Korb v. Minneapolis Threshing Machine Co.

3 P.2d 502, 133 Kan. 783, 1931 Kan. LEXIS 320
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedOctober 10, 1931
DocketNo. 30,083
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 3 P.2d 502 (Korb v. Minneapolis Threshing Machine 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
Korb v. Minneapolis Threshing Machine Co., 3 P.2d 502, 133 Kan. 783, 1931 Kan. LEXIS 320 (kan 1931).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Hutchison, J.:

The question involved in this appeal is the priority of the liens of two mortgages depending upon the construction to be given to a subsequent stipulation signed by the maker of the mortgages and the appellee, who holds the mortgage designated as first.

One Ed Smith, the owner of a quarter section of land in Jewell county, gave a first mortgage thereon to Korb in April, 1926, and the same day gave a second mortgage thereon to Stansbury, both of which were promptly recorded and became liens on the land. Five months later Smith gave a mortgage to the Minneapolis Threshing Machine Company, appellant herein, making it subject to the two earlier mortgages. This was also promptly recorded and became a third lien. Four months later, in January, 1927, Smith gave a warranty deed to the land in question to Stansbury, subject to the first two mortgages, which Stansbury assumed and agreed to pay. In 1929 Smith brought an action in the district court of Jewell county to set aside the first and second mortgages he had given to Korb and Stansbury and the warranty deed he had given to Stansbury, alleging fraud and misrepresentations in the procuring of them, and claiming damages sustained by him because of the fraudulent acts of these two parties. This action was settled and disposed of by stipulation signed and filed in the district court of Jewell county on October 19, 1929, which contains the following paragraph:

“That all indebtedness by the plaintiff to any of the defendants and by any of the defendants to the plaintiff is fully satisfied and paid.”

In May, 1930, Korb commenced this foreclosure action, making [785]*785Stansbury and the appellant parties defendant, with the usual allegations as to their claiming some interest in the land. Stansbury answered, setting up his mortgage, and judgment was rendered July 22,1930, giving Korb a first lien, and Stansbury a secpnd, and barring the appellant served by publication and in default for answer. The land was sold August 26, 1930, to plaintiff under an order of sale for no more than the amount of the first.mortgage and costs. On September 13, 1930, the appellant made application to open up the judgment and requested to be let in to defend, tendering an answer and cross petition setting up its mortgage and claiming it to be a first lien because of the payment of the first and second mortgages as shown by the stipulation which it plead. After the court permitted the threshing machine company to defend, Korb and Stansbury replied, denying the allegations of the answer and cross petition of appellant and alleging that the stipulation was intended only to release and did only release Smith from personal liability and obligation, reserving the mortgage liens upon the land, and if the stipulation indicates anything to the contrary it was by mutual mistake and not as intended.

On the trial during the November term, 1930, the court gave the plaintiff Korb a first lien as had been done in the original judgment, but gave the appellant a second lien instead of Stansbury, and declined to set aside the sheriff’s sale, but extended the redemption period eighteen months from date of confirmation and then confirmed the sale. From this decree the threshing machine-company appeals, claiming its right to a first lien and a new sale by the sheriff. Stansbury has not appealed.

The appellant earnestly contends and insists that the words used in the stipulation are unambiguous and mean just what they say, viz., that the indebtedness of Smith to Korb is fully satisfied and paid, and logically reasons therefrom that when the debt is discharged the mortgage lien which secures it falls and ceases. If we confine ourselves to the paragraph above quoted from the stipulation there would be no room for argument nor difference of opinion upon the subject. But the trial court had before it the entire stipulation, the pleadings raising an issue as to the proper construction of it, and the intention of the parties to it, the evidence of parties as to such intention and the fact of the conveyance of the property by Smith to Stansbury, subject to the first and second mortgages [786]*786which the grantee assumed and agreed to pay, which assumption, when recognized by the mortgagee Korb, made Stansbury the principal debtor and Smith, the mortgagor, only a surety. (Savings Bank v. Butler, 56 Kan. 267, 43 Pac. 229; and Smith v. Kibbe, 104 Kan. 159, 178 Pac. 427.)

The action which was dismissed by the terms of the stipulation had been brought by Smith to recover more than $10,000 in damages and to set aside the two mortgages and the deed. In consideration of the dismissal of this action Smith was relieved of all indebtedness to Korb and Stansbury, received an adjustment of the current crop rent of the land and $125 in cash, and he paid the costs.

The stipulation, instead of setting aside the mortgages and .the deed, which was one of the two important purposes of the suit, by its express terms confirmed and ratified the deed which was made subject to the two mortgages, which was a direct recognition of the existence and continuance of the two mortgages.

The paragraph of the stipulation immediately preceding the one above quoted, providing that all indebtedness of Smith to Korb and Stansbury is fully satisfied and paid, is as follows:

“That the parties agree that the deed from the plaintiff to the defendant, J. A. Stansbury, for all of the above-described lands, was rightfully delivered and placed of record; that it operates as a deed and not as a mortgage or security for indebtedness, and that it passes to the defendant, J. A. Stansbury, all the right, title and interest of the plaintiff in and to all of the above-described real estate, except the right to crops and rents as above described until March 1, 1930; that after March 1, 1930, the plaintiff has no right, title or interest in or to any of the above-described real estate and hereby covenants and agrees that on or before said date he will give up full and complete possession of said real estate to the defendant J. A. Stansbury.”

This paragraph recognizes the existence of a present indebtedness, when it says that the conveyance to Stansbury “operates as a deed and not as a mortgage or security for indebtedness.” If the indebtedness was to be completely disposed of and satisfied by stipulation, what could have been the necessity for specifically providing against the possibility of the deed being regarded as a mortgage? To accept the construction and theory of the appellant we find Smith, instead of giving Stansbury á deed requiring him, the grantee, to assume and agree to pay two mortgages as he had originally done, now giving him, the holder of the second lien, a good title free and clear of encumbrances for the purpose of being freed from the personal obligation as surety for the indebtedness of the [787]*787two mortgages, and we find the holder of the first lien left without anything whatever.

The reasonable rules of construction require that effect be given to each and all the provisions of the stipulation — the reference to the deed not being security for indebtedness as well as the statement that all indebtedness was fully satisfied and paid.

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Bluebook (online)
3 P.2d 502, 133 Kan. 783, 1931 Kan. LEXIS 320, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/korb-v-minneapolis-threshing-machine-co-kan-1931.