Advance-Rumely Thresher Co. v. Judd

180 P. 763, 104 Kan. 757, 1919 Kan. LEXIS 353
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMay 10, 1919
DocketNo. 22,104
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 180 P. 763 (Advance-Rumely Thresher Co. v. Judd) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Advance-Rumely Thresher Co. v. Judd, 180 P. 763, 104 Kan. 757, 1919 Kan. LEXIS 353 (kan 1919).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Portee, J.:

The action was for partition of a quarter section of land in Ellis county. In 1911, the land belonged to Anton Schreibvogel and his brother John, Anton owning an undivided two-thirds interest, and John an undivided one-third. The appellant is their mother, formerly Mrs. Schreibvogel, now Mrs. Pfannanstiel, who claims to be the sole owner of the land.

In 1911, the Advance Thresher Company sued John and attached his interest in the land, and recovered a judgment [759]*759against him for $3,332.55. An execution issued, and at the sheriff’s sale John’s interest was bid in by the M. Rumely Company, which paid $91.45 taxes then due on the quarter section, and subsequently received a sheriff’s deed foh an undivided one-third interest. The title remained in this condition until 1915, when L. Judd brought an action to foreclose a mortgage covering the whole quarter section, and secured a judgment for $703.97. Under the foreclosure judgment the land was sold subject to eighteen months’ redemption, and was bid in by Anton Schumacher for $900. He paid the money to the sheriff, and took a receipt. The amount of his bid exceeded the amount due at the time of the sheriff’s sale by $63.37; this balance remained in the hands of the clerk, and belonged, of course, to the owners of the land.

. In the méantime the Advance-Rumely Thresher Company had become the successor in interest of the M. Rumely Company and held the sheriff’s deed for a one-third interest in the land, under the judgment against John Schreibvogel. On November 17, 1916, its attorneys wrote the clerk, submitting their figures on the amount necessary to redeem a one-third interest in the land, and asked him to check over the statement and let them know whether the items and amounts were correct. The figures they submitted were as follows:

“Judgment, rendered Apr. 26, 1915.......................... $703.97
Interest at 8% to Nov. 26, 1916............................. 89.21
Costs, including taxes, etc................................. 118.58
$911.76
One-third necessary for Rumely to pay to redeem............ $303.92”

The clerk answered that he found the figures correct, and on November 24, 1916, the attorneys forwarded a draft for $303.92, and an affidavit stating that the appellee was the owner of the rights of the Advance Thresher Company and the M. Rumely Company under the judgment against John Schreibvogel, and desired to redeem. The clerk still retains the redemption money, and no claim to it has been made by any one.

Schumacher was made a defendant in this action, but disclaimed any interest in the land, and alleged that he had transferred his interest to Mrs. Pfannenstiel. She filed her inter[760]*760vening petition, and contends that appellee’s rights to any interest in the land are barred by the foreclosure judgment and the failure to redeem therefrom, because the amount deposited for redemption was less than the amount of the judgment, interest, costs, and taxes.

The trial court was not at all satisfied with the showing made by Mrs. Pfannenstiel as to how she acquired the two-thirds interest of her son, Anton, in the land, and found that Anton Schumacher, who bid in the land at the foreclosure sale, was her brother; that after the sale, he turned over the sheriff’s receipt for the $900 to one Herí, a brother-in-law of the appellant ; and that Herl handed it to her. The court found that after the expiration of the eighteen months’ period of redemption, Mrs. Pfannenstiel claimed to have purchased of Anton Schumacher the quarter section in controversy, but that the amount paid, if anything, had not been shown; that the foreclosure sale was confirmed July 23, 1915, but no certificate.of-purchase nor deed was issued or requested by any one, and the only evidence of purchase of an interest in the land by appellant was the turning over and manual delivery of the sheriff’s receipt. The court also found that the appellant did not claim any additional rights as an innocent purchaser, but only such rights in the property as Anton Schumacher gained by virtue of his bid at the sheriff’s sale and the payment of the money.

In the conclusions of law, the court held that Mrs. Pfannenstiel had not shown clearly such an equitable interest in the land as to entitle her to interpose as a defense-the irregularities in the proceedings by which the appellee had undertaken to redeem the undivided one-third interest. But the court held that by reason of the failure of the pleadings or evidence to controvert her claim of ownership, or to show what title or right she did acquire by the transfer of the sheriff’s receipt, she was the owner of an undivided two-thirds interest in the land, and entitled to the money paid into court by the appellee to redeem the other one-third interest.

One fact found by the court is that the attempt to redeem by the appellee was made in good faith, but that the attorneys, as well as the clerk, took the amount of the judgment, interest, costs and taxes as a basis, instead of the amount for which the land was sold at the sheriff’s sale, with interest and taxes. [761]*761The court determined that on November 26, 1916, the amount necessary to redeem was $394.46, including taxes for 1915 and 1916 unpaid; and that appellee should be given credit for two-thirds of $91.45, taxes paid to redeem the land in 1913, and credit for one-third of the excess in the bid of $900 at the sheriff’s sale. After allowing appellee these credits, and credit to the appellant for the taxes she had paid, the court found there was a deficiency of $8.46 in the amount of redemption money remaining in the hands of the clerk, but held that this sum was “too small to be permitted in equity to defeat the rights and claims” of the appellee as the owner of a one-third interest in the land. Upon payment into court of the sum of $8.46, the appellee was decreed to be the owner of a one-third interest, and the land was ordered partitioned.

It is well settled that in decreeing partition the court has power to adjust the equitable rights of all the parties interested in the estate, so far as they relate to and grow out of the relation of the parties to the common property, and will make allowance for the payment of money made on account' of the-property. In Scantlin v. Allison, 32 Kan. 376, 379, 4 Pac. 618, it is said:

“It must also be remembered that this is an action for partition; and in such actions courts may generally do equity and justice between the parties.”

(To the same effect, see 21 A. & E. Encyc. of L. 1170, 1171.)

Thus, it has been held that in partition a cotenant is entitled to an allowance for payments made by him for the benefit of the common property, such as taxes, assessments, the satisfaction of liens, and the like. A court of equity has power to require the parties to make contribution for moneys paid for the benefit of joint tenants and tenants in common. (Leake v. Hayes, 13 Wash. 213.)

The appellant insists that the court had no power to allow appellee credit for $21.12, its share of the excess amount of the bid which came into the hands of the clerk. It is true that the clerk could not have applied this' sum on the redemption, nor have paid it to appellant, until there had been some adjudication by the court.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Dalton v. Franken Construction Companies, Inc.
914 P.2d 1036 (New Mexico Court of Appeals, 1996)
Federal Savings & Loan Ins. Corp. v. Treaster
770 P.2d 481 (Court of Appeals of Kansas, 1989)
First Federal Savings & Loan Ass'n v. McKain
617 P.2d 583 (Court of Appeals of Kansas, 1980)
Renensland v. Ellenberger
574 P.2d 217 (Court of Appeals of Kansas, 1977)
Miller v. Miller
564 P.2d 524 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1977)
Curry v. Perney
402 P.2d 316 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1965)
Gillet v. Powell
254 P.2d 258 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1953)
Knutson v. Clark
217 P.2d 1067 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1950)
Wharton v. Zenger
186 P.2d 287 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1947)
Fry v. Dewees
99 P.2d 844 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1940)
Young v. Young
84 P.2d 916 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1938)
Cassity v. Cassity
76 P.2d 862 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1938)
Wright v. Simpson
51 P.2d 1 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1935)
Moffett v. Moffett
292 P. 947 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1930)
Meyer v. Hurst
201 P. 859 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1921)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
180 P. 763, 104 Kan. 757, 1919 Kan. LEXIS 353, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/advance-rumely-thresher-co-v-judd-kan-1919.