Home State Bank v. P. B. Hoidale Co.

718 P.2d 292, 239 Kan. 165, 1986 Kan. LEXIS 323
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMay 2, 1986
Docket57,658
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 718 P.2d 292 (Home State Bank v. P. B. Hoidale Co.) 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
Home State Bank v. P. B. Hoidale Co., 718 P.2d 292, 239 Kan. 165, 1986 Kan. LEXIS 323 (kan 1986).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Miller, J.:

The plaintiff, Home State Bank, commenced this action to foreclose its mortgages. Joined as defendants were the mortgagor, Save-Time Stores, Inc., as well as P. B. Hoidale Company and others who had filed mechanics’ liens against the realty. The trial court held that two of the Bank’s mortgages were purchase money mortgages and thus superior to Hoidale’s mechanic’s lien. Hoidale appeals.

We will first give a chronological statement of the facts. In May 1982, Save-Time Stores, Inc., gave a mortgage to the Home State Bank on certain Russell County real estate. In August, Save-Time gave a second mortgage to the Bank, and later that month it gave the Bank a third mortgage. The Bank did not record the mortgages promptly. On November 11, 1982, Hoidale contracted with Save-Time Stores to furnish material and perform labor on the premises. Hoidale last performed labor and furnished materials on January 11, 1983. On April 4, Hoidale filed its mechanic’s lien in Russell County for $10,132.11. On April 21, Hoidale filed suit in Sedgwick County against Save-Time for $10,132.11. It did not seek foreclosure of its mechanic’s lien in that action. On May 5, Hoidale sent a copy of the petition filed in *166 Sedgwick County to the Clerk of the Russell County District Court for lis pendens purposes. For reasons not here important, that action was ineffective (see K.S.A. 60-2203a).

On May 13,1983, the Bank finally recorded its three mortgages in the office of the Russell County Register of Deeds, and on June 16 it filed this action in Russell County District Court against Save-Time, Hoidale, and others to foreclose its mortgages. In July, Hoidale filed an answer, asking for foreclosure of its mechanic’s lien in the amount of $55,000. It claimed priority over the Bank’s mortgages. The amount Hoidale sought was later reduced to $10,132.11 during pretrial.

In August 1983, Hoidale filed a separate suit in Russell County against Save-Time Stores to recover the same $10,132.11. No lien foreclosure was sought. On September 1, judgment was entered in the Sedgwick County action in favor of Hoidale and against Save-Time Stores for $10,132.11, together with other relief. On September 9, Hoidale secured a judgment in its Russell County action against Save-Time Stores for $10,132.11. The mechanic’s lien was not mentioned and was not foreclosed by either of those two judgments.

On December 1, 1983, the instant action came on before the trial court for pretrial conference. The matter was submitted to the court for decision and both parties later filed memorandum briefs.

On September 7, 1984, the trial court filed its memorandum decision and directed counsel to prepare a journal entry. The journal entry was filed October 31,1984. The trial court held that the first two of the Bank’s mortgages were purchase money mortgages and as such they were prior to Hoidale’s mechanic’s lien by virtue of K.S.A. 58-2305. The court held that the Bank’s third mortgage was not a purchase money mortgage. The court determined that the Bank’s purchase money mortgages were first and prior liens, followed by Hoidale’s mechanic’s lien, followed by the Bank’s third mortgage, followed in order by the claims of other lien holders with whom we are not concerned. The court ordered sale of the real estate and, from the proceeds, payment of taxes and costs, and then the lien interests of the parties in the order stated. Hoidale appeals.

The controlling issue is raised by appellee: Whether defendant Hoidale, having elected to pursue its claim for a personal *167 judgment only against Save-Time Stores, and having recovered two identical judgments against Save-Time Stores without foreclosing its mechanic’s lien, should be permitted in this third action to foreclose its lien. We are persuaded that it should not.

Kearny County Bank v. Nunn, 156 Kan. 563, 134 P.2d 635 (1943), was an action on a promissory note given by Nunn to the Bank. The Bank, in a separate suit, had already secured a judgment of foreclosure on the real estate mortgage given to secure the note. We held that an answer setting up the judgment in the earlier lawsuit presented a valid defense to the Bank’s suit on the note. We said:

“The rule prohibiting the splitting of a cause of action has always had the approval of this court and is well established in Kansas. (Todd v. Central Petroleum Co., 155 Kan. 249, 124 P.2d 704; Anspaugh v. Dougherty, 153 Kan. 257, 109 P.2d 101; Krueger v. Schlemeyer, 145 Kan. 469, 66 P.2d 395; First Nat’l Bank v. Schruben, 125 Kan. 417, 265 Pac. 53; Thisler v. Miller, 53 Kan. 515, 36 Pac. 1060; Coal Co. v. Brick Co., 52 Kan. 747, 35 Pac. 810; W. & W. Rld. Co. v. Beebe, 39 Kan. 465, 18 Pac. 502.)
“The purpose of the rule is to protect a defendant against a multiplicity of suits on a single cause of action. The rule and the reason for its existence are well illustrated in the instant situation where the creditor, having a single cause of action on his note and mortgage, and the opportunity to take judgment on both, elected to disregard the note and merely foreclose the mortgage, with the expectation that at some later date, in another action, he would obtain a judgment in personam upon the primary obligation, without which the mortgage would never have been executed.
“That the defense of res judicata, as set forth in appellant’s answer is available to him would seem to be established by the decisions of this court. It has been repeatedly held that when all parties are in court, and the court has full jurisdiction of the subject matter and parties and could determine all issues properly involved, all such issues should then be determined, and that not only do the matters which are then expressly determined but also all other matters which might and should have been then determined become res judicata and are not available to the parties in a future action.” 156 Kan. at 565.

The Kearny rationale was followed by the United States District Court in In re Wilson, 390 F. Supp. 1121 (D. Kan. 1975), where Liberty Loan, the holder of a note secured by a perfected security interest, brought suit on the note without attempting to replevin or foreclose on the collateral. It obtained an in personam judgment against the debtor. Several months later the debtor took bankruptcy and Liberty Loan sought secured creditor status in the bankruptcy proceedings. The Referee in Bankruptcy ordered that Liberty Loan be treated as an unsecured creditor and the district court affirmed, saying:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
718 P.2d 292, 239 Kan. 165, 1986 Kan. LEXIS 323, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/home-state-bank-v-p-b-hoidale-co-kan-1986.