Pool v. Gates

225 P. 1069, 116 Kan. 195, 1924 Kan. LEXIS 46
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMay 10, 1924
DocketNo. 25,551
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 225 P. 1069 (Pool v. Gates) 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
Pool v. Gates, 225 P. 1069, 116 Kan. 195, 1924 Kan. LEXIS 46 (kan 1924).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Dawson, J.:

This appeal presents the result of two cases, consolidated below, in which the plaintiff unsuccessfully sought relief from certain obligations he had incurred in giving notes and mortgages for certain oil stock, trust company stock, and investment stock, and for related purposes which will require to be stated with some detail.

The plaintiff, Ed Pool, is 69 years of age, a farmer, and has been a resident of Stafford county for 45 years. He has acquired title to some 1,470 acres of land valued at $112,000, encumbered to the extent of some $49,500, exclusive of certain mortgages involved in this litigation. As a farmer plaintiff had been successful, and had long kept a bank account, and was quite familiar with the responsibilities involved in giving real-estate mortgages, having given 65 of these obligations in the course of his business career. Some two or three years ago, however, he made certain improvident investments in corporate stocks with which he had no familiarity and which have led him into serious financial consequences.

In 1921 plaintiff bought some Collins Investment Company stock from one DeMasters, giving the latter two notes for $2,500 each in payment therefor, and depositing the stock with DeMasters to secure payment of the notes. DeMasters sold these notes to R. C. Gates, a neighbor of plaintiff.

Early in 1922 plaintiff bought some Derby Oil Stock from one Bushnell, giving the latter two notes for $5,000 each in payment therefor. Shortly- afterwards plaintiff bought some more of this stock from Bushnell, giving him a third note for $5,000 in payment. Bushnell sold one of these notes to Frank Sutton and R. C. Gates, and afterwards Gates acquired Sutton’s interest in it. Still later Gates purchased a second of these $5,000 notes from Bushnell. It appears that before purchasing some of these notes Gates had talked with plaintiff concerning them, and plaintiff encouraged Gates to buy them. Gates testified:

“Q. Tell us the conversation, you had with Mr. Pool at that time just as it occurred. A. I said to Mr. Pool, I said ‘You have given this fellow another [197]*197$5,000.00 note.’ ‘Yes, sir,’ he said, ‘he sold me,’ — he said ‘I bought $5,000.00 worth of more stock.’ I said ‘You are giving these notes,’ and I said ‘you know you can’t pay them when they are due.’ I said ‘what will you do in regard to this?’ Mr. Pool says ‘If you will take up this note I will give you a mortgage for the notes you hold, [totalling $15,000], a new note and mortgage, and you can give me more time, if you will give me more time.’ I told him ‘All right,’ I would do that.”

It was apparently arranged that plaintiff should go to St. John to execute a mortgage on his land pursuant to this arrangement; but instead of doing so, plaintiff bought some Ranchman’s Trust Company stock from one Beals, giving notes to the extent of $15,000 in payment, which notes were secured by a mortgage on plaintiff’s land. This mortgage was recorded. When.Gates heard of this, he reproached plaintiff for his duplicity, but accepted another mortgage from plaintiff pursuant to their prior arrangement modified necessarily by the superior mortgage which plaintiff had given to Beals. To strengthen the attenuated third mortgage security for his $15,000 investment, Gates purchased the Beals note and mortgage of $15,000 for $6,000 in cash.

In 1922 plaintiff brought an action, charging Gates, Bushnell, and others with conspiracy whereby he was defrauded into giving certain of these notes and mortgages, and praying for their cancellation. He also brought a second action against Gates, Beals and others, charging them with similar acts of conspiracy for similar fraudulent purposes, and praying for the same sort of relief. This action pertained chiefly to the transaction relating to the purchase of the Ranchman’s Trust Company stock. These two actions were begun in Stafford county.

Yet another action of the same general character was begun in the district court of Sedgwick county, charging the defendants with divers and sundry acts of fraud and conspiracy, and which apparently related to the same transactions, and prayed for the same relief.

After all these actions were begun, plaintiff sold the Ranchman’s Trust Company stock for $2,500. The Sedgwick county case was dismissed, and the Stafford county cases were transferred to Reno county and consolidated for trial. Meantime Gates’ second and third mortgages matured through plaintiff’s default, and Gates filed a cross-petition to foreclose them.

The trial court made findings of fact too voluminous for reproduction here, the principal features of which, so far as concerns this [198]*198appeal, were against the plaintiff, and that there was no conspiracy in which R. C. Gates was a participant, and that he had been a bona fide holder for value of $15,000 worth of plaintiff’s notes, that such notes had been refunded into the notes sued on in this cross action by Gates, and that Gates was entitled to judgment thereon, and that the third mortgage given to secure that indebtedness should be foreclosed and the property sold to satisfy it; also that Gates was entitled to judgment for the $6,000 he paid to buy in the Beals mortgage of $15,000, and to have foreclosure decreed thereon to satisfy that sum, $6,000. It was also decreed by the judgments that plaintiff should take nothing against Gates in either action; but judgments were awarded to plaintiff against Beals for $3,500, against Bushnell for $10,875, and against one Dunne for $3,225, which last, however, was set aside and a new trial ordered thereon.

Plaintiff’s principal grievance on appeal pertains to the judgment and decree of foreclosure awarded against him in favor of Gates. A cross appeal is filed in behalf of Gates because he was only given judgment in foreclosure for $6,000 on the $15,000 mortgage which he purchased from Beals.

Noting first the points urged for appellant, it is argued that there was no consideration for the new notes and mortgage given to Gates. There was all the consideration that usually exists when an indebtedness is refunded — new instruments in lieu of older obligations valid in the bona fide holder’s hands, with such changes in due date, rate of interest and the like as the convenience or necessities of the debtor may require and the circumstances of the creditor permit. The substitution of the new obligation for the old one was sufficient consideration, and the fact of substitution was prima jade proof of consideration. (8 C. J. 217 et seq.)

It is useless to argue that there was any constructive fraud in the refunding of the $15,000 worth of notes held by Gates. The trial court found that there was no fraud of any sort so far as Gates was concerned. There was, indeed, persuasive evidence of plaintiff’s duplicity towards Gates — in promising to give him a second mortgage if Gates would buy in another of plaintiff’s outstanding $5,000 notes and extend the time of payment, and then giving a second mortgage to another party in breach of such agreement — but that is the only fraud, constructive or otherwise, discernible in this record so far as the relations of Pool and Gates are concerned.

[199]*199It is also contended that some sort of fiduciary relationship existed between Gates and plaintiff, but there was no evidence to support that idea, and indeed, it appears to be advanced for the first time in this court — by the fourth

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Related

In Re Estate of Good
266 P.2d 719 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1954)
Pool v. Gates
240 P. 580 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1925)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
225 P. 1069, 116 Kan. 195, 1924 Kan. LEXIS 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pool-v-gates-kan-1924.