Pletcher v. Albrecht

350 P.2d 58, 186 Kan. 273, 1960 Kan. LEXIS 295
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMarch 5, 1960
Docket41,649
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 350 P.2d 58 (Pletcher v. Albrecht) 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
Pletcher v. Albrecht, 350 P.2d 58, 186 Kan. 273, 1960 Kan. LEXIS 295 (kan 1960).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Parker, C. J.:

This is an action to cancel a mortgage of record on land located in Smith county. Plaintiff recovered and the defendant appeals.

Inasmuch as the pleadings are not in controversy and there is little if any conflict in the evidence on which the trial court rendered its judgment, the facts necessary to a proper understanding of the appellate issues involved will be stated in the following manner.

On August 15, 1950, Ivan E. Bliss, then the owner of a quarter section of land located in Smith county, secured a real estate loan through F. L. Stevens, who was engaged in the insurance, loan and abstracting business in Smith Center. Bliss and his wife executed their interest coupon note, due ten years after date, together with a real estate mortgage, in the principal sum of $3,500.00. F. L. Stevens prepared the papers and made his wife, L. M. Stevens, payee in the note and mortgagee in the mortgage. At that time Mrs. Stevens did not know anything about the execution of the note and mortgage and had no money to loan. The mortgage was filed for record on August 15, 1950. On the next day L. M. Stevens transferred the note and mortgage to L. C. Albrecht, who had furnished the money for the loan, by endorsement and assignment, but Albrecht did not file his assignment of the mortgage for record until September 2, 1953.

In this connection it appears that on previous occasions Albrecht had advanced money to F. L. Stevens for several loans which had been made and consummated by F. L. Stevens to other borrowers under conditions and circumstances similar, if not identical, lo those just related.

W. F. Pletcher purchased the mortgaged land on or about April 21,1951, assuming and agreeing to pay the mortgage then of record in the name of L. M. Stevens.

The note required payment of $200.00 on the principal annually according to the tenor of ten annexed interest coupons. It also provided that the sum of $100.00 or any multiple thereof could *275 be paid on the principal by the mortgagor on any interest paying date. On August 15, 1951, the first annual interest payment date, Pletcher paid F. L. Stevens the sum of $2,648.75, which sum he intended to have applied on the interest and principal of the note and mortgage, receiving a receipt from the latter, signed by “F. L. Stevens,” showing payment of that amount as “Interest $148.75— Principal $2500.00 — SW % 33-4-12.” Refore making this payment Pletcher had gone to the court house, inspected the records concerning the mortgage, and learned that it stood of record in the name of L. M. Stevens, but made the payment as above indicated notwithstanding.

F. L. Stevens remitted Albrecht the sum of $1,500.00 from the foregoing payment and also the sum of $148.75, which represented interest then due, and, without the knowledge of Albrecht as to the amount received or retained, kept for himself the sum of $1,000.00.

On June 3, 1952, some two months prior to the next interest payment date, Pletcher, after again inspecting the records in the office of the register of deeds and finding that the mortgage still stood of record in the name of L. M. Stevens, paid F. L. Stevens the sum of $1,042.50, which sum he intended to have applied on the balance of interest and principal, then due on the note and mortgage. At the time of making this payment he made no demand of F. L. Stevens for the surrender of the papers evidencing the indebtedness but did receive a receipt, whereby that individual acknowledged payment of that amount, as “Ral in full” on the land (describing it) in question.

F. L. Stevens remitted no part of the $1,042.50, paid by Pletcher to him, to Albrecht and the latter had no knowledge of such payment having been made until a much later date.

Albrecht had the note and mortgage in his possession at all times after August 16, 1950, and no demand was ever made on him for surrender of the note or any of the interest coupon notes until long after the defalcation of F. L. Stevens was discovered. On the other hand it is to be noted Albrecht accepted remittances made by F. L. Stevens for payments made by Pletcher on the note and mortgage without any objection and, during the trial, admitted he had given F. L. Stevens authority to collect interest on any of the loans made by Stevens with money he had advanced to him for that purpose.

Pletcher had no knowledge of the fact that the note and mortgage were owned by Albrecht at the time he made the payments to F. L. *276 Stevens, but he did know that the record holder appeared to be L. M. Stevens.

Following the payment last above mentioned, and on August 15, 1952, when the next interest payment fell due, F. L. Stevens remitted to Albrecht an interest payment of $85.00, which represented interest on the unpaid principal of the note in the amount of $2,000.00. No interest payment was made August 15, 1953, and shortly thereafter the full story became known to all the parties.

Sometime after it became known that he had defalcated with the funds in question F. L. Stevens moved from Smith Center. Shortly thereafter, he sold some city lots and applied the proceeds received from the sale, amounting to $761.00, to the credit of Albrecht who, thereupon, credited that amount to the unpaid balance owing on the principal of the mortgage. With this credit and the amount of $1,500.00, previously made, Albrecht received on the principal of the note the total sum of $2,261.00, leaving a balance of $1,239.00 still owing on the principal.

Thereafter, and on May 26, 1956, Pletcher instituted the instant action by filing a petition in the district court of Smith County against Albrecht wherein he asked for cancellation of the mortgage. In this pleading Pletcher alleged that he had paid the respective sums of $2,648.75 and $1,042.50 to F. L. Stevens, as agent of L. M. Stevens, his wife. Later he filed an amended petition and again alleged the payment of the above sums to have been made in that manner. Subsequently Albrecht filed his verified answer and cross-petition, denying the allegations of the amended petition and seeking foreclosure of the mortgage. Thereupon Pletcher filed an answer to defendant’s cross-petition and, for the first time, alleged that he had paid the respective sums, just mentioned, in full satisfaction of the note and mortgage to F. L. Stevens, who was acting as the agent of Albrecht. Thereafter Albrecht filed a reply wherein he denied all allegations of Pletcher’s answer to the cross-petition and in the verification thereof asserted that the allegations, averments and denials therein contained are true.

With issues joined as indicated the case was tried by the court which, at the close of all evidence adduced by the parties, took the cause under advisement and ultimately rendered its decision in the form of a memorandum opinion, later incorporated in its journal entry of judgment, which reads:

“This is an action to cancel a note and real property mortgage. The plaintiff claims payment. The defendant seeks by cross petition to foreclose the mort *277 gage. The nominal mortgagee is L. M. Stevens, the wife of F. L. Stevens. The defendant L. C. Albrecht, is the assignee of L. M.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
350 P.2d 58, 186 Kan. 273, 1960 Kan. LEXIS 295, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pletcher-v-albrecht-kan-1960.