83 Kan. 281 | Kan. | 1910
Lead Opinion
The opinion of the court was delivered by
On October 17, 1905, M. M. Poole commenced an action in the district court of Cloud county against Louisa Ann Christensen, N. M. French, C. E.
The facts out of which the controversy arises may in part be stated as follow: W. A.- Poole, the husband of' the plaintiff, purchased the land from the State Normal School, under a ten-year contract, payments to. be made in equal yearly installments. ' This purchase was made in July, 1878. Defendant Louisa Ann Christensen is the daughter of W. A. Poole and the plaintiff. DeWitt C. Poole and Edward Poole are their sons. The land in controversy was not occupied by W. A. Poole or his family before the sale to the sons, DeWitt and Edward, herein mentioned. In 1890 W. A. Poole sold the land to his sons for the sum of $2916, which amount was paid with three promissory notes.’ executed by them and secured by a mortgage on the land. One of these notes was for the sum of $500,. which was shortly afterward paid; another was for $1000, due March 4, 1898, with interest from date— February 3, 1890 — at the rate of 6 per cent, payable annually; and the other was for $1416, due March 1, 1905, with interest from date at the rate of 6 per cent per annum, payable annually. The conveyance was made by an assignment of the contract of purchase which their father received from the state. The plaintiff did not join with her husband in this conveyance. She knew of it, however, and would have joined therein, but upon consultation among themselves it was thought to be unnecessary. The boys took immediate possession of the land, and used it for agricultural and pasturing-
In January, 1895', DeWitt C. Poole was prosecuted for bastardy, and in September of that year was convicted and adjudged to pay $75, and the costs of the suit, amounting to'$249.25. He paid the judgment March 21,1896, but did not pay the costs. On February 15, 1901, an execution was issued, and the land in controversy was levied upon and sold as the property of defendant DeWitt C. Poole. The appellant, N. M. French, purchased it at the sheriff’s sale for $3500, which he paid at that time. At the end of eighteen months, the land not having been redeemed, the sale was confirmed and the sheriff was ordered to execute a deed to the purchaser, which he did. An action subsequently commenced to set aside this deed was appealed to this court and the deed was sustained. (Poole v. French, 71 Kan. 391.) In the bastardy prosecution DeWitt C. Poole employed as his attorney E. S. Ellis, who, prior to the commencement of the term of court at which the conviction occured, received as security for his fees an assignment of the contract which had been transferred to DeWitt C. Poole and Edward Poole when they purchased the land from their father. They both joined in the assignment to Ellis. They received a contract from Ellis in which he agreed to protect the land from taxes, interest and other expenses, and to reconvey to them when they paid his fees and reimbursed him for his expenses on the land. Nothing was paid by them to Ellis, and, after paying taxes and interest until November 13, 1899, he paid the state the whole amount remaining due on the contract and received a patent for the land.
On the 25th of October, 1899, Louisa Ann Christensen purchased the entire interest of her brothers in the land, subject to all liens and encumbrances thereon, which she assumed and agreed to pay. Pursuant to this arrangement she purchased the land from Ellis,
“This grant is intended as a mortgage to secure the payment of the sum of two thousand two hundred and seven and twenty-three hundredths ($2207.23) dollars, with interest at the rate of 4 per cent per annum from the 21st day of July, 1900, in five years from date hereof; the said money being the whole of the second described note and part of the third described note mentioned in a certain mortgage given by D. C. Poole and E. B. Poole, February 3, 1890, to William A. Poole, and by him indorsed to the party of the second part herein, and which mortgage has been satisfied, the*287 party of the first part herein having assumed the same- and this substituted according to the terms of one certain promissory note this day executed and delivered by the said Louisa Ann Poole [Christensen] to the said party of the second part.”
On April 1, 1901, at 2 o’clock P. M., the land was sold, to the appellant under an execution issued upon the judgment in the bastardy case. The sale was afterward confirmed, and a certificate of purchase issued, April 9, 1901. The deed was issued October 6, 1902. The new mortgage given by Mrs. Christensen to her mother was recorded April 1, 1901, at 8:45 A. M., and was therefore prior to the date of the sheriff’s sale. The $3500 paid by the appellant for the sheriff’s deed was $3104 more than the judgment lien for the collection of which the execution was issued. This excess was held by the clerk of the district court. On April 8, 1901, C. E. French, wife of the holder of the sheriff’s, deed, purchased from E. S. Ellis the note executed to him by Mrs. Christensen for $2500, and also the note held by Mrs. Ellis for $1000, and on May 2, 1901, she filed a motion in the bastardy case asking that the $3104 ■in the hands of the clerk be applied to the payment of the Louisa Ann Christensen notes which she had purchased from Ellis. This application was allowed January 23, 1903, and $2200 of this excess was credited upon the note for $2500, and $900 upon the note for $1000. The note for $2500 was payable February 10, 1905, with interest at 7 per cent, payable semiannually;the one for $1000 was payable at the same time, with interest at the same rate. The theory upon which Mrs.. French obtained the money in the clerk’s hands was that it, being the excess above the judgment lien for which the land was sold, belonged to whoever owned the land, and that Mrs. Christensen, having purchased the land, was the owner of the money; that, the notes having been given by her as the purchase price of the land, and the land being pledged by a mortgage for the payment of the notes, it would only be right to have
W. A. Poole died January 2, 1905, and defendant T. D. Troup was duly appointed administrator of his estate by the probate court of Cloud county, Kansas, on the 26th of January, 1907. He duly qualified and has ever since been acting as such.
These are the principal facts upon which this case was presented in the district court. Other facts explanatory of the contentions of the parties will appear in connection with each point discussed.
The first error of which the appellant complains is the order of the district court consolidating the two actions. Without considering whether or not this objection was well taken, we will merely state that, if it was, no prejudice was done by the court’s ruling. Considering the complicated and interwoven condition of the facts, it does not seem possible that the two cases could have been so clearly presented in any other manner. Counsel deserve great credit for the labor and ability bestowed in the presentation of the consolidated cases.
A motion to require the plaintiff to elect which cause of action she would rely upon was denied. This ruling is also assigned as error, but what has already been said of the order of consolidation applies to this objection also. No prejudice or error resulted from the denial of the motion.
The basis upon which the plaintiff claims to be the • owner of the undivided one-half of the land in contro
“One-half in value of all the real estate in which the husband,' at any time during the marriage, had a legal or equitable interest, which has not been sold on execution or other judicial sale, and not necessary for the payment of debts, and of which the wife has made no conveyance, shall, under the direction of the probate court, be set apart by the executor as her property, in fee simple, upon the death of her husband, if she survives him; provided, that the wife shall not be entitled to any interest, under the provisions of this section, in any land to which the husband has made a conveyance, when the wife, at the time of the conveyance, is not or never has been a resident of this state.” (Gen. Stat. 1868, ch. 33, § 8, Gen. Stat. 1909, § 2942.)
It is contended by the appellant that this right, if it existed, has been lost by the fifteen years statute of limitation, and also because of consent, acquiescence and estoppel. It is further claimed that this statute has no application to the property in controversy. In support of this view it is argued that a contract with the state for the purchase of such land is purely statutory, and the procedure prescribed by the statute for its sale must control; and when such procedure has been complied with and the patent has been issued the patentee receives the absolute title in fee, without reserve or contingency. It is also urged that the form of contract used, by the state, and the assignment thereof, both of which are prepared by the state, do not contemplate that the wife shall join with her husband in such transfer, but on the contrary the transaction indicates an intention to deal solely with the purchaser. It is urged that the state may 'choose the manner in which its real estate shall be disposed of, and when a conveyance is completed in such manner to any purchaser no private
The facts relied upon to constitute the bar of estoppel, acquiescence and consent on the part of the plaintiff may be stated as follow: The conveyance of the land by her husband to their sons was well known to her at the time, and fully consented to by her. She insisted upon having and receiving as her own the note for $1000 given as a part of the consideration for the land. She well knew that the sons were in the actual possession of the property, using it for pasturing and agricultural purposes, and that they erected permanent and valuable improvements thereon, believing they were the owners of the complete title thereto. She knew of the arrangement between the boys and Ellis. After Ellis had procured the patent to the land she urged and induced her daughter, Mrs. Christensen, to purchase the land from Ellis, and she knew that her daughter executed to Ellis as a part of such purchase a mortgage on the land to secure the payment of the purchase price. In 1889 the plaintiff , and her husband separated and had an equitable division of all their property, and each waived all future claims against the estate of the other. In fulfillment of that arrangement she received the property which by the agreement was to be hers, and kept it as her own, and as a part of such division she received a portion of the note for $1416 which was given by her sons as a part of the price paid for the land. She received of the purchase price paid by DeWitt C. Poole and Edward Poole notes in the aggregate sum of $2207.28, which she sold to her daughter' for that amount, taking the note sued upon herein therefor. The total purchase price received from DeWitt C. Poole and Edward Poole was $2916, of which $500 was paid soon after the purchase, leaving a re
It is claimed that this note is barred by the statute of limitations. The importance of this claim will be understood when it is remembered that the title of the appellant depends upon the sheriff’s deed, which rests upon the judgment against DeWitt C. Poole which was rendered in the bastardy action in September, 1895, and became a lien upon the land at that time. The notes given by DeWitt C. Poole and his brother when they purchased the land from their father were dated February 3, 1890, and the mortgage given at that date to secure their payment was of course prior to this judgment, but the mortgage by which the notes were secured contained a clause which reads:
“If said sum or sums of money or any part thereof, or any interest thereon, is not paid when the same is due, and if the taxes . . . which are . . . levied against the said premises or any part thereof are not paid when the same are by law made due and payable, then the whole of said sum or sums and interest thereon shall by .these presents become due and payable.”
It is contended that these notes became due.under the provisions of this clause prior to the date indicated upon their face and were barred by the statute of limitations when the note sued upon herein was executed, and that the debt represented by these barred notes lost its priority over the judgment in the bastardy case, and the priority, being lost, couid not be revived, even by agreement of the parties, to the detriment of the appellant. It is therefore urged that the transaction amounted simply to a payment of the notes and mortgage given by the boys at the time they purchased the land, that the new note and new mortgage evidenced a new transaction, and the second mortgage became a lien only at the time of its daté and was
The facts upon the question of when the old notes became due and when barred are as follow: The old notes were dated February 3, 1890. There were three of them — one for $500, due March 1,1893, which was subsequently paid; one for $1000, due March 4, 1898, with interest from March 1, 1894, payable annually; one for $1416, due March 1, 1905. No interest was paid on either of them. Mere failure to pay interest does not •cause a note to become due under such a clause in the mortgage as the one hereinbefore quoted, but there must be a concurrence of default in both interest and taxes. (Lewis v. Lewis, 58 Kan. 563.) No such concurrence occurred as would cause either note to become
Upon these facts the district court held that the plaintiff was barred from any interest she might have had in the land under the statute of descent by the fifteen years statute of limitation, and also by estoppel, consent, ratification and acquiescence. In this decision the court followed the case of Jenkins v. Dewey, 49 Kan. 49. Counsel have criticised this decision to some extent, but an examination of the case shows that the same objections and the same arguments were made when that case was presented that have been made here, and the court was fully advised when that decision was written. It has stood for over twenty years, and we see no good reason for disturbing it now. This disposes of the partition feature of this case. The plaintiff has no interest in the land.
As to the note, we conclude that it is not barred by the statute of limitations. The debt which it represents was in full legal force when the note was executed by Mrs. Christensen to the plaintiff. At that time they were debtor and creditor as to that indebtedness, and were fully competent to make any arrangement for its payment that was satisfactory to themselves. No good reason exists why they should not be free to contract with reference thereto. They were the only persons interested. An extension of time simply prolonged the situation and did not affect the rights of other parties interested in the mortgaged property. It being their intention to preserve the status of the debt as to liens and priority, they should not be deprived of that privilege. Every reasonable interpretation should be given to their agreement to carry out their intention. We think the transaction between Mrs. Christensen and her mother at the time the note involved in this suit was executed amounted to a substitution of the new note for the then existing debt and an extension of the time in which it should be paid.
The action of the court in applying the excess of the money paid at the sheriff’s sale upon the note of Mrs. Christensen was without jurisdiction and void. Mrs. Christensen, being then the owner of the land, was also the owner of the money. There was no excuse for the court to use the money in the payment of her debt, not yet due nor payable for several years, without her knowledge or consent. The order was made in an action to which she was riot a party, and without notice, knowledge or consent on her part, which of course made it void. The trial court, in its judgment entered in February, 1908, adjusted this matter long after the notes became due, by rendering judgment against Mrs. Christensen in favor of Mrs. French for the amount then due and payable upon the notes, and offset this judgment by a credit for the amount of money received by Mrs. French upon the void order of the court, with interest thereon from the date of the order to the date of the judgment. • This left a small balance due from Mrs. Christensen. Whether this be denominated subrogation, or some other name be given to it, is of very little consequence. It resulted in an adjustment which was as just and fair to both parties as could have been. devised at that time. We think the action of the trial court in this matter should be commended and upheld.
These conclusions dispose of the case. There are several other questions discussed by counsel, but in the view the court has taken it will be unnecessary to consider them. We have carefully examined the voluminous abstract and the likewise extended briefs of counsel, and we are unable to find any material error on the part of the district court. The decree is affirmed.
Rehearing
The opinion of the court was delivered by
A petition for a rehearing has been filed in this case by the appellant, in which he calls attention to parts of the opinion heretofore filed which we think require some explanation, to avoid misunderstanding as to the points criticized.
It is strongly urged that the opinion in this case in effect overrules the case of Poole v. French, 71 Kan. 391. We do not concur in this claim. It is our view that the entire scope and extent of the case referred to was to establish the validity of the sheriff’s deed mentioned therein. That case decides that the judgment against DeWitt C. Poole was a valid lien upon his right, title and interest to the land in controversy, and that the sale and conveyance thereunder were valid and effectual and conveyed to N. M. French, the purchaser, a complete title to the interest of DeWitt C. Poole therein. French bought the land at the sale. He paid the money bid therefor and received a valid conveyance for the interest owned by the judgment debtor, DeWitt C. Poole. The right, title and interest of DeWitt C. Poole, by this transaction, was conveyed to N. M. French,1 but the surplus of the money for which it was sold after satisfaction of the judgment belonged to DeWitt C. Poole or his assigns, free and clear of the lien held by French. DeWitt C. Poole might dispose of this surplus to whomsoever he chose, and he did dispose of it to Louisa Ann Christensen when he sold the land to her. While he could not convey any right, title or interest in or to the land as against the judgment lien, his conveyance would operate as an equitable assignment of the surplus money for which it was sold, and we think that the fund in question was in this way transferred to Mrs.. Christensen. Having been conveyed to her, she became the owner thereof. The court could not make a valid order
In the preparation of the opinion it was erroneously said that this fund belonged to her for the reason that she owned the land; but, being her property, she was entitled to have it protected regardless of the manner in which it was acquired.
To recapitulate: William A. Poole bought this land from the state as school land. He assigned his contract to his two sons. One of them had trouble, and they assigned the contract to Ellis, who paid off the amount due the state and received a patent for the land, which he held as security for the repayment of the amount paid by him. Louisa Ann Christensen bought the remaining equity of DeWitt C. Poole, agreeing to pay off all the liens and encumbrances on the land. In pursuance of this agreement she purchased the interest of Ellis, giving to him a note for $2500, which she secured by a mortgage upon the land, she having received a conveyance of the land from him. Mrs. C. E. French, wife of the appellant, then purchased this note from Ellis, and by motion made in the action wherein the judgment against DeWitt C. Poole had been rendered, and wherein the surplus arising from the sale of the land under the judgment was deposited, requested the court to apply such surplus upon the notes of Louisa Ann Christensen, which she, Mrs. French, had acquired from Ellis, claiming that Mrs. Christensen, having purchased the land, became the owner of the surplus arising from the sheriff’s sale and it would be right that her debt for the purchase of the land should be paid with such surplus. The court took this view of the situation and made the order as requested. Of this-motion and order Mrs. Christensen had no notice or knowledge. As before stated, we hold that the conveyance by DeWitt C. Poole to Mrs. Christensen operated as an assignment of this surplus fund to her.
We notice, however, that one matter in this connection was omitted, and that is the costs made by the filing-of the cross-petition in error. The cross-petitioner, having failed in her contention, should pay the costs, caused by filing her cross-petition, and we will correct this omission now. The points contended for. in the cross-petition were prominent questions in controversy. To what extent they increased the costs of the. appeal can not be accurately determined. We think, however, that an equal division of the costs will be approximately fair and just, and it is so ordered.
The petition for a rehearing is denied.