Karr v. Burns

40 P. 1087, 1 Kan. App. 232, 1895 Kan. App. LEXIS 141
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedJuly 16, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 40 P. 1087 (Karr v. Burns) 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
Karr v. Burns, 40 P. 1087, 1 Kan. App. 232, 1895 Kan. App. LEXIS 141 (kanctapp 1895).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Cole, J. :

On December 26, 1888, Margaret H. Karr filed her petition in the district court of Miami county, alleging grounds for divorce from her husband, William Karr. She also made W. H. Karr and Milton E. Karr parties defendant in said action, and alleged as a cause of action against them that in 1883 her husband, with the joint means of herself and husband, purchased lots 8 and 9, in block 11, in Fontana, said county, and that the deed for said property was made in the name of her husband, William Karr, but that said William Karr did not record said deed, and that afterward he returned the same to the grantor, who, at the request of the said William Karr, destroyed said deed, and on May 20, 1886, executed a second deed to Milton E. Karr, who on May 21, 1886, placed said deed of record and gave a mortgage upon said premises to William H. Karr; [233]*233and she further claims in said petition that all these acts after the procurement of the deed were for the purpose of defrauding her of her interest in the premises as the wife of William Karr.

A summons was served personally upon William Karr on January 18, 1889, and on William H. Karr and Milton E. Karr on December 28,1888, and, issues having been joined in said action, the cause came on for trial June 22, 1889, whereupon W. H. Karr and Milton E. Karr objected to the introduction of evidence under said petition on the ground of misjoinder of parties and causes of action, and, the objection having been sustained, Margaret H. Karr dismissed her cause of action without prejudice as to the defendants so objecting, and proceeded to trial upon her action against William Karr, and on July 2, 1889, the court granted her a divorce and a judgment for alimony in the sum of $500 and costs of suit. The court further decreed that, as the action had been dismissed as to W. H. Karr and Milton E. Karr, he could make no order as to the real estate described in the petition. On the same day that Margaret H. Karr dismissed her cause of action as to William H. Karr and Milton E. Karr, she commenced a new action against them, and also joined as a party defendant Flora E. Burns, who, on the 4th day of January, 1889, had loaned Milton E. Karr $300, and taken as security therefor a mortgage upon the real estate above described.

In her petition in the second action Margaret H. Karr alleged substantially the same facts with reference to the real estate as in her former petition, and further alleged that the mortgage given by Milton E. Karr to Flora E. Burns was fraudulently executed and delivered, and that at the time of receiving the [234]*234same the said Flora E. Burns well knew that the conveyance of the premises referred to in the mortgage to Milton E. Karr was fraudulent and void; and said Margaret H. Karr asked that the conveyance to Milton E. Karr be set aside, that the title to said premises be decreed to be in William Karr, that the mortgage to Flora E. Burns be declared null and void, that whatever interest William H. Karr might claim in said premises be held void, and for such further relief as she might in equity be entitled to. Milton E. Karr was personally served with a summons in said action on June 22, 1889, but said service was afterward quashed upon motion, and service by publication was then make upon William H. Karr and M. E. Karr. The defendant, Flora E. Burns, filed an answer and cross-petition in said action, denying the allegations of the petition, and asking for a foreclosure of her mortgage upon the real estate in dispute. The defendant, Milton E. Karr, filed his demurrer to the petition of Margaret H. Karr, and the said demurrer coming on to be heard, thereupon said Margaret H. Karr dismissed said action without prejudice, and at the same time obtained leave of the court to answer the cross-petition-of Flora E. Burns.

In her answer to said cross-petition, which answer was filed October 11, 1889, Margaret PI. Karr alleged a title to said real estate in William Karr, and that, at the time of the execution and delivery of the note and mortgage described in the cross-petition, she, the said Margaret H. Karr, was the wife of said William Karr, and was possessed.of a homestead right in said real estate which she had never conveyed, and that she was, at the date of filing said answer and for a long time prior had been, occupying said real estate for a homestead. She further recited in said answer [235]*235the allegations contained in the petition theretofore filed by her against ’William Karr, M. E. Karr, and W. H. Karr, and the various proceedings had in said case, which are hereinbefore described, including the decree obtained against William Karr, and alleged that she had caused execution to issue against the said real estate, and that a judgment which she had obtained against William Karr was in full force and effect, and that no part had been paid or satisfied. She asked that the note and mortgage of Plora E. Burns be declared no lien upon said real estate as against the claim of said Margaret H. Karr, and she further asked that William Karr be declared owner of said property, and that Milton E. Karr be declared to have no interest therein.

The defendant, Flora E. Burns, replied to the answer of Margaret H. Karr, and alleged in said reply, in addition to the general denial, that Margaret H. Karr married William Karr in 1871, and separated from him in January of 1886, and that she never afterward lived with him nor did she afterward keep house in the state of Kansas ; and further, said Margaret H. Karr did not occupy said premises as a homestead for three years prior to said filing of the said reply, and that, if she was now so occupying it, it was for the purpose of defrauding said Flora E. Burns. She further alleged that at the time of the execution and delivery of her said notes and mortgage the said premises described therein were not occupied by any of the parties to this suit, either as a homestead or otherwise. She further alleged the bringing of the action for. divorce above described, and the dismissal of said action as to William H. Karr and Milton E. Karr, and that no judgment was rendered therein affecting said real estate. She also [236]*236recited the proceedings had in the action in which said reply was had, including the dismissal of said suit.

This cause afterward came on to be heard upon the issues joined by the defendant, Flora E. Burns, and Margaret H. Karr. The cause was tried by the court, a jury having been waived, and a decree rendered foreclosing the mortgage of Flora E. Burns, and declaring the amount due thereon the first lien upon the real estate in dispute, and a judgment of Margaret H. Karr for alimony a second lien upon said premises. The decree further ordered the sale of said premises and the application of the proceeds as follows : First, to the payment of the costs of ^aid suit and of said sale ; • second, to the payment of the judgment of Flora E. Burns, with interest thereon; third, to the payment of the costs of the action brought by Margaret H. Karr for divorce; and, fourth, to the payment of the judgment for alimony of Margaret H. Karr. From the said decree, as well as the ruling of the court in refusing to set aside the same and grant a new trial, the plaintiff in error brings the case to this court.

' Two questions are presented for our consideration, the first being jurisdictional. It is suggested by the brief of defendant in • error that William Karr and M. E.

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Bluebook (online)
40 P. 1087, 1 Kan. App. 232, 1895 Kan. App. LEXIS 141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/karr-v-burns-kanctapp-1895.