Becht v. Johnson

62 S.W.2d 847, 333 Mo. 420, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 638
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedAugust 3, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 62 S.W.2d 847 (Becht v. Johnson) 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
Becht v. Johnson, 62 S.W.2d 847, 333 Mo. 420, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 638 (Mo. 1933).

Opinion

FRANK, P. J.

Action by plaintiff, appellant here, to determine title and to recover possession of certain real estate. The petition is in two counts, the first to determine title and the second in ejectment. The answer to the first count admits that defendants claim title and further alleges that defendants are and were the owners of and in possession of the property, and prays the court to determine and adjudicate the title. The answer to the second count was a *423 general denial. The finding and judgment was against the plaintiff and in favor of defendants on both counts of the petition, and was in favor of defendants and against plaintiff on the affirmative relief prayed for in defendants’ answer. Plaintiff appealed.

Mrs. M. L. Johnson acquired title to the property in question by warranty deed from defendants on March 15, 1920, at which time she gave a mortgage back to Roberta M. Johnson, one of the defendants, to secure the payment of $2,500, which represented the full purchase price of the land. On May 5, 1922, this deed of trust was released for the purpose of permitting the then owner, Mrs. M. L. Johnson, to borrow $2,000 from the Aladdin Home Loan and Investment Company and secure same by a first deed of trust on the property, all of which was done on said May 5, 1922. On the sanie day the owner, Mrs. M. L. Johnson, gave Roberta M. Johnson a second deed of trust on the property to secure the payment of two notes aggregating $1,174.02 which amount represented the balance due on the original purchase price of $2,500 with interest, less the $2,000 borrowed from the Aladdin Home Loan and Investment Company. On August 14, 1923, Mrs. M. L. Johnson, the owner, conveyed the property to Roberta M. Johnson for a stated consideration of $1,275, no mention being made of the two deeds of trust on the property.

Plaintiff’s claim of title is based upon the deed of trust given by Mrs. M. L. Johnson to the Aladdin Home Loan and Investment Company on May 5, 1922, and the trustee’s deed given to him as purchaser of said property at a foreclosure sale had under said deed of trust on November 6, 1928.

Defendants’ claim of title is based on a sheriff’s deed dated December 19, 1924, conveying said property to defendants as purchasers thereof at an execution sale under judgments in attachment suits brought by Rose Torin and Marietta Henly against Roberta M. Johnson, the trustees of the Aladdin Home Loan and Investment Company, the trustees of- the Home and Savings 'Organization, Mrs. M. L. Johnson, the Hawkins Mortgage Company, Morton S. Hawkins and Clyde Farrow, trustee in the deed of trust. The attachment suits were brought prior to the time Mrs. M. L. Johnson conveyed the property to Roberta M. Johnson. The plaintiffs in the attachment suits sought to recover payments on stock bought by them from the Aladdin Home' Loan and Investment Company on the ground that the sale of such stock was part of a scheme to defraud. Attachment ■writs were issued in aid of said suits. Roberta M. Johnson, the owner of the property was summoned as garnishee. She answered admitting that she owed $1,418.85 on the $2,000 note given to the Aladdin Home Loan and Investment Company and secured by a deed of trust on the property.

When the cause came on for hearing, it appearing that defendant, M. L. Johnson, the maker of the. $2,000 note, had sold the property *424 to Roberta M. Johnson, garnishee, the cause was dismissed as to her. The attachment was then sustained and judgment rendered on the merits against the other defendants above named and against the garnishee. Execution issued on this judgment and the property was sold thereunder to Roberta M. Johnson on December 19, 1924.

■ The Aladdin Home Loan and Investment Company made the $2,000 loan on the property and was the original owner of the note. It appears from the record that after making the loan on May 5, 1922, the Aladdin Company merged with the Security Home and Savings Organization. on November 24, 1922, and the latter company became the consolidated organization, and acquired the assets of the Aladdin Home Loan and investment Company by reason of said merger. ■Thereafter on May 4, 1923, the Commissioner of Finance of the State of Missouri was appointed receiver for the Security Home and Savings Organization.

Plaintiff contends that when the two companies merged, the title to the $2,000 note passed to the Security Home and Savings Organization by reason of the merger, and when a receiver was appointed for said organization, possession and control of the note passed to the receiver. Further contention is made that the receiver was a necessary party to the attachment suits, and, not having been made a party thereto, the judgment therein did not affect or destroy the lien of the deed of trust on the property securing the payment of the .$2,000 note.

On the other hand, defendants contend there was substantial evidence tending to show that at the time of the institution of the attachment suits, and at the time judgments were rendered therein, the $2,000 note and deed of trust securing it were in possession of and owned by the Hawkins Mortgage Company, a defendant in the attachment suits.

There is no direct evidence in the record that the Aladdin Home Loan and Investment Company, the original owner of the $2,000 note, owned it at the time the two companies merged, or at any time thereafter, or that title to the note passed to the Security Home and Savings Organization by reason of the merger. While original ownership of the note by the Aladdin Company would warrant an inference that it continued to own the note until the two companies merged, evidence tending to show the contrary would make that question an issue of fact to be determined by the trier of the facts.

Plaintiff’s attorney was a witness in the ease. He testified that one Morton S. Hawkins was the controlling owner of the Security Home and Savings Institution, and was also the head of the Hawkins Mortgage Company. On direct examination this witness further testified that in May, 1923, prior to the time the attachment suits were filed, the officers of the Security Home and Savings Organization *425 learned of the contemplated suits, and removed all of the assets of the company to Portland, Indiana; that the removal of the assets was engineered by Morton S. Hawkins; that the note and deed of trust were in the .possession of Hawkins in Indiana from May, 1923, until May, 1924. ■ '

In this connection, it is well to state that there was no direct evidence that the note was among the assets which were removed to Indiana. . . - ■

The sole question presented by plaintiff in varying, forms is that the judgment of the trial court was erroneous..because the. receiver of the Security Home and Savings Organization was not made a party to the attachment suits. The receiver was not a necessary party to these suits unless the Security Home and Savings Organ-, ization owned the note and deed of trust at the times, in. question. The burden was on the plaintiff to prove that fact. As. we read the record, there was substantial evidence tending to prove that the Security Home and Savings Organization never acquired title to the . note. It is true that the Aladdin Home Loan and Investment Company made the $2,000 loan, and was, therefore,, the original owner of the note.

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133 S.W.2d 381 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1939)

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Bluebook (online)
62 S.W.2d 847, 333 Mo. 420, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 638, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/becht-v-johnson-mo-1933.