Pease v. Snyder

220 P.2d 151, 169 Kan. 628, 1950 Kan. LEXIS 400
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJuly 8, 1950
Docket37,960
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 220 P.2d 151 (Pease v. Snyder) 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
Pease v. Snyder, 220 P.2d 151, 169 Kan. 628, 1950 Kan. LEXIS 400 (kan 1950).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Parker, J.:

This is an action in the nature of a creditor’s bill to subject certain real estate standing in the name of Leila M. Snyder to the satisfaction of a judgment obtained by the plaintiff against her husband, J. R. Snyder.

The pleadings are not in controversy and need not be detailed. For purposes of this appeal the essential and controlling facts disclosed by the record can be stated thus:

Leila M. Snyder and J. R. Snyder are, and on all dates in question were, husband and wife. In 1926 they acquired title to the real estate in controversy as tenants in common. They failed to pay the taxes assessed against it with the result it was sold for taxes at the end of a tax foreclosure action instituted by Bourbon county and *629 bid in at tax foreclosure sale by Leo W. Bohon and wife for the sum of $1,010. At that time the total taxes and expenses of the action were $658.49. The purchasers paid the amount of their bid into the court and on June 30, 1943, pursuant to judicial order, the land was deeded to them by the sheriff of Bourbon county and the deed was duly recorded in the office of the register of deeds of such county. On the same date the Snyders filed a motion in the foreclosure suit challenging the validity of the sheriff’s sale on grounds they had no knowledge of the pendency of the action and had not been served with summons. The sale was never set aside and the judgment on which it depends is in full force and effect. July 22, 1943, without ever taking possession of the property Bohons conveyed the title to Mrs. Snyder for an agreed price of $1,085. The purchase price was paid by a draft which Mrs. Snyder testified had been obtained from the First State Bank of Pittsburg and paid for by her with her own personal funds. Thereafter, and on June 30, 1943, a check was issued by the clerk of the district court of Bourbon county for $351.52 to the Snyders jointly and cashed by them. The amount of this check represented the difference between the Bohons bid and the amount of the judgment in the tax foreclosure action.

On March 1, 1946, the Snyders entered into a written contract to sell the real estate to the defendants, Harry and Grace M. Grimm, for the sum of $4,725 and they took over possession thereof in April, 1946. It is conceded this lawsuit was instituted before they had fully paid the consideration.

The plaintiff, who in October, 1943, had obtained a judgment against J. It. Snyder upon a simple promissory note for the sum of $497.24 with interest and costs but had failed to collect such judgment after the issuance and return of two executions in the latter part of 1945, commenced this action on October 22, 1946.

After hearing the evidence the trial court made findings of • fact and conclusions of law and rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff in which it held the proceeds of the property sold to the Grimms was amenable to the satisfaction of the plaintiff’s judgment.

No useful purpose would be served by setting forth the findings of fact or the conclusions of law. It suffices to say that while the findings disclose the factual situation heretofore related they are wholly silent as to any facts which would warrant a conclusion that any part of the purchase price paid by Mrs. Snyder to the Bohons *630 for her deed to the involved property was advanced by or came from funds belonging to her husband, or that there was any understanding between them the title to the real estate should be taken in her name and jointly owned by them, or that in taking the deed and acquiring such title she was guilty of any fraud or collusion. It can be added the same holds true of the conclusions of law.

Prom a careful examination of the record it is crystal clear the trial court’s judgment was based upon the theory that under the facts and circumstances heretofore related Mrs. Snyder did not acquire title to the property because of the rule that a cotenant in possession cannot acquire title to the common property and that when it is purchased by such a person the purchase is presumed to have been made for the common benefit of all cotenants. Indeed the first and in fact the all decisive conclusion of law upon which such judgment was based expressly so states. It reads:

“The re-purchase of the real estate involved by Leila M. Snyder from the purchaser at the tax sale amounted to a redemption in behalf of the co-tenant, John R. Snyder.”

That the statement last mentioned is correct and entirely justified by the record is evidenced by the principal contention advanced by counsel for the plaintiff in defense of the judgment. The brief filed by them in this court states:

“J. R. Snyder and Leila M. Snyder, his wife, were co-tenants and by the purchase of the property by Mrs. Snyder by way of a quitclaim deed from the holders of a tax deed that all rights under it inured to their benefit as eo-itenants and that in procuring the said quitclaim deed that it amounted to no more than a redemption receipt or payment of the taxes, hence the relationship of co-tenancy continued to exist.”

We pause here to note that this lawsuit is really between the plaintiff and the defendants, J. R. Snyder and Leila M. Snyder, and that the rights of the defendants, Harry Grimm and Grace M. Grimm, under the judgment, although they are appellees herein, depend entirely upon whatever disposition is made of the cause as between the parties first named. On that account we shall refer to the plaintiff as the appellee and the Snyders as the appellants.

It is true, as appellee points out, that in this jurisdiction the general rule is that if a cotenant in possession purchases the common property, either directly or indirectly, at a judicial sale, the purchase will be deemed to have been made for the benefit of all the cotenants (Hayden v. Hughes, 147 Kan. 511, 77 P. 2d 938). That, however, is not the situation which confronts us here.

*631 In the instant case the Snyders, as cotenants, had permitted the taxes on their property, to become delinquent. In due course Bourbon county, as authorized by the provisions of chapter 79, article 28, G. S. 1947 Supp., providing for judicial foreclosure and sale of real estate on which taxes are delinquent, had foreclosed such property and sold it at judicial sale to the Bohons who, after confirmation of such sale and the execution of a sheriff’s deed conveying title thereto; promptly placed such deed of record in the office of the register of deeds. Under express provisions of the statute under which the foreclosure was had (see G. S. 1947 Supp. 79-2804) when that deed was filed for record the Bohons became vested with a fee simple title to the real estate in question and the Snyders were divested of all right, title or interest therein.

There is absolutely nothing in the record of the case at bar which warrants a conclusion, even by inference, that the Bohons were acting for anyone but themselves in bidding in the property at the sale; in paying into the court the amount of the bid; in obtaining the deed or in filing it for record, or that they had any understanding or agreement whatsoever with Mrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
220 P.2d 151, 169 Kan. 628, 1950 Kan. LEXIS 400, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pease-v-snyder-kan-1950.