64 P. 57 | Kan. | 1901
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This was an action by David H. Moore to recover on two promissory notes executed by C. S. Mendenhall and Rebecca R. Mendenhall and to foreclose a mortgage on real estate given by them to secure the payment of the notes. The notes and mortgage were executed on August 1, 1889, in favor of Oliver R. Burnham, who executed a blank assignment of the mortgage on November 29, 1890, and delivered it and the notes to the Husted Investment Company. Soon afterward that company transferred and delivered the notes and mortgage to David H. Moore, at which time Burnham executed a formal assignment of each note and coupon to Moore. On February 11, 1890, the Mendenhalls conveyed their interest in the mortgaged property to Nellie S. Boylan, and on January 13, 1892, she conveyed it to the Kansas Real Estate Company, and that company in turn conveyed the property to L. R. Piper, on May 17, 1892, and Piper conveyed it to O. D. Burt and W. H. Bridgens, on September 20, 1897.
This proceeding was begun on March 1, 1894, and on June 24, 1895, a judgment was obtained against the Mendenhalls for $1761.27, and also for a foreclosure of the mortgage lien. As service had not been obtained on the defendant Piper the case was continued for service on him, and on February 1,1898, after Piper had conveyed the property to Burt and Bridgens, an amended and supplemental petition was filed by Moore, making Burt and Bridgens parties, and asking for a foreclosure as against them. They answered
“It is also further agreed that the only question in issue or dispute in this case is as to the effect upon the plaintiff’s right to maintain his action and foreclosure of the mortgage, set up in his amended and supplemental petition, of his failure to have the assignment of said mortgage, bearing date of the 29th of November, A.n. 1890, filed for record in the office of the register of deeds of Wyandotte county, Kansas, on or before the 12th day of September, 1897, or*539 within six months from March 12, 1897, it being agreed that if the plaintiff’s failure -to have said assignment of said mortgage filed for record in said office on or before said date defeats the plaintiff’s right to foreclose said mortgage as to the defendants Burt and Bridgens, then and in such case the judgment of the court should be for them'; but if the plaintiff’s failure to have said assignment filed for record on or before said date, under the facts and circumstances as set forth in the foregoing agreed statement of the facts, does not defeat the plaintiff’s right to foreclose said mortgage as to the defendants Burt and Bridgens, then the plaintiff should have judgment against the defendants, as prayed for in the amended and supplemental petition.”
In effect, this is a stipulation that Moore is entitled to a judgment of foreclosure unless the failure to have the assignment of the mortgage filed for record within six months after the act requiring the recording of such assignments took effect — that is, on or before September 12, 1897 — defeats his right to maintain the action. It was not recorded until a later time, nor until after Burt and Bridgens had purchased the property; and they now contend that, under the case of Myers v. Wheelock, 60 Kan. 747, 57 Pac. 956, no foreclosure can be had. The present case is distinguishable from the one cited. Here, there is no lack of facts or absence of proof to establish the plaintiff’s right of action, as there was in that case. It is stipulated that there is no dispute between the parties here on any of the issues made by the pleadings, except as to the effect of the failure to record the assignment of the mortgage within the statutory period, and that if that circumstance does not defeat Moore’s right to maintain the action he should have a judgment of foreclosure against Burt and Bridgens, as prayed for in the petition. Every essential fact was therefore conceded,
The only penalty prescribed in the act is that if an assignment is not acknowledged and recorded as therein provided, it shall not be received in evidence in any court of the state. It was not within the constitutional power of the legislature, nor did it attempt, to annul the mortgage or to destroy the mortgage lien. The mortgage continues in existence and remains enforceable notwithstanding the statute ; and the lien and right to enforce the same may be established by any competent proof; but the transfer to and ownership of an assignee cannot be shown by an unrecorded assignment. While such an assignment is wholly valueless as proof, the ownership of the mortgage may be admitted by the defendants or other parties' interested, or it may be shown by any legal or competent evidence. The failure to have the assignment acknowledged and recorded effectually bars its use as evidence, but when a case can be made out or is established without such evidence a judgment of foreclosure should be given. In the present case the stipulation of the parties entitled the plaintiff below to a foreclosure, and therefore the judgments of the district court and of the court of appeals will be affirmed.