67 P.2d 582 | Kan. | 1937
This was an action to quiet title. Defendant’s demurrer to plaintiff’s reply was sustained. Plaintiff has appealed.
In the petition it was alleged that plaintiff is an organized chapter of Sigma Tau Gamma, a national fraternity of men; that it transacts its business through its president and secretary; that its business consists in maintaining the Sigma Tau Gamma, Delta Chapter, that is, in obtaining and keeping a membership of men and maintaining a house at a stated address, being the property title to which is sought to be quieted; that plaintiff is the owner and in possession of the property, and has been continuously since September, 1928, and that defendant claims some right, title or interest to the .property, which plaintiff denies, but which constitutes a cloud on plaintiff’s title. The prayer was that defendant be required to set up its claims, that they be adjudged to be of no effect, and that plaintiff have judgment quieting title.
In answer to the petition defendant filed what it denominated a plea in estoppel by record or former judgment, in which it was alleged: That on April 26,1933, this defendant, as plaintiff, brought an action in the district court in which L. E. Bracey and wife, Jas. M. Jackson and wife, Guy J. Whitaker and wife, Arthur L. Banbury and Willis G. Jones, trustees of the Sigma Tau Gamma, were defendants, to foreclose a real-estate mortgage upon the property in question and to quiet the title to said property in the purchaser at the sheriff’s sale against the defendants and all persons claiming by, through, .or under them; that in said action plaintiff alleged that on September 15, 1926, the real property in controversy was conveyed by warranty deed to Guy J. Whitaker, who as part consideration for the purchase price of the property, assumed and agreed to pay two certain mortgages thereon, one for $3,500, the other for $1,500, in favor of the plaintiff (defendant in this action); that on May 25, 1928, Guy J. Whitaker and wife conveyed the real property to Arthur L. Banbury and Willis D. Jones, trustees, the Sigma Tau Gamma Fraternity, subject to the two mortgages above mentioned, and that whatever title the last-named defendants had in the property is inferior to the claim of plaintiff by reason of its mortgages; that service of summons was duly had upon Arthur L. Ban-bury and Willis D. Jones, as individuals and as trustees of the Sigma Tau Gamma Fraternity, and that they answered both as in
To this plea in estoppel the plaintiff replied, in which it was admitted, seriatim, all the material allegations of the plea in estoppel, but specifically alleged that Banbury and Jones were not at the time of their contract with Whitaker, or at any other time, trustees in fact of Sigma Tau Gamma Fraternity; and, further, that the plaintiff herein, Sigma Tau Gamma, Delta Chapter, had nothing to do with and was not advised concerning the title by which Banbury and Jones were designated in the conveyance from Whitaker to them. It is further alleged that in September, 1928, the Sigma -Tau Gamma, Delta Chapter, made an oral contract with Banbury and Jones by which it purchased the property from them and was given possession of the property upon the consideration of one dollar and subject to the personal liability, if any, of Banbury and Jones, and that it went into possession-of the property and made the payments for a time under the contract of Banbury and Jones, and later, in May, 1933, procured a deed from Banbury and Jones.
Appellant’s right to quiet title in this action is predicated upon the view that Banbury and Jones in fact never were trustees for the Sigma Tau Gamma Fraternity, and even so, Sigma Tau Gamma, Delta Chapter, is a distinct unity from Sigma Tau Gamma, and the further fact that the Sigma Tau Gamma, Delta Chapter, was in possession of the property at the time of the mortgage foreclosure and was not made a party defendant in that action. The very statement of these contentions discloses a lack of equitable grounds for quieting title in plaintiff. The record discloses that whatever interest plaintiff had in this property it acquired through Banbury and
The judgment of the court below is affirmed.