Hamilton v. Whitson

48 P. 462, 5 Kan. App. 347, 1897 Kan. App. LEXIS 539
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedMarch 22, 1897
DocketNo. 187
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 48 P. 462 (Hamilton v. Whitson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hamilton v. Whitson, 48 P. 462, 5 Kan. App. 347, 1897 Kan. App. LEXIS 539 (kanctapp 1897).

Opinion

Mahan, P. J.

Matt Whitson, one of the defendants in error, brought this action in the District Court of Saline County, to foreclose a mechanic’s lien upon several contiguous lots in the city of Salina, and for a jndgment against O. P. Hamilton for the amount due upon an account for steam-heating apparatus, set up in the property by the plaintiff under a contract with O. P. Hamilton, th¿ owner of a part of the property at the time the contract was made. One of the lots in controversy, at the time the contract was made was the homestead of O. P. Hamilton and Delia Plamil[349]*349toil, his wife. C. T. Hamilton, the plaintiff in error, is a son of O. P. Hamilton. Leidigh & Havens claimed a lien upon the same property for lumber furnished. J. B. Hutchinson, as trustee for O. P. Hamilton, held title to a part of this property5 at the time the contract was made and during the time the improvements were being made. Jonathan and Frank Weaver, at the time the contract was made and during a part of the time in which the work was being done by Whitson, appeared by the records to be the owners of the property. The Salina State Bank held an assignment of the claim sued upon, to secure a small balance due to the Bank ; the other parties were lien holders.

O. P. Hamilton and wife, Delia M.; the plaintiff in error; J. B. Hutchinson, trustee; and W. P. Pierce, filed a joint answer in which they, first, denied generally the allegations of the petition ; second, denied that O. P. Hamilton was the agent of the other defendants concerning any of the matters alleged in the petition ; third, alleged that the plaintiff was not the real party in interest because of the assignment to the Salina State Bank as collateral security for a loan, and that the Bank was, at the commencement of the suit, the owner of the account absolutely; and, fourth, as a plea in abatement, alleged the pendency of another action respecting the same matters. The plaintiff filed his reply to this answer in which he, first, denied each and every allegation therein contained, and, second, set out that the assignment referred to was given by him to the State Bank to secure a loan of two hundred dollars, that it had all been paid at the time of the commencement of the suit except about fifty-five dollars, and that it was agreed between himself and [350]*350the Bank that he should file the lien and do whatever was necessary to protect himself and the Bank.

A trial was had at the October term of the District Court and resulted in a finding and judgment of the court for the plaintiff. The court made the following special findings, and conclusions of law :

“ 1. That the lots described in the plaintiff’s petition lie together in one tract of land, and are numbered from north to south in the order mentioned in said petition, and each of said lots is 205 feet in length east and west, and fifty feet north and south.
“2. That the defendant, Delia M. Hamilton, nee Delia M. Gould, for more than ten years last past has been the wife of the defendant O. P. Plamilton, and that the defendant C. T. Hamilton is the son of said O. P. Hamilton.
"3. That on the twenty-eighth day of May, 1891, Amanda Kessler, a widow, executed and delivered to J. B. Hutchinson, trustee, her warranty deed conveying her interest in said lots sixty and sixty-two, subject to certain mortgages mentioned in said deed.
“4. That on the fifth day of December, 1892, said defendant, J. B. Hutchinson, and wife, and J. B. Hutchinson, trustee, conveyed by warranty deed all their interest in said lots sixty and sixty-two to said C. T. Hamilton.
“5. That on the sixteenth day of September, 1887, Enoch White and wife, by warranty deed, conveyed all their interest in said lot sixty-four and the north half of lot sixty-six to Jonathan and Frank L. Weaver, subject to a certain mortgage described in said deed.
“ 6. That on the twenty-sixth day of April, 1891, said Jonathan and Frank L. Weaver and their wives, ,by warranty deed, conveyed all their interests in said lot sixty-four and the north half of lot sixty-six.to said C. T. Hamilton.
“7. That on the sixteenth day of January, 1892, Charles E. Tressin and wife, by warranty deed, conveyed all their interest in the south half of lot sixty-six to said Delia M. Hamilton.
[351]*351“ 8. That on the twelfth day of July, 1870, William H. Gilmore conveyed, by warranty deed, all his interest in said lot sixty-three to said Delia M. Gould.
“9. That on the twenty-seventh day of June, 1892, said O. P. Hamilton and wife, by warranty deed, conveyed to said O. T. Hamilton all their interest in said lot sixty-eight and the south half of said lot sixty-six.
“10. That no consideration was paid by the said C. T. Hamilton for any of the deeds hereinbefore mentioned, or the lands therein described, and that he did not know, before the trial herein, that the said lots sixty, sixty-two, sixty-four, and the north half of said lot sixty-six, had been conveyed to him ; the consideration for said deeds to C. T. Hamilton as grantee., was paid by his father, O. P. Hamilton.
“11. During the summer of 1891, the said O. P. Hamilton determined to repair and improve certain buildings then on said lots and to erect others thereon, for the purpose of using such buildings as a sanitarium ; at that time there was a dwelling house on said lots sixty and sixty-two, and also a dwelling house on said lot sixty-eight and the south half of said lot sixty-six in which said O. P. Hamilton and family lived, and they continued to reside there until about August, 1892, when they moved to a house situated on an adjoining block.
“12. In July, 1891, and in pursuance of said determination, said O. P. Hamilton commenced the erection of a building on said lot sixty-four and the north half of said lot sixty-six, which he completed in the spring of 1892, with the exception of the heating apparatus hereinafter mentioned.
“13. On the first day'of September, 1891, it was agreed between the plaintiff and the said O. P. Hamilton, that the former should put in a steam-heating plant in the three buildings hereinbefore mentioned, and that the latter, said O. P. Hamilton, would pay therefor the sum of $1,370 ; the goods to be used in said plant, with the value of the items, were described in a written memoranda then made by them, and it was also as a part of said agreement stipulated that the engine for said plant should be put into the [352]*352middle building, and the pipes extended from it to the two other buildings.
“14. That the said plaintiff commenced putting in the said steam-heating plant during the fall of 1891, and completed it according to said agreement, about the first day of December, 1892.
“15. That on the twenty-third day of August, 1892, the plaintiff executed and delivered to the defendant, the Salina State Bank, his promissory note for $204, payable in sixty days, with ten per cent, interest from its maturity, and to secure the payment of said note said plaintiff then assigned in writing his claim against said O. P.

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Bluebook (online)
48 P. 462, 5 Kan. App. 347, 1897 Kan. App. LEXIS 539, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hamilton-v-whitson-kanctapp-1897.