Warren Mortgage Co. v. Winters

146 P. 1012, 94 Kan. 615, 1915 Kan. LEXIS 137
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMarch 6, 1915
DocketNo. 19,365
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 146 P. 1012 (Warren Mortgage Co. v. Winters) 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
Warren Mortgage Co. v. Winters, 146 P. 1012, 94 Kan. 615, 1915 Kan. LEXIS 137 (kan 1915).

Opinion

[616]*616The opinion of the court was delivered by

Mason, J.:

'The Warren Mortgage Company brought an action to enforce a lien against a tract of land, the •validity of which was denied by Roy Leben and S. B. Leben. The plaintiff recovered judgment, and the Lebens appeal. The principal question presented is whether the findings (only one of which is challenged as having no support whatever in the evidence) justify the judgment rendered. The matters shown by the findings will be spoken of as the established facts. In the following statement the December dates are in 1911 and the others in 1912.

On December 1 the land involved was owfed by B. F. M. Klump and Lee Ward, who about that time gave B. M. LeGrande an option to purchase it,' expiring March 1. A few days later- LeGrande applied to the mortgage company for a loan of $3000 on the land, representing that Thomas F. Winters, his adopted son, was buying it. On December 25 the company’s agent advised LeGrande -that it would lend $2800 on the property. On the same day Winters made a formal application for the loan, which the company accepted January 4, subject to the approval of the title.

On December 21 LeGrande entered into a written contract with S. B. Leben to exchange the land and $500 for a stock of goods, which recited that the deed was to be received subject to a mortgage for $3000 to run seven years at seven per cent interest. Leben knew that the mortgage referred to had not been made, but that it had been applied for and that the negotiations were pending. The contract concluded: “This bill of sale or a copy is to be put up with the deed to be held in Escrow with J. Gardner until the abstract is brought up to date, and until a sufficient time is given to show the goods are all clear of debt.” On the same day the stock of goods was delivered to LeGrande, who had learned that it was clear of debt. LeGrande and S. [617]*617B. Leben agreed that the deed should be made to the latter’s brother, Roy Leben. A deed from Winters to Roy Leben (intended to cover the land, but by a defective description omitting eleven acres of it) with a check for the $500, was placed in the hands of Gardner, it being the intention of all the parties that they were not to be delivered until the mortgage should be recorded and noted on the abstract of title. The warranty clause was followed by the words “except a mortgage for three thousand dollars.” Roy Leben knew all about the transaction. The title to the land was still in Klump and Ward. The purpose of the loan was to pay the balance of the purchase price to them. They executed a deed to Winters, which was placed in a bank to be delivered on the payment of the price.

On February 12 Gardner and the Lebens, in violation of the agreement, delivered the deed to Roy Leben, and it was recorded on that day, all without the knowledge or consent of LeGrande, Winters or the mortgage company.

The mortgage company intended to place the loan with the Merchants Loan & Trust Company, for which it acted as agent, and the papers were made out in that name. As they were later assigned to the plain-tiif, further reference to the Merchants company will be omitted. On February 16 Winters executed a mortgage for $2800, due in seven years, bearing 5% per cent interest, and a commission (or interest) mortgage for $294, due in seven years, bearing interest at ten per cent after maturity. The mortgages were recorded May 10.

On March 4 the mortgage company paid the amount of the loan ($2795 — a deduction of $5 being made for abstract and recording fees) to the banker who held the deed to Winters, and it was applied on the purchase price to Klump and Ward. This left a balance of $200, which was furnished by S. N. Brees, who had been acting as the agent of LeGrande, on his promise [618]*618that a second mortgage should be executed to secure its repayment, and the banker continued to hold the deed as security for this agreement. On April 29 Brees orally assigned his claim to the company, for $200, and it received the deed to hold as security for the execution of the second mortgage. On the same day Roy Leben orally promised to give the company a mortgage on the property for $3000, due in seven years, bearing seven per cent interest, and the company agreed upon the execution of such mortgage to deliver the deed to Winters. On April 22 Roy Leben had agreed with the company that he would make a deed back to Winters for the tract described in the deed to him, and that Winters should then execute the $3000 mortgage and reconvey to him the entire tract, including the part inadvertently omitted in the first deed. This arrangement failed because Winters at the time refused to make a new deed.

The interests of the two Lebens are substantially the same, as are those of LeGrande and Winters, and for the purpose of an abbreviated statement the acts of S. B. Leben may be regarded as those of Roy Leben, and the acts of LeGrande as those of Winters. The situation then presented is substantially this: Winters had an option on the land. He contracted for its sale to Leben subject to a mortgage for $3000, for which he was negotiating. He received his payment and placed a deed to Leben with Gardner to hold until the mortgage should be of record and shown upon the abstract. Gardner delivered the deed before this condition was fulfilled. Winters obtained $2800, which he applied to the payment of the purchase price, by giving a mortgage for the money lent him for that purpose. This left $200 to be paid before he could obtain his deed. He procured this by a promise to make a second mortgage for the amount, and the undelivered deed was held as security for the performance of the agreement.

[619]*619As against Winters the mortgage company has a legal mortgage for $2800, and a claim for $200 which is secured by the deed which it still holds, and which has not been delivered to the grantee. This is '-not the case of an attempt to create a mortgage by the deposit of the title deeds — conveyances which have become effective by delivery. It is the retention of an undelivered deed as security for the purchase price by one who stands in the attitude of the unpaid vendor.^ Leben has no interest which can conflict with that of the mortgagee. The deed to him conveyed nothing, because it was not legally delivered, and because at the time of its manual delivery, Winters had no title to convey. The execution and delivery of a warranty deed by Winters before he himself had a title would have bound him personally, and by equitable estoppel as well as by the statute any title which he afterwards •obtained would have inured to the benefit of .the grantee. But by this principle, Leben could only get from Winters what Winters himself obtained, and Winters never did for a single instant have title to the property save in subjection to the mortgage. The mortgage was essentially — in view of the relations of all the parties — one for purchase money. One who executes a purchase-money mortgage is not regarded as obtaining the title and then placing an incumbrance on it. He is deemed to take the title charged with the incumbrance, which has priority even over preexisting claims. And a mortgage given to a third person to obtain the money used in buying the property is entitled to the same preference.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
146 P. 1012, 94 Kan. 615, 1915 Kan. LEXIS 137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/warren-mortgage-co-v-winters-kan-1915.