34 Kan. 694 | Kan. | 1886
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The principal questions involved in this case are with reference to the priority of liens and interests in real estate. The plaintiffs in the court below were E. A. Hildebrand, George O. Hildebrand and S. F. .Jones, partners as Hildebrand Bros. & Jones, and the defendants in the court below were L. W..Clay, Polly Clay, Adam M. Clay, John Walruff, John Quinn, I. G. Thomas, Pauline Thomas, George Newman, Henry Harris, Tabitha Harris and Theodore Zoellner. L. W. Clay and Polly Clay, who are husband and wife, and the sole plaintiffs in error, seek by this petition in error to have the judgment of the court below reversed in
The plaintiffs in the court below, Hildebrand Bros. & Jones, commenced their action in the court below on June 4, 1884, and in their petition set forth three separate causes of action, to wit: 1. One upon a promissory note for $600, executed April 1, 1879, by Henry Harris and Tabitha Harris, who were husband and wife, to George Collett jr., due in five years, and secured by a mortgage on lots numbers 11, 13, 15, 17, 18,19, 20, 22, 24, and 26, in block number 2, in Strong City, Chase county, Kansas. The mortgage' was recorded April 1, 1879, and the note and mortgage became the property of the plaintiffs on May 8, 1884, by assignment. 2. One upon a« promissory note for $1,400, executed July 6, 1880, by L. W. Clay and Polly Clay, to Henry Harris, and Tabitha Harris, secured by a second mortgage on all the foregoing lots, which mortgage was recorded on July 14, 1880, and the note and mortgage became the property of the plaintiffs on May 12, 1884, by assignment. This note was to become due on July 6, 1887, or sooner if any default should be made in any of the stipulations contained in the mortgage; and several of such defaults were made, and the note became due before the commencement of this action. 3. One upon a promissory note for $900, executed March 27,. 1883, by I. G. Thomas and Pauline Thomas, husband and wife, to L. W. Clay, due in six months and secured by a mortgage upon lots 17 and 19 of the foregoing lots, which mortgage was recorded April 17, 1883, and the note and mortgage became the property of the plaintiffs on September 6, 1883, by assignment.
The defendant John Quinn set forth in his answer, which was filed July 14, 1884, in substance that L. W. Clay and Polly Clay, on December 6, 1882, by their deed of general warranty, conveyed to him the west half of said lots 18, 20,
John Walruff, in his answer, which was filed June 30,1884, set forth in substance that on December 11, 1881, L. W. Clay. and Polly Clay, being indebted to E. A. Hildebrand, one of the plaintiffs below, in the sum of $850, secured the same by deeding to Hildebrand lots 11 and 13 of the foregoing lots; that on March 21, 1882, the Clays paid said indebtedness to Hildebrand and executed their note to John Walruff for $900, and to secure the payment of the same procured Hildebrand to convey by deed said lot 13 to John Walruff; that such deed to Walruff was intended to be, and was in fact, a mortgage to secure said note; that by the mutual mistake of the parties the deed from the Clays to Hildebrand and the subsequent deed from Hildebrand to Walruff, were made to cover lot 13, instead of lot 15, as was intended by the parties. Walruff demanded a money judgment for said amount of $900, and prayed that the said deed be declared a mortgage, and the same be reformed in its description of the property mentioned therein, so as to make it read “lot 15,” instead of “lot 13,” and that the same be foreclosed. The deed from Hildebrand to Walruff was recorded on jMarch 25, 1882.
These are all the pleadings in the case. All the defendants
I. Befoi’e proceeding to consider whether the court below committed any material error or not in any of its rulings, it would probably be well to state that no exception was taken to any of such rulings. Nor was any motion for a new trial filed in the case, or presented to or considered by the court. Nor does it appear that all or any considerable portion of the evidence presented to the trial court has been brought to this court. Indeed, no trial could have been had as between Clay and any of the other parties, for the reason that no issues were made up between them. The Clays were in default. Nor does it appear that any of the allegations of the plaintiffs’ pe
II. The first complaint, which is made by the Clays, is as follows :
“The court below erred in ordering the appraisement and sale of the real estate to' satisfy the debt created by the note from the plaintiffs in error [the Clays] to Henry and Tabitha Harris, prior to the expiration of six months from the date of the judgment. The mortgage which authorized the sale of the real estate to pay this debt contained the words c appraisement waived,’ and hence execution of the judgment should have been stayed six months. (Code, §453a.)”
The words of the mortgage above referred to read as follows : “Appraisement hereby waived, or not, at the option of the parties of the second part, [to wit, the said Henry Harris and Tabitha Harris,] their executors, administrators, or assigns.” It will be seen that under the contract the holders of the mortgage, whoever they might be, and who are now the plaintiffs in this action, had the option in foreclosing their mortgage to have' 'the property sold in accordance with the terms of the foregoing statute, or not, as they chose; and hence the court below did not err. And we might further say, that this was only a second mortgage, and that none of the other four mortgages mentioned in this action contained any such words as “appraisement waived.” Under such other mortgages there can certainly be no claim that any stay of
III. The next-complaint, which is also made by the Clays, is as follows: “ The court certainly erred in decreeing the judgment rendered against I. H. Thomas and. Pauline Thomas a lien upon all the real estate, as was done by the decree in this case.” If the assumption contained in the foregoing complaint is a correct interpretation of the judgment rendered by the court below, then of course the court below erred; for the mortgage executed by Thomas and wife covered only two lots, to wit, lots 17 and 19. We think, however, that the judgment is open to another and a fairer interpretation, and one which will render it correct and proper, and wherever a judgment is open to two or more interpretations, that interpretation should be given to it which will make it correct and proper, and which will make it correspond with the pleadings and the other proceedings in the case, and not an interpretation which will render it improper or erroneous. Also, wherever the entry of a judgment is so obscure as not to clearly express the exact determination of the court, reference may be had to the pleadings and the other proceedings; and if, with the light thus thrown upon such entry, its obscurity is dispelled and its intended signification made apparent, the judgment will be upheld and carried into effect in the same manner as though its meaning and intent were made clear and manifest by its own terms. (Freeman on Judgments, §45; Fowler v. Doyle, 16 Iowa, 534; Finnagan v. Manchester, 12 id. 521; Bell v. Massey, 14 La. An. 843.) Now, construing the entry of the judgment in the present case in the light of the pleadings and the other proceedings, we think the judgment to enforce the lien of the Thomas mortgage will cover only lots 17 and 19; but as such entry is open to some criticism, we shall allow a modification of the entry to be made so as to make it clear and manifest. Only lots 17 and 19 can be used in paying the Thomas mortgage.
IV. The next complaint, which is also by the Clays, is as
Y. The first complaint made by the defendant Walruff is, that the court below erred in adjudging that the plaintiffs’ liens were prior to his lien upon said lot No. 15; and this for the reason that the only allegations in the plaintiffs’ petition affecting Walruff and his interests were that the “defendants, and each of them, (including Walruff,) have or claim some interest in and to the premises above described;” and the case of Short v. Nooner, 16 Kas. 227, is cited as authority therefor. Now we think the two cases are not parallel, and that the case cited is not authority for this. ■ In that case the defendant was wholly in default, not having filed any answer of any kind in the case, while in this case the defendant Walruff was not in default, but made an appearance in the case and set up in detail all his rights and interests in the property. Besides, the plaintiffs in this case prayed as against all the defendants that their mortgages should be foreclosed; that their liens should be adjudged to be the prior liens upon the premises; and that each of the defendants should be forever barred and foreclosed from all right, title, estate, property, and equity of redemption in and to the said premises, and for such other and further relief as might be proper in equity and good conscience. In the case of Short v. Nooner, supra, no trial was had, nor could it have been under the pleadings in that case; while in the present case a full trial was had and evidence
VI. The second complaint made by Walruff has been sufficiently answered by what we have already said concerning the second complaint made by the Clays. The third complaint made by Walruff is, that the court below erred in determinipg the priority of liens and in ordering a sale of the property without reference to the order in which the property should be sold, merely providing that the proceeds should be used, first, to satisfy the plaintiffs’ judgments, and then, if there was any surplus, that it should be used in the payment of Walruff’s judgment. As to the first two mortgages held by the plaintiffs, there can certainly be no question as to the correctness of the judgment of the court below. The liens of those two mortgages are unquestionably prior to the lien of the Walruff mortgage. Those two mortgages were not only executed and recorded prior in time to the Walruff mortgage, but the Walruff mortgage was executed in express subjection to them. The Walruff mortgage, as it is set forth by his own counsel, is in form a warranty deed, conveying the property with covenants of warranty, against incumbrances and against
As before stated, Walruff’s mortgage was in form a deed, and Walruff alleges that it was executed by E. A. Hildebrand and wife, but the court below found that it was executed by L. W. Clay and wife; but by whomsoever it was executed, it was in fact a mortgage, and was originally a mortgage on lot 13, and not on lot 15, and was long after its execution and after the execution of the Thomas mortgage, reformed by the decree of the court so as to make it a mortgage on lot 15, instead of on lot 13. Now who knew of this mistake in Walruff’s mortgage prior to the time when he alleged such mistake in his answer? Did the plaintiffs know it? Or did Thomas and wife know it? There is no finding that either of these persons knew it; and we can hardly say that there is any evidence tending to show that either knew it. There is certainly not the slightest evidence, directly or indirectly, expressly or impliedly, tending to show that Thomas and wife had any knowledge of this mistake. Besides, the notes and mortgage were negotiable, and the plaintiffs purchased the same before due, and if they had no knowledge in fact of the mistake in the Walruff mortgage, then why should they be compelled to reserve the fund arising from the sale of lot No. 15 to pay Walruff’s mortgage instead of reserving the fund arising from the sale of lots Nos. 17 and 19 to pay the Thomas mortgage?
But, aside from the claims or interests of the plaintiffs and the Clays, have not Thomas and wife the right to have the funds arising from the sale of lots 15, 17 and 19 applied in the above manner? Have they not the right to claim that -lot 15 shall be sold and applied in payment of the plaintiffs’ first two mortgages before lots 17 and 19 shall be so sold and applied, and that if the proceeds of the sale of any lot or lots may be reserved from the payment of the plaintiffs’ first two