89 Kan. 300 | Kan. | 1913
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The controversy in this action is over a fund paid into court by the garnishee. ■ The action was for the recovery of money from defendant Saunders,
. It is admitted that the mortgage was not a valid lien on the hogs sold to the garnishee, for the reason that its date was too remote to make their existence possible at that time. Nevertheless the mortgagee claimed the property under that instrument, the mortgagor yielded to that claim, and agreed that the proceeds should be applied upon the mortgage debt. The hogs were delivered upon the ágreement that such application should be made, to which the purchaser consented. The transaction was completed before this action was begun, except the written order for the money, which was delivered two days afterwards.
While a mortgage lien did not attach to the property
In a similar transaction this court held:
“When the purchasers of land agree as a condition precedent to such purchase, and as a part of the consideration thereof, that they will pay a debt of their grantor, such agreement makes them the debtors of the party holding such claim, and not the agent merely of their grantor for its payment.” (Rickman v. Miller, 39 Kan. 362, syl. ¶ 1, 18 Pac. 304.)
It is true that in the first instance the agreement to sell the hogs did not include an agreement to pay the consideration to Brooks, but after the first load had been delivered, upon the assertion of the claim.of the mortgagee, Saunders agreed that the proceeds should be applied upon the mortgage debt, to which the purchaser assented. As no right of the plaintiff had then attached, no reason is perceived why this agreement should not be enforced. It was an application of the property to pay the debt. Neither the circumstance that the mortgage was not a valid lien nor the fact that the written order was not delivered until after the garnishment can defeat this arrangement.
It was held in Center v. McQuesten, 18 Kan. 476, that an agent after garnishment is not liable to the person to whom he is directed by his principal to pay money. After another trial that case was again reviewed (Center v. McQuesten, 24 Kan. 480), and upon consideration of the additional facts that the party to
The judgment is affirmed.