Royer v. Perkins Loan & Trust Co.

168 P. 848, 101 Kan. 733, 1917 Kan. LEXIS 187
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedNovember 10, 1917
DocketNo. 21,078
StatusPublished

This text of 168 P. 848 (Royer v. Perkins Loan & Trust Co.) 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
Royer v. Perkins Loan & Trust Co., 168 P. 848, 101 Kan. 733, 1917 Kan. LEXIS 187 (kan 1917).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

PORTÉR, J.;

This action was to recover the statutory penalty for failure of a mortgagee to enter satisfaction of a mortgage and for damages and attorney’s fees, under the provisions of sections 6471 and 6473 of the General Statutes of 1915. The plaintiff recovered judgment, from which the defendant appeals.

On the first day of June, 1908, the Atlas Building and Loan Association, hereinafter called the Atlas company, engaged in business at Lawrence, made an ordinary building loan of $1,000 to Lila B. Royer, the plaintiff, taking her note payable to the order of F. M. Perkins, secured by mortgage on residence property in Jewell county. F. M. Perkins was secretary of the company. As further security for the loan, and to set forth the [735]*735manner in which it and the interest thereon should be paid, she signed an instrument or indenture agreeing to subscribe for twenty shares of stock in the company, and assigned the shares to P. M. Perkins. By the agreement she was to pay for the stock in dues of $12, payable on the first day of every month until the shares should mature or the contract should otherwise be fully completed or terminated. In lieu of interest to accrue on the principal of the loan she agreed to pay the sum of $8 on the first day of each month until the shares of stock should mature, making the sum of $20 due on the first day of each month until the contract was completed. The mortgagee or his assigns might declare the principal debt immediately due and payable in case of any default in the payment of any suhi covenanted to be paid, and might foreclose the mortgage, sell the real estate, and have the right to sell the shares at public or private sale and surrender them to the association for cancellation and apply the funds so arising to satisfy all sums due on the contract. It was agreed that the note, mortgage and stock agreement should form one complete contract, to be construed together to , determine the intention of the parties.

On the first of November, 1910, the Perkins Loan and Trust Company, hereinafter referred to as the Perkins company, with its headquarters also at Lawrence, took over all the assets and business of the Atlas company, with the consent and approval of the stockholders of the Atlas company, as provided in section 2230 of the General Statutes of 1915, and with the consent and approval of the bank commissioner.

The petition was filed February 4, 1915. It made no reference to the agreement that the plaintiff should take out shares of stock and make payments thereon, but it alleged that she had paid the sum of $300 more than was justly due and owing to the Perkins company and F. M. Perkins, and alleged their failure to cancel and return the promissory note and enter satisfaction of the mortgage. The petition was drawn as though it were an action by a mortgagor against the mortgagee for failure to release an ordinary real-estate mortgage; it alleged that $250 was a reasonable attorney’s fee, that plaintiff had suffered other damages to the extent of $250, and asked '$60, the reasonable value of an abstract of title, [736]*736which it alleged the defendants had failed to return. The petition asked for a judgment in the sum of $900,' for costs, and that the cloud on plaintiff’s title to the real estate might be removed.

The answer admitted that the Pérkins company had taken over and assumed the liabilities of the Atlas company, and admitted the execution of the note and mortgage. It set up a copy of the note, the mortgage and indenture or stock agreement, and alleged that no part of the principal of the note had ever been paid; that the interest thereon had been in default since February 1, 1914. The answer also pleaded the one year’s statute of limitations for the recovery of a penalty or forfeiture.

F.'M. Perkins filed a separate answer and cross petition, claiming to be the owner in his personal right of the'note, mortgage and indenture, setting out copies of all of them, and alleging that the plaintiff had made 68 monthly payments of $12 each upon the shares of stock, that is, payments from the first day of June, 1908, up to and including January, 1914, and amounting to $816, but no other or further payments had ever been made on the shares of stock; that these were not sufficient to mature the shares which had been delinquent since February 1, 1914. It alleged that the plaintiff made the regular monthly payments of interest to F. M. Perkins up to and including the month of January,, 1914, and that no other or further payments of interest have ever been made on the note and mortgage. The cross petition then set up a claim for the foreclosure of the mortgage because of the defaults in the payment of interest, and because of a provision in the mortgage and indenture that at the option of the mortgagee he might declare the principal sum due for a default of any of the covenants or payments. The defendant, Perkins, further alleged that there was $1,013 due on the loan, with interest at the rate of ten per cent on all defaults, and asked to have the mortgage foreclosed. He alleged that he had never had anything to do with the twenty shares of stock, except to hold them in pledge as security for the loan, and brought the shares into court and offered to surrender them to the plaintiff as soon as the full amount of the indebtedness due him was paid.

[737]*737The case was tried by the court without a jury. The court made the following findings:

“That the defendant F. M. Perkins has no interest in or claim to the note and mortgage set out in his answer filed herein.
“That in the computation the plaintiff, should be credited with the sum. of $360.00, being the total of the different amounts of $12.00 paid each month from the time of making the contract up to November 10th, 1910; and that she should be credited with the total of the amounts of the monthly payment of $20.00 thereafter paid in the sum of $760.00; that she should be credited with the dividends in the, sum of $19.30; that she should be credited with interest on the amounts of the $20.00 payments in the total sum of $74.10; that she should receive credit for the interest on the $360.00 at the rate of six per cent per annum from November 10th, 1910, to January 1st, 1914; in the sum of $67.80, making a total sum of $1,281.20.

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22 Kan. 549 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1879)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
168 P. 848, 101 Kan. 733, 1917 Kan. LEXIS 187, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/royer-v-perkins-loan-trust-co-kan-1917.