this is exactly what the chancellor granted to FNB,
    FNB contends that CTB was not prejudiced and the subrogation is equitable.
    ¶15.   However, the facts of this case clearly demonstrate prejudice to CTB as a result of
    subrogation. After FNB had lent Karen White $800,000 and paid $205,000 to satisfy the
    original loan on the Oxford property, Karen White proceeded to pay more than $550,000
    back to FNB, bringing the outstanding balance on her $800,000 loan down to approximately
    $240,000. At oral argument, counsel for CTB represented to the Court without contradiction
    that the original lien would have been paid down to approximately $12,000 in that same time
    9
    frame if it had continued being paid off at its normal rate. Instead of being behind a $12,000
    lien, CTB now finds itself behind a lien of $205,000, plus interest. It is as if the original
    primary lien had been frozen in time–while collecting interest–from the date that it was paid
    by FNB. This clearly was prejudicial to CTB, as it allowed FNB, in effect, to bury the
    subrogation amount of $205,000 underneath the actual loan amount of $800,000.10 And now
    FNB is in a position to recover the entire subrogation amount, plus interest, as if Karen White
    had not paid one cent on the original loan since 2007.11 This is materially prejudicial to CTB
    and weighs heavily against subrogation.
    ¶16.   Further, CTB was prejudiced not only by the amount of the new loan it was placed
    behind, but also by the fact that the loan it was placed behind involved two completely
    unknown and unanticipated parties. CTB agreed to a deed of trust in secondary position on
    the Oxford property because it determined that Abner’s, Inc., was very likely to pay off the
    primary deed of trust secured by First National Bank of Oxford. Abner’s, Inc., had a good
    10
    This is the practical result of FNB’s argument. Immediately upon its payment of the
    original lien, it contends that it was subrogated to $205,000. If FNB immediately had sought
    subrogation when it paid the primary lien, $205,000 is the only amount to which it would
    have been entitled. However, it now has been several years since that amount was paid off,
    and FNB has recouped more than $550,000 from the borrower. FNB nevertheless maintains
    that it is entitled to $205,000, plus interest. So, as time passed, and FNB has recovered more
    from Karen White, the subrogation amount actually has increased as interest was added.
    Oddly enough, according to FNB, the more FNB recovered on its loan, the more time
    passed, and the bigger FNB’s subrogation amount became.
    11
    At oral argument, counsel for FNB argued that CTB never monitored the status of
    the original primary lien on the Oxford property. Accordingly, Karen White could not have
    been paying that lien at all while CTB’s lien still was being paid, which would have resulted
    in CTB’s being behind the full subrogation amount plus interest. But the fact is, Karen White
    did pay down her loan. She paid back more than $550,000. FNB’s “what if” proposition has
    no merit where, as here, Karen White consistently paid back more than twice the amount of
    the original primary lien.
    10
    reputation and was a profitable business, and, as owner of the Oxford property, had
    significant incentive to pay off the primary lien on the property. CTB did not agree to be
    behind an $800,000 deed of trust between FNB and Karen White. Essentially, CTB now is
    owed money by Abner’s, Inc., that is secured by a deed of trust on real estate that Abner’s,
    Inc., no longer owns. Abner’s, Inc., has markedly less incentive to pay the CTB loan, as it
    does not retain any interest in the Oxford property. Further, at oral argument, counsel for
    CTB argued that the calculus of CTB’s decision to accept a deed of trust on the Oxford
    property would have been substantially different if it had known that the owner of the Oxford
    property was Karen White. This additional prejudice to CTB also weighs against
    subrogation.
    ¶17.   We also must consider the fact that FNB and Mississippi Valley had constructive
    notice of CTB’s deed of trust. “Every title-bond or other written contract in relation to land
    may be acknowledged or proved, and certified and recorded, . . . and the proper certificate
    thereof and delivery to the clerk of the chancery court of the proper county . . . shall be notice
    to all subsequent purchasers of the existence of such bond or contract.” Miss. Code Ann. §
    89-5-7 (Rev. 2011) (emphasis added). “The registration of an instrument is constructive
    notice to the world of the contents of the paper there recorded. . . .” Simmons v. Hutchinson,
    
    81 Miss. 351
    , 
    33 So. 21
    , 22 (1902) (emphasis added). When CTB dutifully recorded its deed
    of trust on the Oxford property in the office of the Lafayette County Chancery Clerk, FNB,
    Mississippi Valley, and all other interested parties were put on constructive notice of the
    existence of that deed of trust. FNB wanted to become the primary lien holder on the
    property, and Mississippi Valley insured FNB that it was. The failure to discover the deed
    11
    of trust, which provided notice for “the world” to see in the office of the chancery clerk,
    clearly constituted negligence.
    ¶18.   FNB is correct when it states that constructive notice of a lien and negligence are not
    bars to equitable subrogation. See 
    Prestridge, 95 So. at 838
    -39 (holding that constructive
    notice of a lien did not bar subrogation); see also 
    Huff, 441 So. 2d at 1320
    (“We hold that
    ordinary negligence will not per se bar subrogation. . . .”). The general rule is that actual
    knowledge and culpable negligence are the only absolute bars to subrogation. As an equitable
    matter, we agree that neither negligence nor constructive knowledge constitutes a per se bar
    to subrogation. Instead, each merely is a consideration that must be weighed along with other
    operative factors. FNB has pointed to numerous jurisdictions which have held that
    subrogation is not barred by constructive knowledge or negligence, but it has not pointed to
    a single case in which these factors required subrogation.12 In weighing the equities, although
    constructive knowledge of a lien and negligence in failing to obtain actual knowledge of a
    lien do not bar subrogation, they certainly do not weigh in its favor. CTB’s deed of trust was
    valid and was recorded in the chancery clerk’s office, available for any interested party to
    view. FNB failed to check for the presence and status of liens on the Oxford property.
    Mississippi Valley, which did have actual notice of the deed of trust through its agent
    McKenzie, insured FNB against the risk of an undiscovered superceding lien on the property.
    12
    FNB’s argument, if followed to its logical conclusion, would mean that, as long as
    a lender pays off the primary lien after negligently failing to discover an intervening
    secondary lien, equitable subrogation should be granted as a matter of course. This cannot
    be the case. Lenders cannot be incentivized to blind themselves willfully to the existence of
    other liens on collateral and then claim that their lack of actual notice requires subrogation.
    12
    If negligence is to be distributed between the banks, there is none to assign to CTB, as it has
    done nothing wrong. This factor must weigh against subrogation.
    ¶19.   FNB also argues, and the chancery court in part relied upon, the fact that CTB secured
    its loan in part with equipment and other chattels as collateral. FNB argues that CTB did not
    perform due diligence when it also secured its loan with a deed of trust on the Oxford real
    property. FNB claims that CTB assigned little to no value to the deed of trust, relying instead
    on the value of the collateral in the personalty. Additionally, as CTB did not periodically
    check on the status of the primary lien in front of it, it was not relying on becoming the
    eventual primary lien holder on the Oxford realty. We fail to see how this in any way
    changes the fact that CTB had a valid, recorded deed of trust on the Oxford property, or how
    it obviates FNB’s or Mississippi Valley’s duty to determine whether an intervening interest
    existed on the Oxford property when FNB made its loan. The chancellor’s reliance on this
    factor was erroneous.
    ¶20.   Finally, FNB argues that the existence of its title insurance should not be a factor to
    be considered by this Court in determining whether equitable subrogation is appropriate.
    However, in the context of equitable subrogation, this Court long ago stated that we must
    examine “natural justice under the actual facts of the situation. . . .” 
    Prestridge, 95 So. at 838
    (emphasis added). The existence of FNB’s title insurance and Mississippi Valley’s failure
    to report CTB’s recorded deed of trust on the Oxford property to FNB are relevant facts that
    equity requires us to consider. Other courts have found that the principles of equity required
    consideration of the negligence of a title insurance company which bungled the transaction
    in the first place. After all, “[e]ither they insure or they don’t. It is not the province of the
    13
    court to relieve a title insurance company of its contractual obligation.” Lawyers Title Ins.
    Corp. v. Capp, 
    369 N.E.2d 672
    , 674 (Ind. Ct. App. 1977) (quotation omitted). In determining
    that the existence of title insurance was relevant to a consideration of equity, the Missouri
    Court of Appeals of the Eastern District stated that “[i]t is strange equity indeed, which
    would protect [the title insurance company] from the results of its negligence at the expense
    of [the party opposing subrogation], which is totally innocent in the matter.” Landmark
    Bank v. Ciaravino, 
    752 S.W.2d 923
    , 929 (Mo. Ct. App. 1988). More recently, the Supreme
    Court of Kentucky found that, in the context of equitable subrogation, the existence and
    potential negligence of a title insurance company which has insured the party seeking
    subrogation is relevant to the overall consideration of the equities.
    The equities favor holding the most culpable party responsible for the loss. In
    this case, the most responsible party is not a party to the case. However, the
    Court presumes that both lending institutions involved in this case have viable
    claims against their respective title insurance companies. Those title insurers
    are engaged in the very profitable business of assuring that their lending
    institution customers receive a clear title by insuring such. If the title insurer’s
    examiners bungle the title search, no matter how innocent the mistake might
    be, then the title insurers must ultimately be held liable.
    Wells Fargo Bank, Minnesota, N.A. v. Comm’r, Finance and Admin., Dep’t of Revenue,
    
    345 S.W.3d 800
    , 808 (Ky. 2011).
    ¶21.   Once again, we must ask ourselves, “What is natural justice under the actual facts of
    the situation?” 
    Prestridge, 95 So. at 838
    . As explained above, if subrogation is permitted,
    CTB is prejudiced. If subrogation is denied, CTB can foreclose on the Oxford property and
    collect what it is owed to the extent of the property’s value. If the value of the property
    exceeds the outstanding amount of CTB’s loan, then FNB may recoup the remainder. FNB
    14
    also may file a claim with Mississippi Valley, the title insurance company that insured FNB
    against the risk of an intervening lien on the Oxford property, and whose agent, McKenzie,
    discovered CTB’s intervening lien and then failed to inform anyone about it.
    ¶22.   Overall, to allow FNB subrogation over CTB would be inequitable in this case. While
    FNB may not have had actual knowledge of CTB’s lien, it was, nevertheless, on constructive
    notice of the lien by virtue of its having been recorded in the office of the chancery clerk.
    The fact that CTB is prejudiced by subrogation, in that it now is behind a much larger lien
    between two unanticipated parties, weighs most heavily against subrogation. And, while
    constructive notice of an intervening lien and negligence on behalf of the party seeking
    subrogation are not per se bars to subrogation, they are factors that necessarily must weigh
    against it. By themselves, these factors are enough for this Court to reverse the chancellor’s
    granting of subrogation to FNB. The safety valve of FNB’s title insurance, and the additional
    circumstances of Mississippi Valley’s failure to make its insured aware of CTB’s recorded
    lien, further substantiate our decision.
    CONCLUSION
    ¶23.   We hold that natural justice under the facts of this case inexorably weighs against
    subrogation in favor of FNB. CTB was materially prejudiced by being placed secondary to
    a lien of a value and between two parties that it never agreed to be behind. It now finds itself
    behind a loan amount that has grown despite consistent and substantial payments by the
    borrower. FNB has recouped more than twice the amount of the original primary lien on the
    Oxford property. FNB failed to undertake the most basic of precautions: a title search, and
    it had, at the least, constructive knowledge of CTB’s lien. Instead, FNB relied upon
    15
    Mississippi Valley to determine the status of the liens on the Oxford property, and FNB paid
    Mississippi Valley to insure that it would be the primary lien holder on the property. FNB
    is not the primary lien holder, and it now is in a position to call upon its title insurance
    company for indemnification. Mississippi Valley easily could have prevented this problem.
    The chancery court erred in holding that CTB was not prejudiced by FNB’s subrogation; it
    erred in failing to weigh FNB’s constructive notice of the CTB lien against FNB; and it erred
    in failing to consider the possible negligence of Mississippi Valley, which arguably created
    this dispute. Subrogation is an equitable doctrine, and under the facts of this case, granting
    subrogation to FNB is not equitable. Community Trust Bank is the primary lien holder on
    the Oxford property because its deed of trust was recorded first in time. We reverse the
    decision of the Chancery Court of Lafayette County and render judgment in favor of
    Community Trust Bank.
    ¶24.   REVERSED AND RENDERED.
    DICKINSON AND RANDOLPH, P.JJ., LAMAR, CHANDLER, PIERCE, KING
    AND COLEMAN, JJ., CONCUR. WALLER, C.J., NOT PARTICIPATING.
    16
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2013-CA-01840-SCT

Citation Numbers: 150 So. 3d 683, 2014 Miss. LEXIS 445, 2014 WL 4361337

Judges: Randolph, Lamar, Kitchens, Dickinson, Chandler, Pierce, King, Coleman, Waller

Filed Date: 9/4/2014

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024