56 Kan. 771 | Kan. | 1896
The opinion of the court was delivered by
In 1885 Prank Royse borrowed from Harriet A. Gore the sum of $2,500, and to secure the payment of the same he and his wife executed to her a mortgage upon lots 8 and 9, in block 96, in the city of Atchison. There were a house and other improve
“This mortgage upon lot 8, block 96, old Atchison, herein described, is released, so as to make a mortgage this day executed by Frank Royse and wife to Martin*774 Baker .for the sum of $1,800 the first and prior lien thereon, the mortgage to H. A. Gore remaining a second-mortgage lien upon said lot. — July 1.0,1889. — PI. A. Gore.
“Attest: D. J. Clieeord, per J. I. N., Deputy.”
Talbott at once reported to Martin Baker that the Gore mortgage had been released or postponed, and" he at once paid the sum of $1,800 to Royse, who with his wife executed and delivered to him a first mortgage upon lot 8, which was duly recorded. The interest due upon the Gore loan was paid when due until 1889, after which default was made, and Harriet A. Gore brought this action to recover the amount of her debt, and also to foreclose the mortgage upon both lots which were originally included in her mortgage. Martin Baker, who held the mortgage on lot 8, was made a party defendant, also G. C. Hixon & Co., who had furnished material for the house erected on lot 9. Baker answered, claiming a first lien upon lot 8, and G. C. Hixon & Co. set up their claim, and asked that it be declared a first lien upon lot 9.
In addition to the facts stated, the trial court found from the testimony that Harriet A. Gore never signed and acknowledged any instrument in writing authorizing Charles J. Gore to release lot 8 from the lien of her mortgage; that after he had executed the release he reported to his mother what he had done in the matter, and that she made no objection to the release further than to say that she thought her security was diminished. She took no steps to rescind or set aside the release or to question it until the foreclosure proceeding was begun, on June 25, 1890. It was found that the lumber and material were furnished by Hixon & Co. between the 26th of March, 1889, and the 12th of October of the same year, and that the building was finally completed on November 10, 1889.
The point of contention between Gore and Baker is as to the effect of the release. A mortgage may be released by a marginal entry on the record duly signed, but it is contended that Charles J. Gore was not the agent of Harriet A. Gore in executing the release, and further, that it cannot be released by an agent unless a written appointment duly signed and acknowledged by the principal is a matter of record. In view of the facts of this case, we are not required to decide whether
What are the rights of G. 0. Hixon & Co.? They furnished lumber and material for the improvements that were made ixpon lot 9. Before the release was executed they had obtained an equity in the lot, and the agent of Harriet A.'Gore had, under her direction, inspected the improvements that had been made. From some of the testimony in the case, it appears that she was aware of the fact that the claims for the improvements made had not been paid and satisfied. The mechanic's lien attached on March 26, 1889, and at that time lot 8 was of the value of ,$2,50Q, almost equal to the amount of the Gore lien., If no third party had intervened, G. 0. Hixon & Co.. would be entitled to have the securities marshaled, and to demand the sale of lot 8 to satisfy the mortgage lien of Harriet A. Gore before subjecting lot 9 or any. part thereof to the satisfaction of her mortgage. The doctrine of marshaling securities applies in favor of mechanics-lien claimants as against mortgage creditors. In a recent case it was stated that
“the general rule in eqixity is that a creditor who is secured by a mortgage or mortgages on several pieces of property, who has actual notice of a junior mortgage on only a portion of the property, is bound to exhaust all his security for the satisfaction of his debt; and if he releases any part of his security,’ or pays to the mortgagor the proceeds derived from a sale of any portion thereof after actual notice of the rights of the junior lien-holder, he does so at his peril and must account to the junior lien-holder for any surplus realized or which ought to have been realized from all of his securities.” (Burnham v. Citizens Bank, 55 Kan. 545.) .