Mid Kansas Federal Savings & Loan Ass'n v. Binter

415 P.2d 278, 197 Kan. 106, 1966 Kan. LEXIS 358
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJune 11, 1966
Docket44,484
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 415 P.2d 278 (Mid Kansas Federal Savings & Loan Ass'n v. Binter) 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
Mid Kansas Federal Savings & Loan Ass'n v. Binter, 415 P.2d 278, 197 Kan. 106, 1966 Kan. LEXIS 358 (kan 1966).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Harman, C.:

This is an action to foreclose a real estate mortgage wherein homestead rights are asserted by a wife as a bar to the suit because she did not consent to the execution of the mortgage.

There is no substantial dispute as to the facts. Appellant and her former husband, Doctor Paul A. Binter, owned their home in *107 Wichita in joint tenancy. Doctor Binter died in 1958 and appellant thereby became the owner of the property which is the subject of this action. She and her three minor children have occupied the property at all times since 1955. Appellant became acquainted with a Doctor White, whom she subsequently married. Prior to that marriage she loaned him $13,750.00 so that he could purchase an airplane. The marriage occurred at Miami, Oklahoma, on November 22, 1961. At Miami, during the one and one-half hour interval between the taking of the blood tests and the performance of the marriage ceremony, appellant gave White a cashier’s check for $39,000.00, which check she had secured two or three days before in Wichita. White insisted on having the check before he would go through with the marriage. The purpose of this loan was to enable White to purchase a dental practice in Kansas City. Neither of the aforesaid sums was ever repaid. At White’s request the marriage was kept secret although some of appellant’s friends and relatives at some undisclosed time during its existence did learn of it. Appellant also indicated that she wanted the marriage kept secret. Appellant and White never lived together at the home in question, and in fact have lived apart. White never contributed to her support. In January, 1962, White informed appellant he had found a dental practice to purchase in Kansas City and that they would move to Kansas City as soon as the purchase of the practice was arranged. He told her he wanted to obtain a loan commitment on the house owned by her and in order to do this he asked her to execute a deed conveying that property to him. He asked her to sign the deed as “Dorothy Binter,” which appellant voluntarily did. The deed, dated January 16, 1962, recited the grantor therein as being Dorothy Binter, widow of Paul A. Binter, and the grantee as Westley E. White, a single man. During her marriage to Doctor Binter she had participated with him in three or four real estate purchases.

It appears that on the same date that the deed was executed, January 16, 1962, White made application to appellee loan association for a $20,000 loan on the house, indicating on the application that he was a single man and that the purpose of the loan was “to purchase.” White submitted an abstract of title to the property which was examined by appellee’s title examiner and a preliminary title opinion rendered showed the fee title on January 22, 1962, to be in Dorothy Binter. An appraiser for appellee went inside the home in making his appraisal and he “did take the owner’s name *108 down as ‘Binter.’” On February 1, 1962, White executed a note and mortgage on the premises to appellee for $20,000, receiving that amount. Appellant never signed either instrument. The mortgage and appellant’s deed to White were recorded the next day. White told appellant the loan was not approved and that he did not get the loan. Appellant first learned of the loan and the mortgage securing it about April 1, 1962, when a delinquency notice was mailed to the house. Later White told her he had obtained the loan and spent the money. She contacted her attorney but nothing was ever done concerning White. Appellant continued to live apart from White but did go on trips with him. Appellant told real estate agents, while attempting to sell the house, that there was a mortgage on it. Since 1961 she has filed her tax returns as Dorothy H. Binter, she registered under that name, and had at least one bank account, her telephone number and her name on the children’s school records in that name. In November, 1964, appellant divorced White, having the property in question set over to her free and clear of any claims of his and in the decree also securing a judgment against White for $72,750.00, representing the money which she stated had been fraudulently taken from her, including the proceeds of the $20,000 mortgage involved here.

Evidently a few payments were made on the note and mortgage but they became delinquent and appellee filed this foreclosure action naming White and appellant as defendants, claiming initially that its mortgage was a purchase money mortgage upon which less than one-third had been repaid, thereby reducing any redemption period to six months. Needless to say, White has wholly defaulted. As the issues were finally joined, appellant invoked the protection of the homestead exemption (Constitution of Kansas, Article XV, §9) because she had never signed the mortgage. The trial court made findings of fact, acknowledging that appellant had occupied the property as a homestead but holding that by her execution and delivery of the deed she put into motion the transaction whereby appellee became an innocent mortgagee and that thereby her right of homestead became subject to appellee’s mortgage lien, ruling adversely to her, rendering judgment in rem against the property for the amount of the unpaid note and decreeing foreclosure of appellee’s mortgage with an eighteen months’ redemption period.

Analogous situations have been before this court. In the case of Roach v. Karr, 18 Kan. 529, the wife signed a mortgage on her homestead without knowing what it was. She could read a little *109 by spelling the words; the mortgage was not read to her; upon inquiry o£ her husband as to the contents of the instrument at the time she made her mark, she was told it was none of her business, that it did not amount to a row of pins, that it was a note. She believed the instrument to be a note. In a foreclosure action by the mortgage holder, who was innocent of any irregularity in the signing of the instrument, the court stated on the question of her consent:

“If she was in any manner mistaken or defrauded as to the contents of the mortgage, such result was the consequence of her own gross negligence. She should have demanded that the instrument he read to her. If she relied on the representations of her husband, it was at her peril alone. The sound policy of the law forbids that a person thus situated, as Mrs. Roach was, and signing a mortgage under such circumstances as herein presented, should thereafter, as against the mortgagee, innocent of any irregularity in the execution of the instrument, assert that she never consented to the execution thereof. Helm v. Helm, 11 Kas. 21; Hallenbeck and Wife v. Dewitt, 2 Johns. 404. A different rule would open the door to the grossest frauds, and lead to unfortunate results scarcely to be realized.” (p. 534.)

This early case has been cited approvingly throughout the years many times on this point by this court and by the courts of other states.

In Lawrence v. Investment Co., 51 Kan. 222, 32 Pac. 816, two illiterate Indians deeded title to their land which they had occupied for many years as their home to a grantee who grossly deceived them by informing them they were executing a mortgage.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
415 P.2d 278, 197 Kan. 106, 1966 Kan. LEXIS 358, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mid-kansas-federal-savings-loan-assn-v-binter-kan-1966.