Republic Mutual Fire Insurance v. Johnson

278 P. 48, 128 Kan. 323, 1929 Kan. LEXIS 319
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJune 8, 1929
DocketNo. 28,511
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 278 P. 48 (Republic Mutual Fire Insurance v. Johnson) 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
Republic Mutual Fire Insurance v. Johnson, 278 P. 48, 128 Kan. 323, 1929 Kan. LEXIS 319 (kan 1929).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Dawson, J.:

This was an action to foreclose a mortgage on real estate, and a cross action to recover on a policy of fire insurance, the details of which will require to be stated at some length.

The defendant, Frank A. Johnson, was the owner of several valuable farms in Republic county. Three of these farms were separately mortgaged to the Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Company for the amounts of $9,500, $8,000 and $12,000, respectively. These mortgage loans had been negotiated by a firm of loan brokers in St. Joseph,, Mo., named Bartlett Brothers; and they and their subagents and business associates in the farm-loan business conducted a corporation called the Lincoln Land Company which advanced moneys to pay interest and taxes for delinquent borrowers so as to maintain the prestige of the mortgage loans negotiated and marketed by Bartlett Brothers.

On one of these farms (NW¼, sec. 4, twp. 4, range 5 west), owned by Johnson and mortgaged as above for $9,500, was a farmhouse which was insured by the Republic Mutual Fire Insurance Company, plaintiff, for $3,000, which policy was payable to the Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Company, mortgagee, as its interest might appear. By agreement, also, to which the mortgagor, mortgagee and insurer were parties, the insurer had the right to purchase the mortgage loan and take over all the rights of the mortgagee. By its terms the policy provided that if the insured parted with his title the insurance contract would thereby become terminated and without effect, unless the insurer gave its consent thereto,

In 1923, while Johnson's three farms were covered with the mortgages mentioned above, he defaulted in his payments of interest and taxes. The Lincoln Land Company took care of these, and on [325]*325May 9, 1924, its representative called on Johnson to adjust or settle these advances. To that end Johnson executed deeds to two of his mortgaged farms in favor of the Lincoln Land Company, and in return he accepted a lease of them whereby he agreed to farm them under directions from the Lincoln Land Company and to deliver to it as rent one-half of the wheat and hay and two-fifths of the corn raised thereon. The lease also provided that subject to their incumbrances Johnson could repurchase the two farms for $4,548.47 plus any additional taxes the Lincoln Land Company might pay, and it reserved to itself the privilege of paying whatever taxes might thereafter accrue. At the same time Johnson executed a promissory note in favor of the Lincoln Land Company for $2,371.49 and gave it a chattel mortgage on his interest “as tenant” in the crops to be grown on the two farms he had just deeded to the Lincoln Land Company.

While this status of affairs existed • between the Lincoln Land Company and Johnson the house on the first farm described above was destroyed by fire. .The plaintiff insurer thereupon exercised its option to buy the interest of the mortgagee, and having had the Johnson note for $9,500 and related mortgage assigned to it, this action was begun to recover on the note and to foreclose the mortgage. Johnson answered admitting the indebtedness but setting up a cross action upon the insurance policy for'the destruction of the house and praying for a recovery of $3,000 thereon to be credited upon his $9,500 indebtedness.

For answer to defendant’s cross petition plaintiff pleaded that by the deeds executed by Johnson in favor of the Lincoln Land Company on May 9, 1924, he had sold and conveyed the farm on which the house had burned and had ceased to be its owner, and the policy of insurance had been thereby terminated and defendant had no interest therein.

The foregoing issuable facts and others of less significance were developed in appropriate pleadings. The cause was tried by the court, which made findings of fact, one of which was that the deed conveying the farm on which the house afterwards burned was in fact a mortgage to secure the amount advanced by the Lincoln Land Company on Johnson’s defaulted interest and taxes, but that the indebtedness of Johnson pertaining thereto had been fully paid, although the Lincoln Land Company did not in fact reconvey the title to Johnson until after the house burned.

[326]*326Judgment in favor of the plaintiff was entered for the amount of the mortgage and its incidents, and judgment in favor of defendant was entered for the amount of the insurance policy, which latter amount was ordered to be credited as a payment upon the amount due on the mortgage indebtedness. An attorney’s fee was also allowed defendant on his cross action and judgment on the fire insurance policy.

Plaintiff appeals, urging various errors which chiefly center upon the question of what effect the transactions of Johnson and the Lincoln Land Company had upon the policy of fire insurance. Plaintiff contends that by the deed of March 9, 1924, Johnson ceased to be the owner of the farm, and thereafter the fire insurance policy was at an end. The pertinent provision of the policy reads:

“Article 36. If the insured shall cease to be the owner or dispose of the property covered by his policy, . . . the insurance shall immediately terminate. . . .”

At the time this insurance policy was written the mere act of incumbering the property did not vitiate the policy, so the first question we have to determine is whether the transactions between the Lincoln Land Company and Johnson on May 9, 1924, .were fairly susceptible of the interpretation placed upon them by the trial court, or whether they were no more than what they purported'to be — an outright and unqualified conveyance of all of Johnson’s title and interest to the Lincoln Land Company with a mere option to repurchase upon terms dictated by the new owner— or whether they were in legal effect and intention an equitable mortgage to secure the repayment of the sums advanced by the Lincoln Land Company on account of interest and taxes due from Johnson to the original mortgagee.

In the determination of this question it is plaintiff’s contention that the only evidence to be considered is the text of the deeds from Johnson to the Lincoln Land Company and of the farm lease and option granted to Johnson. Of course, if that contention were correct, their ostensible tenor would prevail over their actual character. Such, however, is not the law. There is no principle of equity better settled, or better supported in justice and good conscience, than the doctrine that a deed purporting to convey all title and interest from a grantor to a grantee may in fact be no more than an equitable mortgage (McNamara v. Culver, 22 Kan. 661; Overstreet v. Baxter, 30 Kan. 55, 1 Pac. 825; Timma v. Timma, 72 [327]*327Kan. 73, 82 Pac. 481; Moody v. Stubbs, 94 Kan. 250, 146 Pac. 346; Gilmore v. Hoskinson, 98 Kan. 86, 157 Pac. 426; Kolar v. Eckhardt, 119 Kan. 518, 240 Pac. 947; Rusco v. DeGood, 127 Kan. 708, 275 Pac. 201); and between the parties thereto and those in no better position than the contracting parties the facts pertaining to the execution of such an instrument may be shown by any competent evidence, parol or otherwise. (Bank v. Kackley, 88 Kan. 70, syl. ¶ 2, 127 Pac. 539; Dyer v. Johnson, 109 Kan. 338, 198 Pac. 944; Bank v. Bank, 111 Kan. 682, 208 Pac. 636; Clark v. Howe, 121 Kan. 204, 247 Pac. 113.) See, also, Farmers State Bank v. St. Aubyn, 120 Kan. 66, 70, 242 Pac. 466.

In the early case of Moore v. Wade,

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Bluebook (online)
278 P. 48, 128 Kan. 323, 1929 Kan. LEXIS 319, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/republic-mutual-fire-insurance-v-johnson-kan-1929.