Gore v. Royse

44 P. 1053, 56 Kan. 771, 1896 Kan. LEXIS 94
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMay 9, 1896
DocketNos. 8398, 8398½
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 44 P. 1053 (Gore v. Royse) 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
Gore v. Royse, 44 P. 1053, 56 Kan. 771, 1896 Kan. LEXIS 94 (kan 1896).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Joi-inston, J :

In 1885 Prank Royse borrowed from Harriet A. Gore the sum of $2,500, and to secure the payment of the same he and his wife executed to her a mortgage upon lots 8 and 9, in block 96, in the city of Atchison. There were a house and other improve[773]*773ments on lot 8, but lot 9 was vacant and unimproved until 1889. In March, 1889, Royse began the erection of a house on lot 9, and obtained material for that purpose of the value of $776.72 from G. C. Hixon & Co. Royse did not pay for the material when it was purchased, and had not sufficient funds to complete the house, and in July, 1889, he undertook to borrow a further sum of money. He notified Harriet A. Gore, who held the mortgage on both lots, that he had erected a new two-story house on lot 9, which he claimed was good security for the amount owing to her, and he requested her to release lot-8 from the lien of her mortgage so that he might use it as security to obtain a further loan. She sent her son, Charles J. Gore, who attended to business of this character for her, with authority, oral and by letter, to release lot 8 from the lien of the mortgage if, in his judgment, he found lot 9 with the improvements thereon was sufficient security for her debt. In the meantime Royse had spoken to J. H. Talbott to obtain a loan of $1,800 on lot 8, providing it could be released from the Gore mortgage, and Talbott learning that Martin Baker had money to loan suggested a loan upon this property, and Baker told Talbott that if the lot was released from the lien of the Gore mortgage Royse could obtain the money by securing him with a mortgage on lot 8. On July 10, 1889, Charles J. Gore examined the house erected on lot 9, and, upon determining it to be sufficient security, he went to the office of the register of deeds, and on the margin of the record where the Gore mortgage was recorded the following release was written, to which he signed his mother's name :

“This mortgage upon lot 8, block 96, old Atchison, herein described, is released, so as to make a mortgage this day executed by Frank Royse and wife to Martin [774]*774Baker .for the sum of $1,800 the first and prior lien thereon, the mortgage to H. A. Gore remaining a second-mortgage lien upon said lot. — July 1.0,1889. — PI. A. Gore.
“Attest: D. J. Clieeord, per J. I. N., Deputy.”

Talbott at once reported to Martin Baker that the Gore mortgage had been released or postponed, and" he at once paid the sum of $1,800 to Royse, who with his wife executed and delivered to him a first mortgage upon lot 8, which was duly recorded. The interest due upon the Gore loan was paid when due until 1889, after which default was made, and Harriet A. Gore brought this action to recover the amount of her debt, and also to foreclose the mortgage upon both lots which were originally included in her mortgage. Martin Baker, who held the mortgage on lot 8, was made a party defendant, also G. C. Hixon & Co., who had furnished material for the house erected on lot 9. Baker answered, claiming a first lien upon lot 8, and G. C. Hixon & Co. set up their claim, and asked that it be declared a first lien upon lot 9.

In addition to the facts stated, the trial court found from the testimony that Harriet A. Gore never signed and acknowledged any instrument in writing authorizing Charles J. Gore to release lot 8 from the lien of her mortgage; that after he had executed the release he reported to his mother what he had done in the matter, and that she made no objection to the release further than to say that she thought her security was diminished. She took no steps to rescind or set aside the release or to question it until the foreclosure proceeding was begun, on June 25, 1890. It was found that the lumber and material were furnished by Hixon & Co. between the 26th of March, 1889, and the 12th of October of the same year, and that the building was finally completed on November 10, 1889. [775]*775It further found, that in due time G. 0. Hixon & Co. filed a statement for a lien in due form, the amount of the claim being |776.72. There was a finding that on March 26, 1889, lot 8, with the house upon it, was of the value of $2,500. Lot 9, at that time being vacant, was of the value of $1,000. On July 10, 1889, when the release was executed, lot 8 was of the value of $2,500, and lot 9 of the value of $2,500. Judgment was given in favor of Harriet A. Gore for the amount of her claim, and it was decreed to be a first lien upon lot 9, and a second lien upon lot 8, while the judgment awarded Martin Baker was decreed to be a first lien upon lot 8. It was further held, that G. C. Hixon & Co. were entitled to a second lien upon lot 9. Harriet A. Gore complains of the ruling making her lien upon lot 8 inferior to that of Martin Baker, while G. C. Hixon & Co. complain of the ruling making the lien of their judgment inferior and second to that of the Gore judgment. A case-made was prepared and served in behalf of both of the complaining parties, and separate petitions in error, under different titles and numbers, have been filed by them in this court. There was no necessity for separate titles and numbers, as there is in fact but a single proceeding here, and the rulings will be reviewed in a single opinion.

The point of contention between Gore and Baker is as to the effect of the release. A mortgage may be released by a marginal entry on the record duly signed, but it is contended that Charles J. Gore was not the agent of Harriet A. Gore in executing the release, and further, that it cannot be released by an agent unless a written appointment duly signed and acknowledged by the principal is a matter of record. In view of the facts of this case, we are not required to decide whether [776]*776* ‘ the release was executed in strict compliance with law. Under the circumstances, Harriet A. Gore, is estopped from questioning the authority of Charles J. Gore, or from denying that the release is effectual.. Charles J. Gore had acted as the agent of his mother in collecting interest and in other matters pertaining to this loan. With a full knowledge of the facts in the case, she instructed him to release the mortgage upon lot 8, if he deemed the- lien on lot 9 was sufficient security for the debt. Royse had asked for the release in order that he might use the lot to obtain a further loan of money. She. left it entirely to the judgment of her son as to whether .the release should be made. Baker loaned his money upon the faith of this release. Harriet A. Gore not only consented that the release should be made for this purpose, but she acquiesced in the action of her agent after he reported that the release had been executed. In a letter written to Royse several months afterward, she acknowledged that she had released'the mortgage. By.her own testimony, it appears that she expected that a portion of the money obtained upon the Baker mortgage would be used as a payment upon her claim. It is evident that she expected the loan to be made, and trusted Royse to make the promised payment. .Her son, upon whose judgment she relied, frankly states that the release was executed upon written and oral authority which he received from his mother. In signing the release, he abbreviated his mother’s Christian name, but that is of little consequence, since it appears that a letter of her own which she introduced in evidence was signed in the same manner. Under the circumstances, we think she cannot be heard to say that there was no authority for the execution of the release.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
44 P. 1053, 56 Kan. 771, 1896 Kan. LEXIS 94, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gore-v-royse-kan-1896.