Hegwood v. Leeper
This text of 164 P. 173 (Hegwood v. Leeper) 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.
Opinion
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Truman Leeper and Pearl S. Leeper, his wife, executed to his father, J. M. Leeper, an instrument in the form of an ordinary warranty deed to a quarter section of land. The grantees afterwards conveyed the land to W. M. Glenn, receiving in exchange a deed to a town lot, valued at $5000, the title to which was taken in N. E. Stucker, an uncle of Truman Leeper, who canceled a debt of $4000 owed to him by J. M. Leeper and paid $1000 to Glenn. Later Mrs. C. G. Hegwood' and Ferry Wilcox, the mother and uncle of Pearl 5. Leeper, brought an action against all the persons named excepting W. M. Glenn, asserting that the deed from Truman Leeper and his wife to his father was in effect, by virtue of an oral agreement, a mortgage given to secure an indebtedness of $2700 owed by the grantors to him, and also two notes of $900 each due from the grantors to the plaintiffs, and that by the transfer of the property they had wrongfully been deprived of their security, whereby a personal liability had arisen against J. M. Leeper and also against Stucker, who had [381]*381acted with full knowledge of the facts. The trial court found the facts to be substantially as stated by the plaintiffs, and as the land had been valued at $4000 in the trade with Glenn, that amount (subject to additions for income and to deductions for expenses, reducing it to $3907) should be regarded as a fund pledged to the payment of the $2700 (with interest $2914) due from Truman Leeper and his wife to his father, and of the plaintiffs’ notes, amounting with interest to $2169. The security diverted having been sufficient to cover but seventy-six and eight-tenths per cent of the entire indebtedness, J. M. Leeper and Stacker were held liable for that proportion of the plaintiffs’ claims, and judgment was rendered accordingly, from which this appeal is taken.
[382]*382The circumstance that the deed was made to secure debts owing by the grantor to third persons as well as to the grantee does not in our judgment make it any the less a mortgage, or bring it within the prohibition of the trust statute. It is conceded that the deed was in effect a mortgage as between the grantors and the grantee, but the appellants contend that it was not a mortgage in favor of the plaintiffs. When proof was complete that the deed had been executed and accepted mérely as security, its character as a mortgage was established. The reception of oral evidence that the plaintiffs were among the beneficiaries intended to be protected by it did not alter the essential nature of the court’s action — did not convert it into a recognition of a trust concerning real estaté created by parol in any different sense from -that in which it might otherwise have been so characterized. “A deed from a debtor to a third person, if made to secure the payment of money, is as much a mortgage as if made to the creditor himself for the same purpose.” (27 Cyc. 992. Bradford v. Helsell, 150 Iowa, 732.) An agreement that a grantee is to handle land conveyed to him in the interest of certain designated beneficiaries, and in case of a sale to distribute the proceeds among them, is ordinarily an attempt to create an express trust and must be in writing to be valid. (Ingham v. Burnell, 31 Kan. 333, 2 Pac. 804.) But a deed intended as security, although made to- a trustee, who, by its expressed terms is authorized to sell the property and pay debts owed to the grantor and to other persons, is merely a mortgage. (McDonald & Co. v. Kellogg, Trustee, 30 Kan. 170, 2 Pac. 507.)
“If land is conveyed by absolute deed, but with an agreement that the grantee shall effect a sale of it, and out of the proceeds satisfy an existing debt due to him from the grantor, or repay himself for advances then made to the grantor, .and also pay other creditors of the grantor, and account to the latter for any surplus remaining after the payment of such debts and the expenses, it is generally held that the transaction is in the nature of a mortgage, and may be enforced as such in equity.” (27 Cyc. 1004.) . .
The judgment is affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
164 P. 173, 100 Kan. 379, 1917 Kan. LEXIS 332, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hegwood-v-leeper-kan-1917.