Burnham, Hanna, Munger & Co. v. Citizens Bank of Emporia
This text of 55 Kan. 545 (Burnham, Hanna, Munger & Co. v. Citizens Bank of Emporia) 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.
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The opinion of the court was delivered by
[550]*550
D. W. Eastman, the cashier of the bank, testified:
“ Q,. When did you first learn of the mortgage to Burnham, Hanna, Munger & Co. ? A. I do not know ; some time after it was given.
“Q,. How long would you say after it was given? A. I do n’t think we knew of it until one time Mr. Brooks came up here, some time after it was given.”
[551]*551
[552]*5524. Recitals in mortgage-^ [551]*551Judging from the findings of the trial court alone, we should infer that the indebtedness of Campbell to the bank had been satisfied, and that a surplus remained of $1,999.75, which was paid oyer to Campbell, but in the evidence of Eastman we find a statement that Campbell was still indebted to the bank on account of debts of himself or of the firm of Campbell ,& Johnson, or Campbell & Bros, between $1,500 and $1,600. "Whether these claims were otherwise secured does not appear. It- would seem quite remarkable that the bank should pay over a portion of the proceeds of the mortgaged property to Campbell while a portion of its claim still remained unpaid ; but if the indebtedness to the bank secured by its mortgages were sufficient to exhaust the entire proceeds of the mortgaged property, the plaintiffs could not complain of its doing so. The trial - court held, not only that the provision in the mortgage for. the payment to Campbell, the mortgagee, of one-half of the proceeds [552]*552of the December sales did not render the mortgage void, but that the acceptance by the plaintiffs of a mortgage recognizing the validity of the mortgage to the bank, recognized as well the provision for this payment to the mortgagor. The mortgage to the plaintiffs in terms conveys to them all the interest Campbell had in the goods. It represents “that there are no claims or liens of any kind on the above property, but this mortgage is a first lien, except a claim in the nature of a chattel mortgage held by the Citizens Bank of Emporia.’' Can it be said that Campbell still reserved an interest in the goods altogether indefinite m amount, and on which Burnham, Hanna, Munger & Co.- acquired no lien by virtue of their mortgage? The reservation in the mortgage to the bank of the proceeds to an amount not to exceed one-half the sales during the month of December, 1887, was to be used for the purpose of payments on his other indebtedness. He was then indebted to the plaintiffs. The amount of sales to be made in December was altogether indefinite, and depended entirely on the action of the bank. It might be nothing, or it might be the whole stock. Campbell had an undoubted right to mortgage every interest he had in the property not already conveyed to the bank, including as well as the proceeds of sales to be made in December as of those made at a later day. There is no reserva•tion to himself of any interest in the property by the terms of the mortgage to the plaintiffs, except the ultimate surplus after the payment both of the claims of the bank and the plaintiffs. The bank was not bound to make any sales in December, but having done so, one-half of the proceeds inured to the benefit of the plaintiffs.
[553]*553The judgment is reversed, and a new trial ordered between Burnham, Hanna, Munger & Co. and the Citizens Bank. We find no evidence that the Citizens Bank had actual notice of the mortgage to Kellogg & Sedgwick, and the judgment as to the other plaintiffs in error is affirmed.
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