Lake of the Forest Club v. Buttles

51 P.2d 18, 142 Kan. 538, 1935 Kan. LEXIS 13
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedNovember 9, 1935
DocketNo. 32,219
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 51 P.2d 18 (Lake of the Forest Club v. Buttles) 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
Lake of the Forest Club v. Buttles, 51 P.2d 18, 142 Kan. 538, 1935 Kan. LEXIS 13 (kan 1935).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by.

Thiele, J.:

Defendant appeals from a judgment under which her real estate was sold because of her failure to pay dues to the plaintiff club.

The questions presented for considerations arise out of facts concerning which there is no dispute.

[539]*539J. D. Waters and other persons owning adjoining lands, and perhaps others, caused the Lake of the Forest Club, hereafter usually referred to as the club, to be incorporated for the purpose of maintaining a club for social enjoyment, to hold and improve real estate and to make necessary rules and regulations for the transaction of its business and the government of its members, and other purposes not necessary to be detailed. On December 9, 1910, a plat of “The Lake of the Forest Club” was executed and filed as required by law. Under the dedication, the lands reserved for the use of the club as paths, drives, walks and lake were dedicated to the club as such. By-laws covering the activities of the club were adopted. They cover the field of its activities, but we here note only the following: Two classes of members were provided:

(1) Active members, who own lots and have a right to vote; and
(2) Associate members, who have no right .to vote, and are entitled to the privileges of the club until the following May 1, when their memberships cease and new applications must be filed.

The dues for active members are $150 per year, payable in two installments, and for associate members $150 per year, payable with application for membership. Article' VIII, section 10, reads as follows:

“Members shall be notified on or before the 15th day of each month the amount of their indebtedness to the club. A member shall be suspended for nonpayment of dues sixty days or later after the same are due at the discretion of the board of directors. Any member who has been suspended may be reinstated at any time by the board of directors upon the payment of all such dues together with court costs, if any, and attorney fees expended in collection of account against such suspended member:
“Should any member who has been so suspended fail to pay said indebtedness to -the club within ten days after being so suspended, then the board of directors is hereby authorized and instructed to immediately bring suit in the proper court to set aside the membership certificate that is held by said member; also the deed to said member’s said lot, and ask the court to order sale of same to any person qualified to become a member of the Lake of the Forest Club or to any corporation or association approved by the board of directors. The proceeds of the said sale of said membership certificate and lot shall be distributed as follows:
“First — All court costs and attorney’s fees shall be paid.
“Second — All indebtedness, with interest due the Lake of the Forest Club, shall be paid.
“Third — All the residue, if any, shall be delivered to the suspended member [540]*540and the right of said member so suspended to redeem said property shall be waived.”

Provisions for expulsion need not be noticed.

On June 25, 1912, Waters and others conveyed the lot in question here to one Dengel by a warranty deed containing the following clause:

“This deed is delivered by the owners and accepted by the purchaser subject to the by-laws adopted by the Lake of the Forest Club now in force or as the same may be hereafter amended.”

Dengel conveyed to Spake by warranty deed which contained no such provision. On February 19, 1927, Spake conveyed to appellant by warranty deed, which recited in part:

“. . . All of lot one hundred thirteen (113) of the Lake of the Forest Club in Wyandotte county, Kansas, as per recorded plat thereof, subject to the by-laws of the Lake of the Forest Club as originally adopted and now in force or as same may be hereafter amended.”

On February 22, 1926, appellant filed her written application for membership in the club, which recited in part :

“I hereby apply for membership in the Lake of the Forest Club, Edwards-ville, Kansas, and if accepted, I will comply with and be governed by the rules and regulations of said club as they now exist, and as they may hereafter be enlarged or amended.”

The lot in question has a residence on it. It does not appear whether appellant occupied it or not, but from May 1, 1930, and up to the trial of the action it was occupied by a tenant, an associate member of the club, who paid her as rents the sum of about $2,400. This tenant also paid his requisite dues to the club. Although not clearly expressed as a statement of fact, appellant seems to have taken the position that if her tenant was an associate member paying dues, she was relieved therefrom, for she failed and refused to pay the dues for the year 1930 and thereafter. In this condition, the club made no effort to suspend appellant as provided in the by-laws, but on July 27, 1933, it filed its petition alleging formal matters, certain provisions of the by-laws, the application for membership of appellant and that she became a member of the club, the conveyance of the lot to appellant and the condition of the grant as quoted above; that appellant had failed to pay dues as shown on an attached exhibit; that the club by reason of nonpayment of dues was entitled to a decree setting aside her certificate of membership and her title to the lot and ordering the lot sold to satisfy the judgment, [541]*541and judgment was prayed accordingly. We omit all reference to the defendant, the Brotherhood State Bank, for its rights were found to be inferior to those of the club, and it has not appealed. Appellant’s answer was a general denial; an allegation the facts stated in the petition did not constitute a cause of action; a denial of the correctness of the account or that she is indebted in any sum; a denial that plaintiff had a capacity to sue; an allegation that there was no privity of contract between plaintiff and defendant, as plaintiff had never been the legal or equitable owner of the property; that plaintiff had no lien upon the described real estate; that the provisions of the by-laws were and are insufficient to constitute a lien upon said property or to entitle plaintiff to the relief sought; and that the provision of the by-laws relied on is not a provision for a lien, but for forfeiture of title upon happening of a certain event, and is void. At the trial, an agreed statement of facts was filed covering most of the matters in issue.

The court made findings of fact, from which the above statement is largely drawn, and concluded that the application for membership and the by-laws constituted a contract between the parties; that the condition in the deeds from Waters to Dengel and from Spake to appellant Buttles constituted a covenant running with the lands; that appellant was not suspended as a member, was thereby enabled to collect rents from her tenant and cannot be heard to complain she was not suspended.

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Bluebook (online)
51 P.2d 18, 142 Kan. 538, 1935 Kan. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lake-of-the-forest-club-v-buttles-kan-1935.