McDaniel v. Jones

679 P.2d 682, 235 Kan. 93, 1984 Kan. LEXIS 301
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMarch 24, 1984
Docket55,569
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 679 P.2d 682 (McDaniel v. Jones) 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
McDaniel v. Jones, 679 P.2d 682, 235 Kan. 93, 1984 Kan. LEXIS 301 (kan 1984).

Opinion

*95 The opinion of the court was delivered by

Schroeder, C.J.:

This is an action to quiet title to residential property located in Johnson County, Kansas. The district court quieted title in the property in the name of Robert and Dona Jones (defendants), subject to existing mortgages, liens and other encumbrances on the property. These include a judgment lien in favor of Gene and Joyce McDaniel (plaintiffs) and tax liens in favor of the United States of America (intervenor). The court further ordered the property be foreclosed to satisfy these liens. Each of these parties has appealed from parts of the judgment.

The facts involved span a period of over twenty years. In 1959 the defendants purchased a home located at 8900 Delmar in Prairie Village, Kansas, for $61,000. Part of the purchase price was paid in cash and the remainder was financed through two mortgages. Beginning in 1963 the defendants began to encounter financial difficulties. They fell behind in making payments to one of the mortgagees and tax liens were filed against them by the federal government for unpaid income taxes. In August 1963 the mortgagee instituted foreclosure proceedings against the property. The property was foreclosed upon and was sold at a sheriff s sale in November 1963. The defendants were unable to obtain refinancing to redeem the property due to the outstanding tax liens and other financial problems. In early 1964 Mr. Jones sought assistance from Mr. McDaniel, his law partner, in obtaining refinancing for the property. McDaniel was aware of the defendants’ financial problems and was concerned about his law partner losing his home. Jones and McDaniel entered into an oral agreement that the property would be conveyed to McDaniel to enable him to secure a loan to redeem the property. Jones and his family would continue to live in the house and pay all expenses for the property for which McDaniel would be liable as record title owner, including the mortgage, insurance and tax payments.

McDaniel subsequently obtained a mortgage on the property of approximately $40,000 from Mission State Bank. McDaniel was the sole obligor on the mortgage. The proceeds of the mortgage were used to redeem the property for the Joneses by paying off the two prior mortgages and the defendants’ various tax liabilities secured by liens against the property. Jones paid the fees and costs incurred in obtaining the mortgage. The warranty deed conveying the property from the defendants to *96 McDaniel and the mortgage held by Mission State Bank were recorded in 1964. In October of that year Mission State Bank assigned the mortgage to Prudential Insurance Company. At that time the president of the bank wrote Jones notifying him that “your loan” was sold to Prudential.

Subsequently the defendants made payments on the mortgage directly to Prudential, and maintained insurance on the property listing Prudential as the loss payee. They also paid for repairs and improvements to the house. In 1965 both McDaniel and Jones submitted financial statements to a bank in connection with attempts to obtain financing for their partnership. Jones listed the residence at 8900 Delmar as an asset with the $40,000 mortgage thereon as a liability. McDaniel did not list the property as an asset nor the mortgage as a liability.

During 1966 Prudential was required to advance funds for the payment of taxes on the property when the defendants were late in making such payments. In early 1967 Prudential declared the mortgage in default and indicated it would commence foreclosure proceedings. McDaniel and Jones attempted to reinstate the mortgage in accordance with the terms of a demand letter sent by Prudential which required payment of the amount then due and execution of an affidavit setting forth the interests of the defendants in the property. A check drawn on the trust account of the Jones and McDaniel law firm for the amount due was returned by Prudential for failure to furnish the requested affidavit. A foreclosure action was filed by Prudential against McDaniel, the defendants and the United States. (Additional tax liens had been filed against the defendants since 1964.) Subsequently, Jones forwarded an affidavit to Prudential’s counsel stating “[t]hat he occupies the premises at 8900 Delmar, Prairie Village, Kansas, not under any lease agreement, purchase contract or mortgage assumption agreement, but by virtue of oral agreement between the affiant and Gene A. McDaniel, the owner of the fee interest in said property.” This affidavit was rejected by Prudential. McDaniel and Jones later received a letter from Prudential setting forth five specific requirements for reinstatement, including execution of an affidavit prepared by Prudential’s counsel. This affidavit states McDaniel is the fee title owner of the real estate and further reads:

“[T]hat affiant [McDaniel] does not live or reside on the real estate above *97 described, but that Robert C. Jones and Donna Jones, his wife, are in possession thereof as month-to-month tenants of affiant as lessor; that said tenants, Robert C. Jones and Donna Jones, occupy the said real estate under an oral month-to-month lease arrangement with affiant and said tenants, Robert C. Jones and Donna Jones, are in possession of said real estate only under such oral tenancy arrangement and do not occupy said premises under or by virtue of any written lease agreement, trust, purchase contract, option or mortgage assumption agreement and said Robert C. Jones and Donna Jones have no interest whatsoever in said real estate, except as such month-to-month tenants.”

This document was executed by McDaniel and Jones in order to comply with the reinstatement requirements and was forwarded to Prudential along with other requested documents and the funds due. The letter from Prudential also directed that all further payments were to be made from McDaniel’s individual account and not from the law firm account or a trust account established for McDaniel and Jones. Thereafter the defendants made payments in the amount of the mortgage payments to McDaniel, who in turn made the mortgage payments to Prudential. The defendants continued to pay all expenses incurred for maintenance, taxes and insurance on the property.

Beginning in 1967 and continuing through 1980 when this lawsuit commenced, the plaintiffs reported the money they received from the defendants for the mortgage payments as rental income on their federal income tax returns. In addition, they claimed deductions relating to the property for depreciation, taxes and interest on the mortgage. For six of those years the plaintiffs reported net losses in connection with the property. The remaining years, however, they realized net gains on the rental income received from the defendants, on which they were required to pay income taxes.

Also during this time the Internal Revenue Service apparently became suspicious of the dealings between the plaintiffs and defendants concerning the property and conducted an investigation to determine if it could levy against the property to satisfy the defendants’ tax liens. The aforementioned affidavit submitted to Prudential indicating McDaniel was the fee title owner of the property was given to the I.R.S. to preclude it from levying on the property.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
679 P.2d 682, 235 Kan. 93, 1984 Kan. LEXIS 301, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcdaniel-v-jones-kan-1984.