Bailey v. Winn

101 Mo. 649
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 15, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 101 Mo. 649 (Bailey v. Winn) 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
Bailey v. Winn, 101 Mo. 649 (Mo. 1890).

Opinion

Black, J.

This is ejectment for one hundred and twenty acres of land, the same being a part of school section 16, in township 59, range 16, in Macon county.

The defendants, Winn and Epperson, are the tenants of James D. Sparrow, who is the curator of the estates of David E. and Thomas M. Edwards, minor heirs of Edward Edwards, deceased. Sparrow was made a defendant on his own motion, and defends for his wards, though they are not made defendants. The answer of Sparrow sets up, and he made full proof of, the following facts: On November 2, 1847, the sheriff of Macon county, pursuant to an order of the county court, sold one of the three forty-acre tracts to Blan, who paid the purchase price; and in October, 1850, the county court ordered the clerk to certify the fact of payment to the register of lands to' the end that a patent should be issued to Blan. He conveyed to Wil-Bon, who purchased the other two forty-acre tracts in 1850, under an order of sale made by the county court. In 1853, Wilson conveyed the one hundred and twenty acres to Trewitt, who assumed and paid the purchase price of the eighty acres, agreed to be paid by Wilson. In 1858, Trewitt conveyed to Estes, and he conveyed to Agee in 1865, and the latter conveyed to Edward Edwards by a deed dated June 18, 1870. Edward [655]*655Edwards died in possession in 1877, leaving a widow and the two minor children before named. „

Edward Edwards and those under whom he claimed had been in possession since 1850, but no patent was ever issued by the state to the above-named purchasers or their grantees. By a deed dated and recorded on April 3, 1880, the widow of Edward Edwards conveyed her interest to the wards of defendant Sparrow.

1. To defeat this equitable title in the minor heirs of Edward Edwards, the plaintiff relies upon three titles. The first is a patent from the state to Edward A. Edwards, dated January 25, 1884, and a deed from him to the plaintiff Bailey, dated in the following February. The patent is based upon a sale of the school lands, said to have been made in January, 1884, and Edward A. Edwards became the purchaser at $1.35 per acre. The land had been sold many years before to Blan and Wilson, and the purchase price paid into the township school fund, and it is difficult to account for this last sale on any other theory than this, that it was sold through the manipulations of Edward A. Edwards. Be that as it may, Edward A. Edwards had previously sued Sparrow in ejectment for this land, and failed in his suit. He had full knowledge of the equitable title of Edward Edwards and his heirs. Conceding that Edward A. Edwards acquired the legal title by the patent, still he acquired it with actual notice and knowledge of the equitable title in the heirs of Edward Edwards. He is but a trustee of the legal title, and holds it for the benefit of the equitable title, and, unless he has acquired the equitable title, the defendants should prevail in this suit. Sensenderfer v. Kemp, 83 Mo. 581; Swisher v. Sensenderfer, 84 Mo. 104.

As to the plaintiff Bailey, little need be said. Edward A. Edwards testified that there was no understanding between him and Bailey, whereby the latter is to deed back the land in case the plaintiff should [656]*656succeed in this suit; but he says Bailey paid nothing for the land, and, if he fails in this suit, is to pay nothing. It is olear that Bailey is prosecuting this suit for Edward A. Edwards and occupies no better position than would Edwards, if he were the plaintiff.

2. The second alleged title of the plaintiff is this: Edward Edwards and his wife, by their mortgage deed, dated January 11, 1871, conveyed the one hundred and twenty acres of land to David W. Williams, to secure a note of the same date, executed by Edwards and payable to Williams for six hundred and seventy dollars, due in two years. David W. Williams acknowledged satisfaction in full on the margin of the record, under date of August 13, 1879. Plaintiff, however, produced in evidence the note with two assignments indorsed thereon, one from Williams to Edward A. Edwards, and the other from him to plaintiffs. Edward A. Edwards testified that he purchased this note from Williams on August 9, 1879, and had it assigned to himself on that day, and that the marginal satisfaction was made without his knowledge or consent, and after he had become the owner of the note. He says he had previously contracted for the note, had made several payments, and that the payment of $206.20, on August 9, was the last one. Concede that Edward A. Edwards became the owner of the note by assignment, and that he assigned it to plaintiff, still we do not see how the plaintiff can recover in this action of ejectment, on the mortgage. There is no doubt but a mortgagee, after condition broken, may recover in ejectment against the mortgagor and those claiming under him. Sutton v. Mason, 38 Mo. 120 ; Johnson v. Houston, 47 Mo. 230. The assignment of the debt carries the security, so that the assignee may foreclose the mortgage. But the mortgagee may recover in ejectment, because, after condition broken, he is in law regarded as the owner of the estate. The legal title vests in him for the protection of the debt, but for no other purpose. Before the [657]*657assignee of the debt' can recover in ejectment, he must show &■ transfer of this legal estate to himself. We have held that the beneficiary in a deed of trust to secure the payment of a debt cánnot maintain ejectment, after condition broken. Siemers v. Schrader, 88 Mo. 20. So in case of an ordinary mortgage, the mere assignment of the debt does not vest the title of the mortgagee to the land in the assignee. Jones on Mortgages [4 Ed.] sec. 818. In the present case, there was no assignment of the mortgage or transfer of the estate by the mortgagee, and it follows from what has been said that plaintiff cannot recover on the mortgage, even if he is the owner and holder of the note.

3. For a third title, the plaintiff put in evidence a sheriff’s deed to Edward A. Edwards, dated July 15, 1875. This deed was made- by virtue of a sale under a special execution issued upon a judgment of the Macon county court of common pleas in favor of one David W. Edwards, and against Edward Edwards, rendered on April 28, 1875. By the second section of the act establishing that court (Acts, 1874, p. 256), it is provided: “Said court * * * shall have power and jurisdiction within said county as follows : First, concurrent original jurisdiction in all civil actions with the circuit court, except where the title ta real estate shall be involved.” The point is made that the common-pleas court had no jurisdiction of the suit, because it involved the title to real estate, and that the deed and decree upon which it is based are void. The pleadings in that case are not in evidence; but, from the decree, it appears the suit was one of David W„ Edwards against Edward Edwards. The findings made by the court disclose the following facts: These two persons purchased the one hundred and twenty acres of land from Andrew Agee in 1869, at the agreed price of sixteen hundred dollars. They paid, at the time of the purchase, one thousand dollars, of which amount David paid four hundred [658]*658dollars, and Edward six hundred dollars. David gave. Agee his note for the balance of the purchase price, namely, six hundred dollars, and Agee executed to David a bond for deed. . David turned this title bond over to Edward, and the latter paid the debt due to Agee, and received a deed.

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Bluebook (online)
101 Mo. 649, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bailey-v-winn-mo-1890.