58 Kan. 514 | Kan. | 1897
This action was brought to compel a reconveyance of a tract of land in Montgomery County, consisting of 160 acres, and for an accounting of the rents and profits of the same.
On April 26, 1875, Enos McLaughlin and his wife borrowed twelve hundred dollars from Thomas Acom, and to secure the payment of the same executed a deed to the land, which upon its face purported to convey to Acom the absolute title. At the same time Acom executed an instrument of defeasance, in the form of a bond, which recited that the deed, although absolute in form, was in fact a mortgage given and accepted as security for the payment of twelve hundred dollars borrowed from Acom, due in five years, with interest payable annually. No interest was ever paid by the McLaughlins, and shortly afterward they abandoned the premises and left the State. Acom took possession of the land in 1878, and has since made substantial and valuable improvements thereon. In 1874, forty acres of the mortgaged land had been
This action was instituted by McLaughlin in August, 1890 — more than fifteen years after the loan and more than twelve years after possession had been taken by Acom. In addition to setting forth his rights under the mortgage, Acom set up his tax title to the land; and it was contended in the court below that the relation of Acom was such as to make it his duty to pay the taxes, and that he was therefore precluded from becoming a purchaser of a tax title on the mortgaged premises in his own behalf.
The other view was taken by the trial court, and the question is renewed here. What were the relations of the parties? What was Acorn’s duty with respect to the taxes?
Although the instrument was in form a deed, it was not only understood by both parties to be a mortgage, but it was expressly stipulated that it was intended solely as a security for the payment of the loan. “In Kansas, every deed of conveyance, whether absolute or conditional upon its face, and whether made to a trustee or not, if made for the purpose of securing a debt, and for that purpose only, is a mortgage, and can be enforced only by an action in a court of