65 P. 643 | Kan. | 1901
Two contentions are made by counsel for plaintiff in error to work a reversal of the judgment below: (1) That the taking of the quitclaim deed by the bank operated to merge the mortgage held by it in the legal'title so taken, and thus gave priority to the mortgage of plaintiff in error; (2) that the agreement made by the bank to receive the conveyance of the mortgaged premises and release mortgagors from any deficiency judgment that might remain after exhausting the mortgaged premises operated in equity to create the mortgage of plaintiff in error a paramount lien on the pretnises.
“But that the taking of said deed by said plaintiff should not affect in any way the right of the plaintiff*447 to foreclose its said mortgage or trust deed, or to obtain judgment upon the note sued on by the plaintiff herein, or its right to proceed in any way against any of the other defendants herein upon said note and mortgage or trust deed.”
Not only the express finding of the trial court, from the evidence upon this proposition, is opposed to the contention of merger urged by counsel for plaintiff in error, but it would seem from the authorities that, in the absence of such a finding, it would be conclusively presumed that the intention of the bank was that its mortgage should not merge in the legal title, where the effect of such merger would be to give a junior encumbrancer a paramount lien on the property. Mr. Jones, in his work on Mortgages, section 873, says:
“Even when the parties have undertaken to discharge the mortgage upon the uniting of the estates of the mortgagor and mortgagee in the latter, it will still be upheld as a source of title whenever it is for his interest, by reason of some intervening title or other cause, that it should not be regarded 'as merged. .It is presumed, as matter of law, that the party must have intended to keep on foot his mortgage title, when it was essential to his security against an intervening title, or for other purposes of security; and this presumption applies although the parties, through ignorance of such intervening title, or through inadvertence, have actually discharged the mortgage and canceled the notes.”
The text is approved in Stantons v. Thompson, 49 N. H. 272; Hanlon v. Doherty, 109 Ind. 37, 9 N. E. 782; Lowman v. Lowman et al., 118 Ill. 582, 9 N. E. 245; Coburn v. Stephens, 137 Ind. 683, 36 N. E. 132.
Assuming, while not so deciding, the general rule to be as claimed by counsel, is plaintiff in error in a position to avail herself of the same in this case? We think not. It must be conceded that it was the right of plaintiff in error, a junior lien-holder, to pay off the prior mortgage existing upon the premises pledged to secure her obligation, and upon such payment, in equity, to be subrogated to all the rights of the bank against both the property and the makers of the obligation by her discharged. But the right of subrogation, and, as well, the right to make payment of a prior lien upon which the claim of subrogation may be predicated, like all other rights, may be waived or
Hence, it must be held in this case that plaintiff in error, by her acts and conduct, waived the defense of which she now here seeks for the first time to avail herself, and also, by her pleadings upon which the •case went to trial, assumed a position inconsistent with the claim of right made in this court.
AI-generated responses must be verified and are not legal advice.