Morrison v. Bandt

67 P.2d 584, 145 Kan. 942, 1937 Kan. LEXIS 246
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMay 8, 1937
DocketNo. 33,384
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 67 P.2d 584 (Morrison v. Bandt) 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
Morrison v. Bandt, 67 P.2d 584, 145 Kan. 942, 1937 Kan. LEXIS 246 (kan 1937).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Thiele, J.:

The issue in this appeal is whether appellant’s cause of action grew out of an illegal agreement in restraint of trade so as to render the note and mortgage sued on void or whether the note and mortgage were separable and distinct contracts and not tainted with illegality. The question arises from rulings on demurrers of the plaintiffs to answers of the defendants.

Plaintiffs brought an action to recover on a note for $5,000, dated June 26,1931, made by the defendants Bandt, secured by a mortgage [943]*943on real estate in Phillipsburg, Kan., and to foreclose all of the defendants.

The defendants Bandt filed an amended answer alleging that on or about June 15, 1931, the defendant C. H. Bandt was operating a grain-buying-and-selling.business in an elevator on the mortgaged real estate, which real estate was at that time mortgaged for $5,000 to one Close as trustee for the defendant bank; that Bandt had other real estate mortgaged for $2,000 to defendant bank, and that he was indebted to that bank on an overdraft of $3,236.18. That about June 15, 1931, plaintiffs sought to procure the elevator for their use and proposed to Bandt that they were on intimate terms with the managers of the Farmers Union & Jobbing Association, operating the only other elevator in Phillipsburg, and would make an arrangement with them so that they would both pay only the same price for grain purchased and would not compete with each other in price, and they would set the price so both of them could make good money, and in order to secure the Bandt elevator arid have a place to operate in Phillipsburg, they would let defendant Bandt have $5,000 to secure good title and peaceable possession of the elevator by liquidating some of the claims and demands against him and his elevator, the advance to be evidenced by note and mortgage on the property; that plaintiffs and Bandt would operate the property and Bandt would receive two thirds of the net profits, Which division of profits and other agreements should be witnessed by a later contract, and for that purpose plaintiffs’ representative would interview the Farmers Union people to see if they would line up on prices to be paid, to all of which proposals Bandt orally agreed. It was further alleged that on June 24,1931, plaintiff’s representative came to Phillipsburg and stated to defendant's Bandt that he had interviewed the Farmers Union people, who were agreeable, and plaintiffs were ready to close, and thereupon gave Bandt $5,000 to be used to liquidate claims and demands against the elevator property so that control and possession of the elevator could be had for the purposes mentioned, and defendants Bandt gave the note and mortgage sued on; -that control and peaceable possession of the elevator property could not be secured for less than $5,000, and that it was the intention of plaintiffs and defendant Bandt that the money should be used to make them secure in their possession and control of the property, and the money was used to pay off the then existing mortgage of $5,000 for the benefit of the defendant bank, and upon [944]*944payment of said mortgage such control and possession was secured; that all of the above contracts and arrangements between plaintiffs, defendants Bandt and the Farmers Union people were secret and oral, except the note and mortgage and a contract between plaintiffs and defendants Bandt as to operation, and went into effect immediately, and thereafter plaintiffs and the Farmers Union bought grain, each paying the same prices, although each held themselves out to the public and solicited business as competing purchasers of grain; that the above arrangements continued in force until control of the Farmers Union Elevator changed in the latter part of 1932. There is specific allegation there were but the two elevators in Phillipsburg, and that the plan and arrangement made was for the purpose of creating a monopoly, etc., and was an unlawful arrangement and combination; that the note and mortgage involved grew out of and were part thereof, were without lawful consideration, as they were an essential part of the unlawful combination, were against public policy and void, etc., and should be canceled and held for naught.

The written contract between Bandt and plaintiffs need not be noticed further than to state it provides Bandt agrees to furnish the-elevator and equipment and give his time to buying of grain, etc., doing so according to the wishes of plaintiffs, paying such prices, etc., according as plaintiffs desire, and providing for division of profits.

The defendant bank filed an amended answer and cross petition in which it was denied that plaintiff’s mortgage was a first lien on the described real estate; and alleged that on June 30, 1931, defendants Bandt executed to defendant bank their note for $3,240, secured by a mortgage on the same real estate, and that if the note and mortgage alleged in plaintiff’s petition were entered into it was pursuant to plans and agreements and subject to the following conditions: Prior to the execution of said note and mortgage, defendant Bandt was indebted to defendant bank on a note for $5,000, payable to Close for the benefit of the bank, and on a note for $2,000 secured by mortgage on other property and in the amount of $3,236.18, an overdraft, and that before execution of the note and mortgage set up in the petition, the bank had made demand on Bandt for payment of $5,000 on his indebtedness, and collection thereof was about to be enforced, and it was orally agreed between the bank and Bandt that if the other indebtedness of Bandt could be reduced $5,000, the bank would permit Bandt to continue opera[945]*945tion of the elevator without molestation. Then follow allegations with respect to the transactions between plaintiffs and Bandt, set out more fully in Bandt’s answer and not here repeated; and that the defendant bank first learned thereof about the time the instant action was filed. The cross petition was for foreclosure of the $3,240 note and mortgage as a first lien.

Plaintiffs demurred to each of the above answers and appeal from the order of the trial court overruling the demurrers. It may here be noted that appellant does not contend the answers do not sufficiently allege the making of an agreement in violation of our statutes with reference to monopolies and unfair trade, but that the arrangements pleaded do not show a single indivisible contract, but one which is separable and divisible, that the consideration for the note and mortgage was distinct from the remaining parts of the agreement; that plaintiffs do not have to rely upon those portions of the arrangements respecting restraint of trade in order to sustain the note and mortgage, and therefore the answers do not state a defense.

This court on many occasions has considered whether a particular agreement, charged to be in violation of the animonopoly statutes or otherwise in'violation of law, was divisible so that a part thereof was enforceable.

In the early case of McBratney v. Chandler, 22 Kan. 692, recovery of attorney fees was sought. The defense was that the services were those of a lobbyist, were contrary to public policy, and recovery should not be allowed. In discussing the' trial court’s ruling on a demurrer to evidence, this court, speaking through Brewer, J., said:

“The contract of a lobbyist, in the sense in which that term is now used, for his services as such, is against public policy, and void.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
67 P.2d 584, 145 Kan. 942, 1937 Kan. LEXIS 246, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morrison-v-bandt-kan-1937.