19 P.2d 709 | Kan. | 1933
The opinion qf the court was delivered by
This was an action brought by the receiver of a failed state bank to recover a stockholder’s statutory liability.
Among other allegations the petition filed February 5, 1931, charged that 120 shares of the capital stock of the Lebanon State Bank stood in the name of the estate of I. J. Finch, deceased, and that the same were held, possessed and voted by the defendant
“For further answer to the petition of the plaintiff this defendant says that the real estate involved in this action, located in Smith county, Kansas, and described in the amended petition of the plaintiff, was at the time of the institution of this action, has ever since been and still is, the absolute property of this defendant, the same being her sole and separate property; that the same was purchased and paid for wholly with the money of this defendant; that Herbert I. Finch never had the ownership thereof or the control of the same, and that although the same was at one time in the name of Herbert I. Finch by virtue of deed it was the understanding of the parties that the same was purchased with the money of this defendant and belonged to her and by deed of date February 15, 1929, and recorded in the office of the register of deeds of Smith county, Kansas, oni January 29, 1930, and appearing of record in book 42 at page 130 in the records of said office, the title of record was by Herbert I. Finch transferred to this defendant, she being at all times the owner of the equitable title thereto.
“For further answer to the petition of the plaintiff this defendant says that the above-described real estate is not subject to the payment of the debts of Herbert I. Finch, he having no interest therein, and while it was in his name as of record it was only for the convenience of the parties, both parties understanding and agreeing that the actual title to said real estate belonged to this defendant.”
She prayed that the claim of the plaintiff be held for naught and that she be decreed to be the owner in fee simple of the property involved. To this answer plaintiff filed a reply (1) denying allegations of new matter; (2) alleging that Sylvia T. Finch and her husband are estopped to deny that he was the owner of the shares of stock; and (3) that Herbert I. Finch held title to the lands involved in trust for the plaintiff, which fact was at all times known to the defendant Sylvia T. Finch, who has no right, etc., therein. Defendant Sylvia T. Finch filed a motion to strike out the allegations of number (3) of the reply as setting up a new and separate cause of action, which motion was overruled.
In so far as the real estate involved is concerned, plaintiff started out on the assumption that Herbert I. Finch owned the same, then
During the course of the trial contention was made that the issues were being enlarged and testimony offered was being improperly admitted; that a departure was made between pleadings and proof, and that the court erred in permitting amendments after proof, etc., but, in view of our conclusion, the error, if any, was immaterial. Perhaps due to this contention, the court made forty-seven findings of fact, many of which were not material and some of which pertain to matters of evidence rather than to ultimate facts. The original conclusions of law were later modified and now are as follows:
“1. That defendant, Herbert I. Finch, is the beneficial owner of forty shares of stock in the Lebanon State Bank appearing on the stock book of said bank as owned by the estate of I. J. Finch. . . .
“2. That the deposit in controversy of $6,443.45 in the Lebanon State Bank is the property of Herbert I. Finch and subject in this action to appropriation for the liability of said Finch as a shareholder in said bank, to the extent, of said liability.
“3. (Eliminated by the lower court.)
“4. That the contract between Herbert I. Finch and the Lebanon State Bank with reference to the Amis land and the deed made in the foreclosure proceedings in the United States district court to the Lebanon State Bank for said land are each valid as far as the issues submitted by the parties to this case are concerned.
“5. That the deed purporting to be executed by Herbert I. Finch to Sylvia T. Finch to the Amis land is void by reason of the fact that said deed was never delivered by the grantor to the grantee, and the deed is void as far as conveying legal title to the land mentioned in the said deed by reason of the fact that the grantor at said time had no legal title thereto.
“6. That the plaintiff is entitled to judgment against the $6,443.45 on deposit in the Lebanon State Bank in the name of Herbert I. Finch for $4,000, with interest at six per cent from the 5th day of February, 1931, and the costs of this action.”
The court rendered judgment consistent with conclusion No. 6, and further that the defendant Sylvia T. Finch be barred from any interest in the real, estate involved.
The defendant Sylvia T. Finch appeals. No notice of appeal was served upon her .codefendant, Herbert I. Finch. The plaintiff served
The correctness of the court’s ruling with respect to the real estate involved depends on the findings of fact and the conclusions of law to be drawn therefrom. The findings are too voluminous to set out verbatim but are summarized as follows:
In January, 1919, the defendant Herbert I. Finch transferred to his wife, the defendant Sylvia T. Finch, real-estate mortgages which had prior to that time been handled by the Lebanon State Bank for him. This transfer was a gift and without a money consideration, the original gift approximating $58,000. Later in the same year about $4,500 of mortgages was added to the gift. After this transfer, in so far as the Lebanon State Bank is concerned, there was no change, and interest from the mortgages and payments thereon were credited to a checking account of Herbert I. Finch in said bank or remitted direct to him. The income from the transferred property was reported by her in a separate income-tax return pre
In the briefs a great deal of space is devoted to whether the transaction between the bank and Herbert I. Finch following the foreclosure proceedings was a conditional sale, resulted in an equitable lien in favor of Finch and against the bank and other kindred
Prior to the foreclosure proceedings the bank’s interest in the real estate was that of a second mortgagee, and its rights subsequent thereto are fixed by the contract of August 15, 1927. The lower court, in adjudging that Sylvia T. Finch had no interest in the real estate, evidently concluded that if the deed from the bank to Finch was unauthorized, and the deed from Finch to his wife was undelivered, she obtained no title, but such a conclusion about the two deeds, even if it were correct, is not decisive of the matter, for Finch’s interest is determined by the contract and the other documents executed as a part of the same transaction. After the foreclosure proceedings were had Finch was the owner of the certificate of purchase and would in time be reimbursed for the amounts expended by him, either by redemption or by acquisition of the real estate. In this situation, and for the expressly stated purpose of permitting the bank to protect itself as a junior lienholder, the contract was entered into whereby he transferred his interest in the certificate of purchase to the bank on its express agreement that “following the sale of said lands or any sufficient part or portion thereof or the redemption by the defendant owners or their successors in interest, it will pay or cause to be paid to party of the second part” (Finch) the amount which he advanced, plus interest, and in the event of no redemption and no sale within five years to convey “all of the right, title and interest it shall acquire under the deed of the special master in chancery and without further encumbrance” to Finch., It is immaterial whether the bank as a junior lienholder could or could not have forced the judgment debtors to pay its claim, for no redemption was attempted. No reason appears from the contract and contemporaneous documents, nor from anything which appears of record, nor from anything said in the briefs, why this contract should not be enforced according to its terms. It is argued, in support of the lower court’s judgment, that under the contract Finch had a claim against the bank or its receiver, and that the claim not having been filed within one year from the date of appointment of the receiver, is barred. The difficulty with this
There is also considerable argument predicated upon the proposition that when Herbert I. Finch conveyed to Sylvia T. Finch, the bank of which he was a director was insolvent, and that he knew it. Assuming this to be true, it made no difference. Estoppel is not pleaded nor proved, if it had any place in this action. The bank was not prejudiced in any manner, because of the fact it did not know that in so far as the Amis land matters are, concerned, Herbert I. Finch was acting for his wife, Sylvia T. Finch, and that it was her money that was being used. Its rights under the contract were the same, whether Herbert I. Finch or his wife were to receive cash in event of redemption or sale, or the land if no sale were had within the five-year period. There is no showing that the bank had any claim of any kind or character against Herbert I. Finch other than the claim for statutory liability above discussed and on which it is fully protected. Under the undisputed evidence, Finch furnished the moneys with which the real estate involved was acquired, he made the deed to the bank for the primary benefit of the bank, under conditions agreeable to it, and the bank cannot now say it is owner of the real estate freed from the conditions and obligations under which it acquired the title. No reason is disclosed why performance should not be had of the contract between the bank and Finch according to its terms, and if the real estate has been sold within the time fixed, five years from August 15, 1927, why the receiver of said bank should not pay to Sylvia T. Finch the amounts
Various errors assigned have been examined, but on account of our conclusions, discussion thereof would serve no purpose. It might be remarked that motions to make certain findings of fact and of law and to strike or modify others should have been sustained.
The judgment of the lower court with respect to the extent of liability of the defendant Herbert I. Finch, and that the deposit of $6,443.45 is the property of Herbert I. Finch and subject to appropriation for said liability, is affirmed.
The judgment of the lower court with respect of Sylvia T. Finch, barring her from any interest in and to the Amis land above described, is reversed, and the cause is remanded with instructions to determine whether the Lebanon State Bank has sold said real estate and, if so, to order and direct the receiver of said bank to pay to Sylvia T. Finch the sum of $17,700 with interest at six per cent per annum from November 15, 1924, and the further sum of $1,037.94 with interest at six per cent from August 24, 1926; and if said real estate has not been sold, to convey to said Sylvia T. Finch the above-mentioned real estate, as provided in the contract here under consideration.