Dobbs v. Lilley

121 P. 505, 86 Kan. 513, 1912 Kan. LEXIS 329
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedFebruary 10, 1912
DocketNo. 17,455
StatusPublished

This text of 121 P. 505 (Dobbs v. Lilley) 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
Dobbs v. Lilley, 121 P. 505, 86 Kan. 513, 1912 Kan. LEXIS 329 (kan 1912).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Burch, J.:

In 1896 George H. Dobbs was the owner of the real estate in controversy, and in March of that year he mortgaged it to Wilder S. Metcalf to secure a loan of money. In January, 1898, Dobbs was convicted of murder in the second degree and sentenced to confinement in the penitentiary for the term of his natural life. No appeal was taken, the judgment was executed without clemency, and Dobbs was kept in confinement in the penitentiary until January 81, 1905, when he died. He left as his heirs his son, Charles M. Dobbs, aged eighteen, and his daughter, Lulu Dobbs, aged sixteen, since married to F. G. Bias, who were plaintiffs in the district court. While confined in the penitentiary Dobbs executed, in October, 1901, a mortgage of the land to the firm of Stowell & Nold, and in June, 1902, a deed to John Stowell. The Metcalf mortgage and the Stowell & Nold mortgage were assigned to Michael Worthy, who foreclosed them by proceedings, regular in form, resulting in January, 1904, in a sheriff’s deed to C. C. Lilley, the defendant in the district court. The parties defendant in the foreclosure suit were John Stowell, William Knox, tenant of the land under Stowell, John W. Dobbs, as guardian of Charles M. and Lulu Dobbs, and Charles M. Dobbs and Lulu Dobbs. Charles M. Dobbs and Lulu Dobbs answered by a guardian ad litem, who pleaded original ownership of the land by George H. Dobbs, his conviction and his incarceration in the penitentiary. The Stowell & Nold mortgage and the deed to Stowell were attacked as invalid because made after the legal decease of George H. Dobbs. It was alleged that Charles [515]*515M. and Lulu' Dobbs were the sole and only heirs at law of George H. Dobbs, and that by virtue of his conviction and imprisonment they were the legal and equitable owners of the land. The prayer was that they might be protected in their rights and ownership and might recover as seemed to the court to be equitable and just.

In April, 1908, some three years after the death of their father, the plaintiffs brought an action to recover possession of the land, to quiet title against the Stowell & Nold mortgage, the Stowell deed and the foreclosure proceedings, all of which, it was claimed, were' void, and to redeem from the defendant, as a mortgagee in possession under the Metcalf mortgage. The court found in favor- of the plaintiffs. An accounting was taken, which disclosed that the Metcalf mortgage, and interest, and taxes paid by the defendant, and interest, were more- than offset by rents and profits and the value of improvements removed from the land by the defendant. Judgment was rendered accordingly, and the defendant appeals.

The plaintiffs claim under 'title derived by inheritance from their father consequent upon his natural death after the foreclosure proceedings had been concluded. Taking for granted what doubtless is true, that the mortgage to Stowell & Nold and the deed to Stowell were without legal effect, the question is whether the foreclosure proceedings, considered as resting upon the valid Metcalf mortgage, bar the plaintiffs’ claim.

The statute provides that whenever a person shall be imprisoned under a sentence for life, his estate, property and effects shall be administered and disposed of in all respects as if he were naturally dead. (Crim. Code, § 337.) In the case of Smith v. Becker, 62 Kan. 541, 64 Pac. 70, it was held that under this statute the fact of sentence and imprisonment does not cast the descent of a convict’s property upon his heirs. The plaintiffs [516]*516argue that Dobbs was vested with title to the land until he died; that the plaintiffs had and could obtain no title before the occurrence of that event; that they possessed nothing to defend in the foreclosure suit; that Dobbs could not be made a party, be served with process, defend the action or be bound by the foreclosure judgment, because of the extinction of his civil rights; that a. landowner’s title can not be transferred by a judicial sale unless he be a party to the proceeding; and that upon the natural death of Dobbs the estate he had all the time possessed, but had been incapacitated to enjoy, passed, unaffected by the sheriff’s deed, to the plaintiffs.

The foregoing argument assumes that the decision in the Smith-Beeker case is conclusive upon the rights of the present litigants. The scope of the Smith-Becker decision is fairly indicated by the following extracts from the opinion:

“The turning-point is the construction to be placed on the words ‘administered and disposed of.’ Administration has relation to personal property, and it is only where the personalty is insufficient in value to pay the debts of the decedent that the administrator exercises any control over the real estate. It descends to the heirs eo instanti upon the death o'f the ancestor. We think that by the use of the word ‘administered’ in this provision relating to the estate of convicts it was the intention of the lawmakers to restrict the administrator to the control and disposition of personal property for the benefit of creditors, to the end that all debts of the convict might be speedily paid. The words ‘disposed of’ are not in our judgment broad and comprehensive enough to reach to and embrace that act of law which vests the ownership of property in an heir by inheritance. They can be more sensibly applied to affirmative action taken by a person, either natural or artificial. It is an inapt expression to say that when an estate is cast by descent on the heir by the death of the owner it has been disposed of. . . . In the present case the property in controversy is real estate, and .there are no debts owing by the convict. If such estate has already devolved upon the heirs, an administrator [517]*517can do nothing which will affect the lands. As applied to this case, the use of the word ‘administered’ can have no force, for the estate in controversy can never come to the hands of an administrator.” (pp. 542,543.)

It will be observed that great care was taken to restrict this discussion to the specific facts presented by the record and to the precise question to be determined. The convict at his legal death left no creditors with! unsatisfied debts, and the question was whether descent was cast by civil, as distinguished from natural, death. In this case the convict, upon his incarceration, left a creditor holding an unpaid debt secured by a mortgage on real estate belonging to the convict, and the question is not one of descent, but whether such real estate may be disposed of to satisfy the lien.

It is indeed true that statutes in derogation of the natural right to hold private property will not be enlarged by interpretation. (Gray v. Stewart, 70 Kan. 429, 78 Pac. 852.) But it does not detract from such right to provide that property may be applied to the very use to which the owner has pledged it. On the contrary, a statute having that end in view merely makes the right to private property more beneficial and effectual. Besides this, concomitant with the right of private property in English and American law, is the right of creditors to satisfaction of their debts through speedy and efficient remedies. That right is also a private property right, and it would be surprising indeed to discover that punishment of a malefactor includes a virtual confiscation of the claims of his innocent creditors upon his property. A statute having that outrageous effect would be contrary to the whole policy of ofir law.

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Related

Smith v. Becker
53 L.R.A. 141 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1901)
Gray v. Stewart
78 P. 852 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1904)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
121 P. 505, 86 Kan. 513, 1912 Kan. LEXIS 329, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dobbs-v-lilley-kan-1912.