113 P.2d 98 | Kan. | 1941
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This was an action to quiet title to an eighty-acre tract of land in McPherson county. The trial court sustained defendants’ motion to strike from plaintiff’s reply allegations deemed vital to plaintiff’s right to recover. Plaintiff has appealed.
Briefly, the pleadings may be summarized as follows: Plaintiff, in his petition, alleged that he is the owner and in the actual possession of the described land; that defendants claim some estate in or lien on the property, the nature of which is unknown to plaintiff; that all such claims were subject to and inferior to plaintiff’s title, and the court was asked to require defendants to set up their claims. The prayer was for judgment excluding defendants from any interest in, claim to, or lien upon the property, and quieting plaintiff’s title thereto as against defendants.
Defendants’ answer contained a general denial, with the admission that they claim an interest in the land; alleged that on November 6, 1925, Carl J. Hanson and wife were the owners of the fee-simple title to the land, and on that date executed to F. A. Smith a mineral deed for an undivided one-half interest in and to all the oil and gas and other minerals in or under the land, or which may be produced therefrom, which deed was duly recorded December 7,1925; that on
The reply contained a general denial, and a specific denial that Carl J. Hanson and wife were the owners of the fee-simple title to the land on November 6,1925, and alleged that prior thereto, and on January 25,1923, Carl J. Hanson and wife had executed to the Central Trust Company a mortgage on the land to secure their note for $2,500, which mortgage was duly recorded. It is further alleged that about April 16, 1931, the Central Trust Company brought an action to foreclose the mortgage, in which action a judgment of foreclosure was rendered, and an order of sale issued under which the property was sold by the sheriff on August 10, 1931, and bid in by the plaintiff, the Central Trust Company, which sale was confirmed on September 18, 1931, and a sheriff’s certificate of purchase was duly issued ; that about September 22,1931, the sheriff’s certificate was duly assigned to plaintiff, to whom a sheriff’s deed was issued February 13,1933. In this foreclosure action F. A. Smith and wife and Virgil O. Wood and wife were made parties defendant, but Robert H. Wood and the defendant, Homa Wood, were not made parties defendant.
It is alleged that Virgil Wood, Robert H. Wood and Homa Wood are brothers, and F. A. Smith is their brother-in-law; that after
In 42.C. J. 164 it is said:
“In accordance with general rules [relating to judgments] the judgment or decree in a foreclosure action is conclusive on all persons who were properly made parties to the action. The converse of this rule is equally true, that persons not parties are not concluded by the judgment of foreclosure. . . .”
Our decisions are in harmony with this rule. See Britton v. Hunt, 9 Kan. 228; Lenox v. Reed, 12 Kan. 223; Ervin v. Morris, 26 Kan. 664; Richards v. Thompson, 43 Kan. 209, 23 Pac. 106; Stacey v. Tucker, 123 Kan. 137, 254 Pac. 339; Motor Equipment Co. v. Winters, 146 Kan. 127, 69 P. 2d 23; Phillips v. Parker, 148 Kan. 474, 83 P. 2d 709; Simmons v. Clark, 151 Kan. 431, 99 P. 2d 739.
Under our code (G. S. 1935, 60-3101) a judgment is a final determination of the rights of the parties to an action, and G. S. 1935, 60-3102, authorizes judgment only against such parties.
Appellant does not contend he acquired the interests under the mineral deeds to Robert H. Wood and Homa Wood by the foreclosure proceedings, but argues that the defendant, Homa Wood, is estopped to claim rights under the mineral deeds to him by his failure to disclose to plaintiff his title, and by his fraudulent representations to plaintiff that he and his brother, Robert H. Wood, were parties to the foreclosure action, and that their rights under the mineral deeds had been foreclosed in that action unless they redeemed, which they would do if they could not buy the certificate of purchase
Plaintiff was not induced to buy the certificate of purchase because of anything Homa Wood said to him; he had previously purchased it. In this and other material respects the case differs from Burgess v. Hixon, 75 Kan. 201, 88 Pac. 1076; Investment Co. v. Reddig, 86 Kan. 689, 121 Pac. 912; 87 Kan. 295, 123 Pac. 741, and other cases cited by appellant. Plaintiff alleged defendant, Homa Wood, approached him and wanted to buy the certificate of purchase. There was nothing wrong about that. It is alleged defendant stated he and his brothers and brother-in-law would redeem from the sale. This was but an expression of a, plan or intention to do' something in the future. Appellant does not contend there was any contract by which appellee was bound to redeem. It was alleged defendant stated he and Robert H. Wood were parties to the foreclosure action, and that their rights under the mineral deeds were foreclosed thereby. Since plaintiff had previously acquired the certificate of purchase, this statement could not change his rights; he had not relied upon this statement when he purchased, and was not justified in relying on it when it was made. (In re Estate of McFarland, 118 Kan. 534, 235 Pac. 832.) A prudent man would have investigated that matter before he purchased. Standing in the position of a purchaser at a judicial sale, he purchased what was sold, and no more. (See Simmons v. Clark, 151 Kan. 431, 433, 99 P. 2d 739, and cases there cited.) Neither the defendant, Homa Wood, nor Robert H. Wood had concealed ownership of their mineral rights; their mineral deeds were duly recorded before the foreclosure action was brought. That record, and the record of the foreclosure proceedings, were as open to plaintiff as they were to defendant. They involve the very transaction in hand, and themselves are sufficient notice to plaintiff of any fraudulent representation respecting them made by defendant. (Black v. Black, 64 Kan. 689, 68 Pac. 662.)
Appellant stresses the fact that the judgment of foreclosure was rendered, the sheriff’s sale had and confirmed, all in the June, 1931, term of the district court. (See G. S. 1935, 20-1009.) While the date the defendant, Homa Wood, is alleged to have talked with plaintiff is not fixed in the reply, appellant argues it was within the same term of court, and that plaintiff was injured by defendant’s statement in this way: Had the false representations not been made by defendant, plaintiff would have examined the records of the fore
In addition to what has been said, relief from the alleged fraud was barred by the statute of limitations (G. S. 1935, 60-306, third) long prior to the filing of this action. The alleged fraud was practiced sometime between September 22 and the first Monday of December, 1931, if within the term of court at which the judgment was rendered, and in any event before the sheriff’s deed was issued, February 13, 1933. This action was not filed until April, 1940. The means of discovery of the fraud was in the public records on which plaintiff’s deed was based. He cannot be heard to say he did not discover the fraud until the spring of 1939. (Black v. Black, supra; In re Estate of McFarland, supra; Sauberli v. Sledd, 143 Kan. 350, 55 P. 2d 415; Malone v. Young, 148 Kan. 250, 81 P. 2d 23.)
We find no error in the record. The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.