58 Kan. 278 | Kan. | 1897
This was an action of ejectment for the recovery of 120 acres of land.
In 1873, James Campbell borrowed $440 of Amanda Corby, and secured the same by mortgage upon a quarter-section of land of which the tract in dispute is the greater part. He having defaulted in the payment of the mortgage debt, foreclosure suit was instituted, and judgment was recovered on January 3, 1876. In April following, Mr. Campbell sold forty acres of the
Upon Mr. Campbell’s return this action was instituted, and thereafter a substitution was had of parties plaintiff, not necessary to be explained here. Mrs. Corby defends upon her mortgage judgment, foreclosure sale and sheriff’s deed, and the five-years Statute of Limitations contained in section 16 of the Civil Code. To these defenses the plaintiffs reply that such sale and deed are nullities\ and pass no title, because of the payment of the judgment upon which they are founded and because the sheriff’s deed is void upon its face. Upon the trial the court instructed the jury that such deed was void úpon its face, and, because thereof, directed the return of a verdict in favor of the plaintiffs, defendants in error here. The court, however, submitted to the jury the question whether the mortgage judgment had been paid prior to the sheriff’s sale and deed, as alleged by plaintiffs, and the jury found, in answer to a special interrogatory upon the subject, that such judgment had been paid prior to such sale and deed.
The first question for. consideration relates to the validity of the deed, and the consequent correctness of
Following the instruction to find for the plaintiffs, the court directed an inquiry into the question of payment of the mortgage judgment; for the purpose, we suppose, of determining the amount, if anything, to be paid by plaintiffs to defendant in discharge of the judgment, and as a condition precedent to regaining possession of the land. This was proper under section 613 of the Civil Code, but we are of the opinion that the question of the payment of the debt could not have been properly considered by the jury, and the facts of the case, as claimed by the defendant, properly inquired into by them, in the face of a positive instruction to find, at all events, in the plaintiffs’ favor; and especially is this true under another instruction given to the jury, to the effect that, if they believed from the evidence that Mr. Campbell had paid to Mr. Culligan, the defendant’s agent, the money derived from the sale of the forty acres of land, in satisfaction of the judgment, they should find that such judgment had been paid, although they might believe from other evidence that, after such payment, Mr. Campbell had received different sums of money from Mr. Culligan. It was claimed by defendant, and evidence was introduced to prove such claim, that if the judgment had been paid to Mr. Culligan the money received by him therefor had been paid back. Thus the question of the payment of the judgment was rendered difficult of determination, by the doubt which the court’s instruction threw upon the question of the subsequent reclamation of the money from
That upon a future trial the law may be understood, we feel justified in saying, though not strictly necessary to the determination of the case as presented to us, that if, as a fact, the mortgage judgment was paid prior to the sheriff’s sale, there can be no doubt that such sale was a nullity, and the deed founded thereon likewise a nullity, as against the defendant and all other persons having knowledge of the same ; as much so as though the fact was apparent upon the face of the deed or of the record upon which it was founded. There can be no valid sale under a satisfied judgment. Weston v. Clark, 37 Mo. 568 ; Durfee v. Moran, 57 id. 374 ; McClure v. Logan, 59 id. 234 ; Drefhal v. Tuttle, 42 Iowa, 177; Frost v. Yonkers Savings Bank, 70 N. Y. 553 ; Craft v. Merril, 14 id. 456; Wood v. Colvin, 2 Hill, 566.
For the error pointed out, the judgment will be reversed and a new trial ordered.