Hotchkiss v. Ogle

109 P.2d 134, 153 Kan. 156, 1941 Kan. LEXIS 109
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 25, 1941
DocketNo. 35,029
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 109 P.2d 134 (Hotchkiss v. Ogle) 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
Hotchkiss v. Ogle, 109 P.2d 134, 153 Kan. 156, 1941 Kan. LEXIS 109 (kan 1941).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Habvey, J.:

This was an action on a promissory note and to foreclose a real-estate mortgage given to secure it. The trial court rendered judgment for plaintiffs, and defendants have appealed.

The record may be summarized as follows: On February 14,1934, Owen Ogle executed a note for |4,500 payable to Lew Dawson, due in five years, with interest at five percent, payable annually, and secured the same by a mortgage upon certain land in Osage county. On September 27, 1934, Lew Dawson died intestate and left as his heirs at law his sister, Charlotte J. Price, and his brother, Charles Dawson. He had another brother, Harry A. Dawson, but he moved away from the neighborhood years ago and his brother and sister did not know whether he was living, and if not, whether he left heirs. Lew Dawson had an account of several hundred dollars in a bank. On their executing an instrument satisfactory to the bank, Charlotte J. Price and Charles Dawson were permitted to draw the money from the bank, with which they paid the funeral expenses of Lew Dawson, and divided the remainder'between them. When the first interest was due on the $4,500 note in February, 1935, Ogle paid it to Charles Dawson, who kept out of it money he said Lew owed him and divided the remainder with his sister, Mrs. Price. When the interest was due the next year it was paid to Charles Dawson. When his sister asked for her part of it a few months later he said he had spent it, and she concluded to let the matter go until the note itself became due. A few months before the note was due Mrs. Price learned Charles Dawson was claiming’to be the owner of the note and mortgage and that it was in the possession of Albert M. Casten, who claimed to be holding it as a pledge for.money advanced to Charles Dawson. On October 21, 1938, Alex Hotchkiss was appointed administrator of the estate of Lew Dawson, and on June 8, 1939, this action was filed. The plaintiffs were Alex Hotchkiss, [158]*158as administrator of the estate of Lew Dawson, and Charlotte J. Price. The defendants were Owen Ogle and wife, Charles Dawson, Albert M. Casten and Harry A. Dawson, if living, but if dead, then his unknown heirs, etc.

The petition contained the usual allegations, including most of the facts above stated; alleged that the action was prosecuted for the benefit of the heirs of Lew Dawson, for which reason Charlotte J. Price was joined as plaintiff; that plaintiffs did not know whether Harry A. Dawson was living or dead, or if dead, the names or whereabouts of his heirs, etc.; that Charles Dawson was made a defendant because he denied plaintiffs’ right to the note or mortgage; that these instruments were then in possession of Charles Dawson and Albert M. Casten, and they were asked to set up any right or title they had to them; alleged the note was past due and the mortgage in default, and asked for judgment on the note against Owen Ogle and for the foreclosure of the mortgage.

The answer of Charles Dawson in effect demurred to the petition on the ground that there was a misjoinder of plaintiffs, a mis-joinder of causes of action, and that the facts alleged did not state a cause of action in favor of either of the plaintiffs. It pleaded a settlement between Mrs. Price and Charles Dawson of the estate of their brother, and that she was estopped from claiming an interest in the note by reason thereof, and alleged that subsequent to the execution and delivery of the note and mortgage to Lew Dawson he delivered them to Albert M. Casten and orally directed that upon his death they be delivered to- Charles Dawson, intending by such delivery to make a gift of the note and mortgage to Charles Dawson; that about October 1, 1934, Casten did deliver the instruments to Charles Dawson, who since has been the exclusive owner of them, and that Mrs. Price had full knowledge of his claim of ownership and acquiesced therein. There was a plea of the statute of limitations and a prayer that plaintiffs take nothing by reason of their petition, and that they be barred from any interest in the note and mortgage.

The answer of Owen Ogle was that Charles Dawson was the owner of the note; that plaintiffs have no interest therein, and that the allegations of the petition were insufficient to state a cause of action in favor of either of them. The answer of Albert M. Casten pleaded the statute of limitations, alleged Charles Dawson was the owner of the note and mortgage, alleged the administrator was not [159]*159the real party in interest, that the allegations were insufficient to state a cause of action in favor of Charlotte J. Price, that neither of the plaintiffs has any right to foreclose the mortgage, and alleged that he had possession of the note and iportgage under an agreement with its owner, Charles Dawson, who had pledged it with him to secure moneys advanced. Plaintiffs’ reply denied the new matter in these answers.

While the action was pending it was learned that Harry A. Dawson had died, leaving two sons, Lawrence Dawson and J. W. Dawson, and two grandchildren, Jack Dawson and Peggy Dawson, minors, children of a son, Barney A. Dawson. These parties lived at Elma, Wash., where Mollie A. Carroll had been duly appointed as the guardian of the estate of the minors. These heirs of Harry A. Dawson answered as defendants denying the claims of Charles Dawson and Albert M. Casten, and by cross petition collectively claimed a one-third interest in the note and mortgage, and asked that the mortgage be foreclosed.

No answer denied the execution of the note and mortgage, nor denied that the note was due and unpaid and the mortgage in default. The appointment of the administrator and the relationship of the parties to Lew Dawson, as alleged by plaintiffs, were stipulated. Plaintiffs introduced evidence of the death of Harry A. Dawson and of who constituted his heirs, and rested. The demurrer of defendants to plaintiffs’ evidence was overruled. The court rendered judgment against Owen Ogle and wife on the pleadings and held the burden of proof to be on Charles Dawson and Albert M. Casten respecting the claim of Charles Dawson to the ownership of the mortgage and Casten’s claim to be holding them as security for money he had advanced to Charles Dawson.

Defendants called as a witness the plaintiff, Charlotte J. Price. She testified that after the death of her brother Lew, and it was learned he had some money in the bank, at the request of the bank and in order to draw the money, she and her brother Charles signed a written statement to the effect that the estate of their brother, Lew Dawson, had not been administered upon, that they were the only heirs at law, and they would hold the bank harmless if the money were paid to them; that she drew the money, paid the funeral expenses, and there was left $157.90, which was divided with her brother Charles; that her brother Harry had gone west many years ago and she had lost track of him and his family, except that some[160]*160one several years ago had sent her a newspaper clipping giving an account of his death, which she sent to her brother Charles, but that she knew nothing about what children, if any, he had left; that her brother Lew had left a little personal property — two horses and farm implements, all old — which she and her brother Charles divided; that while they were doing this nothing was said about this note and mortgage; that she went to the office of Mr. Casten and inquired if her brother had left a will.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
109 P.2d 134, 153 Kan. 156, 1941 Kan. LEXIS 109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hotchkiss-v-ogle-kan-1941.