Christie v. Scott

94 P. 214 | Kan. | 1908

The opinion of the court was delivered, by

Smith, J.:

The defendant moves to dismiss the case here on the ground that there is not one hundred dollars in value involved. To establish this claim he computes the interest on each note from the date of the same to the 13th day of February, 1906, being the day the demurrer was sustained, then adds these amounts together and deducts therefrom the sum of all the partial payments with interest on each payment from the date it was made to February 13, 1906. By this method he finds a balance due on February 13, 1906, of $84.90. This method of computing interest is known as the mercantile method. The plaintiff, however, computes interest and applies partial payments according to the method known as the United States rule; that is to say, a partial payment being made and exceeding the amount of interest due on the note, he appliés the,payment first to the discharge of the interest due and the remainder to reduce the principal. If the payment be less than the interest due, the payment is applied to the interest, but the balance of interest is not applied to increase the principal. By this method of computation there appears to have been in issue on February 13, 1906, the sum of $101.46. The latter is the almost universal method of computing interest and applying payments in this state, as well as in the great majority of states. (22 Cyc. 1564, and authorities there cited.) The motion to dismiss is denied.

*260The bill of particulars of the plaintiff, upon which the case was presented in the district court, embraced three causes of action, one upon each note. Separate demurrers, upon the same grounds, were filed to each cause of action, the first ground being that sufficient facts were not stated to constitute a cause of action; the second, that the cause of action showed upon its face that it was barred by the statute of limitations. The court sustained each of the demurrers on both grounds.

It is contended on the part of defendant, as it appeared in each cause of action from the contract attached to the promissory note that the plaintiff reserved the title and right of possession of the property sold, the price of which constituted the only consideration for the note, and thereafter took possession of the property and sold it, that this constituted a revocation of the contract of sale and no consideration remained for the note; in other words, that the transaction constituted a conditional sale, and upon the defendant’s breaking the condition of payment the plaintiff elected to avoid the sale, or should be conclusively presumed to have elected to avoid the sale, by the taking of the property, and that the plaintiff could not thereafter recover on the note.

Authorities are cited from several states which hold that, where the contract attached to a note shows the seller retained the title and right of possession of the property until payment was made, and took possession of the property under the contract, the consideration for the note thereby failed and he cannot recover upon the note. The contract in this case, however, goes further and provides that the seller may take possession of the property, remove and sell the same, and apply the proceeds toward the payment of the note, less the expense of such removal and sale. This is a plain recognition of the obligation to pay the note after the taking, of the property. At least since the enactment of section 4257 of the General Statutes *261of 1901, providing for the recording of such notes and contracts as chattel mortgages, these contracts should be regarded as on the same basis as chattel mortgages. Indeed the transaction, reserving the title and right of possession and right to retake the property, is intended and operates simply as a security for the debt. The transaction does not essentially differ from one in which the seller, at the time of making a sale, takes a promissory note for the purchase-price and at the same time, and before he has really transferred the property sold, takes a mortgage thereon to secure the payment of the note — the purchase-price. Under the law of this state such a mortgage conveys the title and right of possession to the mortgagee. In the one case the purchaser agrees unconditionally to pay a certain stated sum as the purchase-price, and agrees that the seller shall hold the title to the property and right of possession until the debt is paid, and, if it be not paid, that the seller may take the property and sell it and apply the proceeds of the sale toward the payment of the note, implying that the proceeds may be less than the amount of the note. In the other case the purchaser executes a promissory note and unconditionally promises thereby to pay the purchase-price, and, before he has actually received the property purchased, conveys the title and right of possession thereof to the seller, and further agrees that the seller may take possession of the property and sell it and apply the proceeds, less the expenses, toward the payment of the note. There is a theoretical distinction between the two transactions, but no practical difference.

It has never been held in this state, where a mortgagee, under such circumstances, took the mortgaged property and sold it in good faith at a less price than the amount of the note given for the purchase thereof, that the consideration had failed for the balance remaining on the note. On the other hand, the opposite of this proposition was decided by this court nearly twenty-five years ago, in Mfg. Co. v. Lewis, 30 Kan. *262541, 1 Pac. 812, and the law on that subject has since been so generally regarded as settled by that decision that the court has never heretofore had occasion to cite the case. In the case at bar the purchaser may have had full consideration in the use of the articles purchased for the balance remaining unpaid on his notes. Under the contract attached to these notes, we hold that the plaintiff was authorized to take the property and sell it and apply the proceeds toward the payment of the notes, and that by so doing the law does not imply a revocation of the contract of sale, nor does the law imply that there remains no consideration for the payment of the balance due on the notes.

As to the second ground of demurrer, the bill of particulars in each cause of action alleged the absence of the defendant from the state of Kansas a sufficient length of time after the maturity of the notes and before the action was commenced to remove the bar of the statute of limitations, or rather to suspend' the running of the statute of limitations for such a length of time that the bar had not fallen at the time of the commencement of the action. (Gen. Stat. 1901, § 4449.-) And these allegations, as well as the allegations of payment, for the purposes of the demurrer, are admitted to be true. (Pears v. Wilson, 23 Kan. 343.)

The order sustaining the demurrer to each of the three causes of action is reversed, and the case is remanded for further proceedings in accordance with the views herein expressed.