The opinion of the court was delivered by
This was an action brought by Henry D. Markley and Isaac N. Bair against Sarah B. Reasoner and Stephen H. Reasoner, and others, to recover a judgment upon a promissory note, and to enforce a lien upon certain real estate, which lien was created for the purpose of securing the payment of said note, and was created by an instrument in writing, which is claimed to be in effect a mortgage. Judgment was rendered in the court below in favor of the plaintiffs and against the defendants, who now bring the case to this court.
The defendants below (plaintiffs in error) make three points in this court: First, Th,at the property claimed to have been mortgaged belonged at the time to the government of the United States, and was not subject to be mortgaged; second, that the subject-matter of this action is res adjudieata; third, that the defendants’ set-off for damages should have been allowed in the court below.
The facts of this case are substantially as follows: In 1871, the town site of Osborne City was settled upon and occupied as a town site, under the act of congress of March 2, 1867. (14 U. S. Stat. at Large, 541.) The town site was divided into lots, and T. J. Clark settled upon and occupied the lots claimed to have been mortgaged in this case, which lots'were a part of said town site. On January 28, 1873, Clark and wife executed a warranty deed to Stephen II. Reasoner and Albert E. Saxey for said lots. On August 27,1873, Reasoner and wife executed a warranty deed to Saxey for an undivided half-interest in said lots; and Saxey then executed a warranty
I. The first point made by the plaintiffs in error, defendants below1, that the title to the mortgaged property was in the United States at the time it was mortgaged, and therefore that the mortgage is void, is not tenable. (Fessler v. Haas, 19 Kas. 216; Rathbone v. Sterling, ante, p. 444.) A settler and occupant upon a piece of land, settled upon and occupied as a town site under the said act of congress, has rights in and to the property although the title may still be in the United States. But the plaintiffs in error do not press this point. They seem themselves to consider that the point is not Avell taken,\and we shall pass to the next point.
II. JWe think that the point that the subject-matter of this action is res adjudicata, is just as untenable as the first point made by the plaintiffs in error. It does not come within the rule enunciated in the case of the A. T. & S. F. Rld. Co. v. Comm’rs of Jefferson Co., 12 Kas. 127. The first action was for the recovery of real estate; the second action was to set aside a deed, and to declare the title to the property in Mrs. Reasoner; while this action is for the recovery of money on a promissory note, and to foreclose a mortgage; and the plaintiffs in this action were not parties to either one of the other
III. The third point made by the plaintiffs in error is also untenable. They claim damages by way of set-off or counter-claim, for expenses'incurred in defending said ejectment suit, and in prosecuting said suit to set aside the deed from the probate judge; and these expenses are principally attorney’s fees. Now, as we have before stated, the plaintiffs in this action were not parties to either of the said suits; but if they had been, it is not pretended that either of said suits was so malicious or devoid of probable cause as to furnish the basis for an action for malicious prosecution. But in the second suit th'e plaintiffs in error were themselves the plain
The judgment of the court below will be affirmed.
