12 Kan. 500 | Kan. | 1874
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This was an action on a note and mortgage. The note was given by Richard Jenness to William E. Haxton, and assigned by Haxton after due to Joseph M. Cutler. The mortgage was given by said Richard Jenness .and his wife Sybil Jenness to said Haxton to secure the payment of said note. The note called for $1,650, was dated November 3, 1870,' was due one year after date, and drew interest at the rate of twelve per cent, per annum after maturity. The mortgage was given on property belonging to Richard Jenness, and occupied by himself and wife as a homestead. The action was brought by Cutler against Jenness and wife. Jenness pleaded usury, and his wife pleaded that the mortgage was void. The trial was had before the court without a jury. The court found that the consideration for said note was $1,380 in money loaned by Haxton to Jenness, and that the other $270 of said note was for interest agreed to be paid by Jenness to Haxton for the use of said $1,380 for one year. The court also -found that Jenness, on the 3d of' November, 1871, (the day on which said note became due, paid to Haxton the sum of one hundred dollars, in consideration of which Haxton agreed to extend the time for the payment of said note for another year. No other payment was made. Judgment was rendered April 17th, 1873. If the judgment had been rendered in accordance with the contract between the parties it would have been
I. The court below clearly did not err in rendering said personal judgment against said Richard Jenness for said sum of $1,280, however usurious the note may have been, and however void the mortgage may have been. A personal judgment is always rendered in foreclosure cases in this state; (Civil code, § 399, amended by laws of 1870, p. 175, § 13; 4 Kas., 558; 7 Kas., 423, 424.) And the most rigid and penal usury law that was ever enacted in Kansas would allow judgment to be rendered for said amount. It was the amount which Jenness had actually received from Haxton nearly two and one-half years prior to the rendering of said judgment, and for which he had paid no interest, and of which he had paid no portion. Whether any-error was committed in rendering the judgment for said attorney fee, or for costs, does not appear from the'record brought to this court. Therefore, as to the $1,280, and the attorney fee, and the costs, the judgment of the court below must be affirmed.
“Sec. 3. All payments of money or property made by way of usurious interest, or of any inducement to contract for more than twelve per cent, per annum, whether made in advance or not, shall be deemed and taken to be payments made on account of the principal; and the courts shall render judgment for no greater sum than the balance found due after deducting the payments of money or property made as aforesaid, without interest.” (Gen. Stat., 526.)
But supposing the contract for the extension of time for the payment of said note was a valid contract, then did it annul the provisions of said mortgage? A. very able and ingenious argument has been made by counsel for plaintiffs in error, for the purpose of showing that it did. We have also read a very able and elaborate . printed argument oi counsel tor plamtift in error in the case of “Pennock v. Haxton,” (not yet submitted to us,) maintaining the same doctrine. These arguments cannot easily be met or overturned. And yet the doctrine that they promulgate is so novel, and startling, that it is difficult to believe that they are sound. It is claimed that Mrs. Jenness, by joining with her husband in executing said mortgage, virtually became the surety of her husband; that the contract between Haxton and her husband, for the extension of the payment of said note, was a valid contract; (this we now assume as true, for the purposes of this argument, though we think it is not true in fact;») that as such extension was without the knowledge or consent of Mrs. Jenness, such extension released her as surety for her husband; that such release destroyed her previous consent given by her to have said property pledged and sold for the payment of said debt; that, as a mortgage of the homestead, to be valid, must have the consent of both husband and wife, this mortgage, which no longer had the consent of the wife, became void; and therefore, that it could not, after it became void, be foreclosed as against either the husband or wife. The first question for our consideration, and the controlling one is, whether Mrs. Jenness was such a surety for her husband as to entitled to all the rights and privileges of other sureties. We do not think she was. But before we proceed further, we would say, that the mortgaged property belonged solely to her husband,'and no part .of it belonged to her, except that she and her husband occupied the same as a homestead; that the debt secured by the note and mortgage
This cause will be remanded .to the court below with the order that the judgment of the court below be so modified as to correspond with this opinion.