Myers v. Isern

75 P.2d 253, 147 Kan. 182, 1938 Kan. LEXIS 32
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 29, 1938
DocketNo. 33,681
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 75 P.2d 253 (Myers v. Isern) 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
Myers v. Isern, 75 P.2d 253, 147 Kan. 182, 1938 Kan. LEXIS 32 (kan 1938).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

DawsoN, C. J.:

This was an action to recover $2,500 as the alleged value of thirty shares of installment stock in a building and loan association which were canceled when the mortgage loan to which the stock was incidental was paid off.

The pertinent facts must be stated at some length. Early in January, 1926, plaintiff Myers owned a house and a parcel of ground in Lyons. About that time (the dates in the abstract are confusing) he borrowed $2,500 from the Railroad Building, Loan and Savings Association, of Newton; and in accordance with the usual formalities for procuring a loan of money from that sort of institution he was required to subscribe for thirty shares of installment stock, and to execute a promissory note for the desired amount, and to execute a mortgage on his Lyons property to secure its payment.

The installment stock, designated “Series G,” was never formally issued, but an entry was made in the books of the loan association that the shares stood in his name. At their inception these shares had no actual value, but they had a potentially growing value as contemplated monthly installments should be paid. These installments were so computed that if 120 of them were regularly and timely paid the thirty shares of stock would attain their ultimate par value at the same time the mortgage indebtedness would fall due, and by appropriate book entries the stock would then be canceled and the mortgage indebtedness thereby satisfied.

For some two years plaintiff Myers paid the monthly installments on his loan, but in the meantime he had gotten into debt to defendant Isern in the sum of $2,313.33. On May 11, 1928, apparently to secure or satisfy that indebtedness, Myers executed a deed conveying the Lyons property to Isern, and about the same time they made a written contract which may be summarized thus:

Myers was' to continue to pay the dues, interest and installments on the mortgage indebtedness according to the instruments pertaining thereto. He also agreed to pay the taxes, and keep the property [184]*184insured and in good repair. Isern agreed that at any time within five years he would reconvey the property to Myers upon receipt of the $2,313.33 with six percent interest. It was also agreed that if Myers breached the contract in any particular Isern would be entitled to immediate possession — from which provision it can be inferred that possession of the property was not delivered to Isern when he received the deed thereto.

Sometime after this transaction and agreement Myers became delinquent in his payments to the loan company, thus breaching his contract with Isern of May, 1928. The last payment by Myers occurred in November, 1930.

On September 17, 1932, Meyers and Isern entered into another written contract, in which Isern was recognized as the owner of the property subject to the loan association mortgage, and Isern agreed to lease the premises to Myers for four years at $35 per month payable in advance. The agreement stated that Myers was in possession at that time and that he could continue to enjoy possession so long as he complied with its terms. It was also agreed that Isern would convey the property to Myers, subject to the mortgage, at any time within four years if Myers should pay him $2,400— apparently a return of the consideration Isern had given for Myers’ equity in the property. It was further agreed that on Myers’ failure to pay the monthly rent as it became due, the agreement should terminate and Isern would be entitled to immediate possession. Another provision of the agreement, which may become important as we proceed, reads:

“It is further agreed that this agreement and lease supersedes and takes place of all other and prior agreements, contracts and instruments heretofore entered into between the parties hereunto.”

This agreement was shortly thereafter breached, and a forcible detainer action was begun which found its way into the district court and culminated on September 8, 1933, in a judgment in favor of Isern for possession and for $300 due him as rent.

From time to time, whenever Myers made default in his payments of dues, interest and installments to the loan association, Isern paid them, as he also did the later installments up to and including the 112th, which he paid on February 20,1935. At all times Myers was aware of these facts. Indeed, it was one of Myers’ contentions in this lawsuit, as it still is, that Isern had agreed to assume and pay the mortgage indebtedness to the loan company according to its terms.

[185]*185About February 25, 1935, Isern signified to the loan company his desire to pay off the mortgage loan. Accordingly, the then paid-up value of the stock plus the dividends credited thereto which aggregated $2,400, together with an additional cash payment of $100 by Isern, was applied to the mortgage indebtedness, which thereby extinguished it. Whether it likewise extinguished the thirty installment shares which were brought into nominal existence at the time the loan was made as an incident thereto and which were intended to be extinguished with the mortgage indebtedness at its maturity is the gist of this lawsuit.

Plaintiff sought to hold both Isern and the loan association for $2,500 as the alleged value of the shares. The trial court held that the shares were merely incidental to the mortgage loan transaction, that when the mortgage was paid the shares were extinguished as contemplated from their inception, and gave judgment for defendants.

Plaintiff appeals, assigning errors in the trial court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law.

He first complains of the trial court’s refusal to find that Isern had agreed to pay the mortgage, and directs our attention to certain language in the contract of September 17,1932, where it recites that Isern is the owner of the Lyons property subject to a first mortgage for $2,500 “which. . . was assumed and to be paid” by Isern “in accordance with the deed of conveyance of said property to him.” Looking into the deed, however, there is no such assumption stated nor any language susceptible of such a construction. On the contrary, the written contemporaneous agreement of the parties, dated August 13,1928, expressly provided that Myers, grantor of the deed, agreed “to pay all the dues, interest or installments becoming due on said mortgage according to the terms thereof.” Moreover, the agreement of September 17, 1932, provided that whatever may have been the prior agreements of Myers and Isern, they were all to be superseded by the contract of that date, and it contained no such obligation on the part of Isern. From all the evidence, including the pertinent documents as well as the circumstances, the trial court concluded that the recital in the agreement of 1932 was merely a mistake, as it certainly was insofar as it stated that the deed from Myers to Isern provided that the grantee should pay the mortgage. No substantial error is made to appear on this point. (In re Estate of Dennis, 146 Kan. 121, 126, 68 P. 2d 1083.)

[186]*186Counsel for plaintiff remind us that a grantee’s agreement to assume a mortgage may be oral and wholly outside the conveyance. True, but the quoted provision of the written agreement of 1932 disposed of any such oral, extraneous agreement, if there had been one; so the point now sought to be made on the theory of an oral extraneous agreement cannot be sustained.

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Bluebook (online)
75 P.2d 253, 147 Kan. 182, 1938 Kan. LEXIS 32, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/myers-v-isern-kan-1938.