The Honorable Clyde Graeber State Representative, Forty-First District 2400 Kingman Leavenworth, Kansas 66048-4230
Dear Representative Graeber:
On behalf of the register of deeds for Leavenworth county, you request our opinion regarding application of the mortgage registration fee statutes in the following situation:
"Our register of deeds is receiving mortgages for recording by Bank A. Bank A assigns that mortgage out immediately to Bank B and is paid in full for the debt. Later on the borrower will return to Bank A for an additional loan or refinancing of the original debt and Bank A records that refinanced mortgage again intending to assign it to Bank B claiming an exemption for mortgage tax because Bank B is Bank A's parent company."
The exemption claimed by Bank A is K.S.A. 1992 Supp.
"No registration fee whatsoever shall be paid, collected or required for or on: . . . any mortgage or other instrument upon that portion of the consideration stated in the mortgage tendered for filing which is verified by affidavit to be principal indebtedness covered or included in a previously recorded mortgage or other instrument with the same lender or their assigns upon which the registration fee herein provided for has been paid; . . . ."
While the various predecessor versions of the exemption provisions of K.S.A.
The exemption in question applies only when an affidavit is filed verifying that the mortgage presented secures principal indebtedness covered by a previously recorded mortgage upon which the registration fee has been paid. Additionally, both mortgages must be given by the same lender or the lender's assigns. In the example you provide, both mortgages were originally entered into by the same lender, Bank A. Further, both mortgages were assigned to and are now held by the same assignee, Bank B. However, Bank B held the original mortgage pursuant to the assignment at the time Bank A entered into the second mortgage agreement. While it is not evident from the documents and information you have presented, we presume that the proceeds of the note secured by the second mortgage were used to satisfy the original mortgage and the debt it secured, and that Bank B did not reassign the original mortgage to Bank A before the second mortgage agreement was entered into. [We note that an assignment is valid between the parties thereto even though it is not recorded (see Attorney General opinion No. 87-162), so the register may not necessarily know whether the mortgage has been reassigned.] We also assume that the assignments were made pursuant to the provisions of K.S.A.
In Attorney General Opinion No.
In each of the cases where the Kansas Supreme Court has held that a second note does not supersede the first but is merely a renewal or extension of the first, the facts involved the same lender holding the first mortgage as entered into the second. See Potwin State Bank v.Ward,
We are aware of two recent orders of the board of tax appeals that disagree with our position in this opinion and Attorney General Opinion No.
You question whether the fact that Bank B is the parent corporation of Bank A changes the outcome. The courts have consistently held that "[a] holding or parent company has a separate corporate existence and is treated separately from its subsidiary in the absence of circumstances justifying disregard of the corporate entity." Quarles v. FuquaIndustries, Inc.,
In conclusion, if in "refinancing" a debt that it has previously assigned, along with the mortgage, to another entity, the mortgagee settles or satisfies the assigned debt, mortgage registration fees would be due upon filing the "new" mortgage of record. The result is the same even if the assignee of the original debt is the parent corporation of the assignor.
Very truly yours,
ROBERT T. STEPHAN Attorney General of Kansas
Julene L. Miller Deputy Attorney General
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