Federal Land Bank v. Bailey

134 P.2d 409, 156 Kan. 464, 1943 Kan. LEXIS 40
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMarch 6, 1943
DocketNo. 35,621
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 134 P.2d 409 (Federal Land Bank v. Bailey) 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
Federal Land Bank v. Bailey, 134 P.2d 409, 156 Kan. 464, 1943 Kan. LEXIS 40 (kan 1943).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Dawson, C. J.:

This was an action to foreclose a first mortgage lien on an Osage county farm. The defendants were the mortgagors and their grantee, and the holder of the second mortgage was impleaded. This appeal is limited to a review of the trial court’s judgment that the grantee of the farm had assumed the mortgages in a contract of exchange therefor.

The material facts were these: Defendants Bailey and wife owned a farm near Lyndon. The plaintiff bank held a first mortgage on it to secure $3,000 which they had borrowed in 1933. The defendant mortgage corporation held a second mortgage executed by the Baileys about the same time to secure the payment of their promissory note for $2,200.

One Edna Jaggers owned a residential property in Topeka upon which one Broughton held an option to purchase. Broughton owed [465]*465the bank of Osawkie some money, to satisfy which he agreed with A. 0. Kendall, a retired officer of the Osawkie bank, that the latter should attempt to dispose of the option. The Topeka property had been listed for sale or exchange with one Mills, a real estate dealer. Mills commenced negotiations with the Baileys to exchange their farm for the Topeka property, and eventually a bargain was effected whereby the Baileys were to acquire the Topeka property and Kendall was to acquire the Bailey farm in Osage county. The Baileys agreed to mortgage the Topeka property to the Osawkie bank for $800 and that money was deposited to Kendall’s account. He disbursed that money to pay for abstract of title, to pay Mrs. Jaggers for the Topeka property, to pay the taxes on it, to pay Mills his real estate dealer’s commission and to pay Broughton for his option on the Jaggers property.

The Baileys executed a conveyance of their Osage county farm to Kendall, which contained the usual recitals of' ownership of the grantors, and that they warranted the farm to be free of encumbrances of every sort—

“Except two mortgages of record to the Federal Land Bank of Wichita and Land Bank Commissioner, respectively, and except the 1938 and 1939 taxes.”

The execution of the deeds for the exchange of properties was consummated on September 21, 1940, in the office of one Rodgers, an abstractor of titles in Lyndon, the Baileys, Mills and Kendall being present. Whether Kendall had agreed to assume the mortgages and the legal effect of the want of a specific recital to that effect in the deed were questions sharply contested in the trial court on issues raised by appropriate pleadings.

No defense was offered by any defendant to the cause of action pleaded by the plaintiff bank. With their answer the Baileys filed a cross petition against their codefendant Kendall, in which they pleaded the facts of their exchange of properties with Kendall, and alleged—

“That as a part of the consideration for the transaction, it was orally understood and agreed by and between these defendants and the defendant A. O. Kendall that he assumed the mortgage indebtedness then on the premises, which is the mortgage set up in plaintiff’s petition and the cross petition of the defendant, Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation, and taxes for the years 1938 and 1939, then due and owing on the premises.”

The Baileys set out a copy of their deed to Kendall which excepted from their warranty against encumbrances the two mortgages [466]*466held by the first and second mortgagees, in the language quoted above. The Baileys alleged that at the time of the execution of the deed both parties believed that its language sufficiently expressed the agreement of the parties; that Kendall assured the grantors that it was not necessary nor important to change the deed as drawn; that through the mutual mistake of the grantors and grantee the deed did not recite that Kendall assumed the mortgages and taxes as agreed and intended. The Baileys also alleged that they believed and relied on the statement of Kendall as to the sufficiency of the recital in the deed to state the actual agreement of the parties, arid they further alleged that—

“If the acceptance of such deed in such form was not a mistake on the part of said defendant, then defendants allege that it was his intention and disposition thereby to defraud these defendants by inducing and permitting them to execute a deed that did not express and carry into effect the true intent of the said parties.”

The Baileys concluded their cross petition with a prayer that their deed of conveyance to Kendall be reformed by adding to the exception clause set out above the additional words “which party of the second part assumes” and that Kendall be held primarily liable on the mortgages sued on by the plaintiff bank and by the defendant mortgage corporation, and that they have judgment over against Kendall for whatever judgment or part thereof they, the Baileys, may be compelled to pay to the mortgage holders as sued on in this action.

The Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation filed an amendment to its answer and cross petition pleading in substance the same allegations of fact against Kendall as those alleged in the Baileys’ cross petition against him, and praying judgment against Kendall as well as against the Baileys for the amount due on its second mortgage.

Kendall answered at length, admitting that he entered into an exchange of properties with the Baileys, but denied that he agreed, either orally or in writing, to assume the mortgages on the Osage county farm, and alleged that the deed expressed the full and complete understanding and agreement of the parties. Kendall also denied that the Baileys paid over to him the proceeds of the $800 mortgage executed by them to the Osawkie bank, but that $625 of that amount was disbursed (by whom he did not plead). Defendant Kendall further denied that he made any representation to the Baileys that the exception clause in the warranties of the deed, [467]*467relating to the mortgages, had the legal effect of making him assume and agree to pay them. He further denied that there was any mutual mistake in the language of the deed. Kendall closed his answer with a demurrer to Baileys’ cross petition on the ground that it did not state a cause of action.

Kendall’s answer to the cross petition of the second mortgagee contained a general denial, but in other respects it was consistent with his answer to the Baileys’ cross petition.

When the cause was called for trial the Baileys were permitted to amend their cross petition by interlineation thus:

“That these defendants are farmers unfamiliar with the law and without experience in real estate transactions; that the defendant, A. 0. Kendall, is a retired banker, has engaged extensively in dealing in and the exchanging of real estate and is familiar therewith and led these defendants to believe they could rely on his knowledge of the law relating thereto and these defendants had confidence in his statements with reference thereto.”

Kendall was permitted to interline an amendment to his pleading thus:

“The defendant, A. 0. Kendall, for further answer to the amendment of the' defendant, L. H. Bailey, to their answer and cross petition, herein filed, denies each, all, every and singular the allegations, statements and averments contained in said amendment, except those hereinafter specifically admitted. The defendant, A. O.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
134 P.2d 409, 156 Kan. 464, 1943 Kan. LEXIS 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/federal-land-bank-v-bailey-kan-1943.