American Bank v. Bray

11 S.W.2d 1016, 321 Mo. 576, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 451
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 18, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 11 S.W.2d 1016 (American Bank v. Bray) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Bank v. Bray, 11 S.W.2d 1016, 321 Mo. 576, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 451 (Mo. 1928).

Opinions

This action was brought in the Circuit Court of Dunklin County to reform a deed of trust executed by W.G. Bray and Ora Bray, his wife, December 15, 1911, to secure the payment of their note to the German-American Bank of DeSoto for the sum of $3500 and interest, due two years after date. The court found the issues for the defendant O'Brien and the plaintiff appealed. Since the appeal the death of J.H. O'Brien, one of the defendants, has been suggested, the appearance of J.L. O'Brien, the administrator of his estate, has been entered, and the cause revived in the name of the administrator.

It is averred in the amended petition that plaintiff bank is a corporation and successor to the German-American Bank; that W.G. Bray owned the southeast fourth of the southwest quarter of Section 32, Township 17 north, Range 8 east, in Dunklin County, Missouri, *Page 580 and that it was mutually intended that Bray and his wife would convey said tract by a deed of trust to secure the payment of their note for $3500 to the German-American Bank, a corporation, but by mutual mistake in making said deed the said tract was erroneously described as being in Range 9 east, a tract of land which W.G. Bray did not own; that at a later date Bray and his wife conveyed the tract first described to John Keating and wife and Bray took back a deed of trust on said tract from Keating and wife to secure the payment of the notes given to Bray for the purchase price, and afterwards Bray assigned said notes given to him by Keating to H.O. Stonum, as collateral security to a note given by Bray to Stonum, which deed of trust was duly filed and recorded in the office of the Recorder of Deeds of Dunklin County, Missouri; that Stonum, as holder of the notes, on January 16, 1922, foreclosed said Keating deed of trust for default in payment of the notes, and J.H. O'Brien became the purchaser at said sale of said tract of land first above described, and that said J.H. O'Brien had full knowledge at the time he purchased at said sale that there was a former deed of trust against the said real estate.

The amended answer of J.H. O'Brien is a general denial, and denies any knowledge or notice of any claim of plaintiff through any deed of trust on said land; that he bought said land in good faith and expended ____ dollars for same; that he has made lasting and valuable improvements thereon without notice of any defect of title, and that Bray and his wife are the plaintiffs in fact in the case and do not come into court with clean hands.

The evidence shows that Bray and his wife executed the deed of trust as averred in the petition to secure the payment of their note to the German-American Bank; that they intended to convey the forty acres of land in Range 8, as averred, which was owned by Bray, but by mutual mistake the tract was erroneously described as being in Range 9, a tract not owned by Bray. The note secured by the deed of trust remained unpaid at the time of the trial.

Bray testified that Donnell was present when the deed of trust was executed and he thought the deed was made to him, as he understood Donnell owned the bank. Bray did not learn of the error in the description of the land in the deed of trust until after the foreclosure of the Keating deed of trust. Mr. Donnell died before the trial.

On May 16, 1916, W.G. Bray and his wife executed a deed of trust, which was duly recorded, conveying 240 acres, including the forty acres in controversy, to secure his notes for $5,165, payable to the Abston-Wynne Cotton Company or order, "subject to a former deed of trust for about $25 per acre, together with other property, *Page 581 due in three years." On April 15, 1917, W.G. Bray and wife conveyed this forty-acre tract in 32-17-8 and the northwest fourth of the northwest quarter of 5-16-8 east to J.A. Keating by warranty deed, "except deeds of trust given to Abston-Wynne Cotton Company, together on other lands and to A.B. Donnell and W.M. Hunter by W.F. Dye." At the same time, Keating and his wife executed a deed of trust conveying said tract, the southeast fourth of the southwest quarter of Section 32, Township 17, Range 8 east, and the other forty-acre tract, to C.O. Bray in trust to secure the payment to W.G. Bray of nine negotiable promissory notes of even date, aggregating $7,536, the first payable November 15, 1917, and the others at yearly intervals thereafter, the last maturing November 15, 1925. This deed provided that "if any one of said notes should not be paid when due, they should all become due and payable, and the trustee, or the sheriff in his absence or refusal to act, might proceed to sell the land, as is usually provided in deeds of trust. Two or three years later, Bray assigned these notes to H.O. Stonum as collateral security for his note to Stonum for $4000. It was under the foreclosure of this Keating deed of trust that J.H. O'Brien, on January 16, 1922, became the purchaser of the forty-acre tract, the southeast quarter of the southwest quarter of Section 32, Township 17, Range 8 east (and the forty acres in 5-16-8), as averred in the amended petition, for the consideration of $2500.

On June 28, 1913, W.G. Bray and his wife executed a deed of trust conveying forty acres in 5-16-8 east, in Dunklin County, to Anna B. Donnell, in trust to secure the payment of Bray's note for $1000 to W.S. Johnson. Prior to April 15, 1917, W.F. Dye executed a deed of trust to W.M. Hunter on the same forty acre tract in 5-16-8. These were recorded and offered in evidence to explain the exception in the warranty in Bray's deed to Keating.

Bray further testified: On the day of the sale I saw O'Brien and Stovall. Stovall (O'Brien's son-in-law) asked about the title to that land and I told him there were other deeds of trust against that land and if they bought that land they would buy trouble, and in a few minutes Mr. O'Brien came to me and asked me about it and I told him about it. To the best of my knowledge that was during the time the sheriff was crying the land off. I told Stovall and O'Brien there was a prior deed of trust against this land. I expect I had told Stovall a dozen times prior to that time about it. Stonum knew there was a second deed of trust against it. I told him; we discussed it time and again. I told Mr. O'Brien while the sheriff was calling the crowd together to cry the sale.

Cross-examination: I mentioned in the deed to Keating a deed of trust to Abston-Wynne and Donnell and I don't recall if there is *Page 582 any more or not. Q. And Hunter? A. Hunter by Dye, I think, and one to Donnell. Q. Had you ever given Donnell a deed of trust on this land or had you ever intended to give him a deed of trust? A. Yes, sir. I thought the deed of trust was given to Donnell. I didn't see the deed of trust until I got a copy of it made. I signed it. Mr. Donnell seemed to represent the bank fully and lots of times the paper was made to old man Donnell and he would assign them to the German-American Bank, but it seems to me Donnell was present when this deed of trust was drawn up and Walter Johnson drew the deed of trust and I signed it and carried it to the house and got my wife to sign it and Johnson called her by telephone and acknowledged it. I can't say that I read the deed of trust over. I indorsed these notes to Mr. Stonum on the back and he has still got them. Donnell is dead. He always collected the interest once a year.

This was all the evidence offered by the plaintiff.

The respondent, O'Brien, read in evidence the trustee's deed under foreclosure of the Keating deed of trust, conveying the forty-acre tract in question and the forty acres in Section 5, dated January 16, 1922, for the consideration of $2500, to J.H. O'Brien. He also read in evidence the deed of trust given by W.G.

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11 S.W.2d 1016, 321 Mo. 576, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 451, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-bank-v-bray-mo-1928.