Board of Trustees of Westminster College v. Fry

91 S.W. 472, 192 Mo. 552
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 22, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 91 S.W. 472 (Board of Trustees of Westminster College v. Fry) 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
Board of Trustees of Westminster College v. Fry, 91 S.W. 472, 192 Mo. 552 (Mo. 1905).

Opinion

GANTT, J.

This is an action of ejectment, in which both parties claim title to the land in controversy-under John C. Peirsol.

The plaintiff purchased the land at a sale under a decree of the circuit court of Morgan county, rendered in obedience to the mandate of this court in the case of Westminster College v. Peirsol, 161 Mo. 270, foreclosing a mortgage executed on the first day of April, 1893, by said Peirsol and wife.

Ouster is laid as of October 16, 1901. Edward J. Fry was originally the only defendant. On December 9, 1901, Fry filed his answer admitting that he was in possession of said lands as tenant of Peter George Woods and denied the other allegations of the petition. Upon the same day, by consent, Woods was made a party defendant and filed his answer. Randolph R. Fry was in possession of the land at the time the above-mentioned foreclosure suit was begun and was made a desaid Peirsol, dated on the first day of February, 1893. It fendant in said action. He defended on the ground that he had a prior right to the land under a contract with appeared, however, in said suit, that the deed made to him by Peirsol recited upon its face that it was subject to the deed of trust under which plaintiff in this suit purchased the land, and while he denied that he had ever accepted this deed, it was shown that he had executed a deed of trust upon the land in which he stated that said deed of trust was subject to the lien of the deed of trust executed by Peirsol on the first day of April, 1893, and he made payments on the debt secured by the latter instrument. The facts developed in the foreclosure suit are fully set out in the opinion of this court in Westminster College v. Peirsol, 161 Mo. 270.

The circuit court heard the suit to foreclose the Peirsol mortgage on the 17th of December, 1897, and took the case under advisement until the 21st of April, 1898, at which time judgment was entered for the de[558]*558fendants. The Peirsol mortgage of April 1, 1893, was not set aside or vacated by this judgment, nor was there any affirmative relief granted to said Randolph R. Fry. There is nothing in the judgment declaring that his. right to the land was superior to the Peirsol mortgage under which plaintiff claims, nor does it in any way attempt to interfere with the lien of said mortgage. It simply recites that the court found the issues for the defendants, “and against the petition of the plaintiff,” and ordered that plaintiff take nothing by its writ and that defendants recover their costs, etc. That judgment, as above stated, was rendered April 21, 1898. The plaintiff filed a motion for new trial which was overruled and the court by an order of record gave plaintiff leave to file its bill of exceptions on or before the 10th of August, 1898. The hill of exceptions was filed on the 21st of June, and on the 29th of June, 1898, a writ of error was sued out from this court, returnable to the October term, 1898, and notice of its issuance was served upon the defendants on the following day. On the 22nd day of June, 1898, Randolph R. Fry and wife executed to Joel E. Hubbard, trustee, their deed of trust on the lands in suit to- secure William Forman the payment of Randolph Fry’s promissory note to said' Forman for $1,100 payable two years thereafter. This-deed of trust was filed for record June 22,1898, at 4:32 o’clock p. m. Randolph Fry and wife also executed a deed of trust on the same lands to James McNair, trustee, to secure the payment of Fry’s several promissory notes payable to the Bank of Versailles, which aggregated the sum of $6,143.40. This deed of trust, which was subject to Forman’s deed of trust, was filed for record on the same day at 4:35 o’clock, p. m. On March 26, 1901, this court rendered its judgment in the case of Westminster College v. Peirsol, reversing the judgment of the Morgan Circuit Court, and remanded the cause with directions to the Morgan Circuit Court to enter up a decree in favor of the plaintiff therein, foreclosing [559]*559the equity of the redemption of the mortgagors and those claiming under them in the land in question. On April 20, 1901, the circuit court of Morgan county in pursuance of said mandate rendered judgment for Westminster College for the sum of $12,047.65, and de-, creed that said deed of trust he foreclosed and the equity of redemption of John C. Peirsol and his wife, Randolph Fly and W. B. A. McNutt, defendants therein, should he foreclosed and said lands sold by the sheriff of Morgan county, Missouri, to satisfy said indebtedness, together with the interest thereon from the date of judgment, and with judgment over against said Peirsol for any remaining deficit. On July 22, 1901, the lands in controversy were sold under a deed of trust in favor of William Forman, and Forman became the purchaser and received the deed of the acting trustee. This deed was filed for record July 22,1901, at five o ’clock p. m. On July 22, 1901, the same land was also sold under the deed of trust to the Bank of Versailles, and Peter George Woods became the purchaser and received the deed of the trustee to said lands. This deed was filed for record August 14,1901. On August 8,1901, William Forman and wife quitclaimed said lands to Peter George Woods, which deed was recorded August 14, 1901. The note for $1,100 given by Fry to Forman was for Mr. Forman’s fee in the first foreclosure suit, and $100 for other services. Prior to the acceptance of this note and deed of trust to secure the same, Mr. Forman had examined and approved the bill of exceptions filed on the day previous in the foreclosure suit and knew that said bill had been filed. The deed of trust to the bank of date June 22, 1898, was for past indebtedness of Fry to the bank. No new consideration was received by Fry at the time. These notes were subsequently assigned by the bank to the defendant Peter George Woods, but he was notified before this assignment that the writ of error had been issued by this court in the foreclosure suit. The sales under both of these deeds [560]*560of trust were made after the decision of this court reversing the judgment of the Morgan Circuit Court in the foreclosure suit above mentioned and the notice of the proceedings was given by plaintiff’s attorney at the sale.

The defense in this case stands upon the proposition that as the deed of trust for Mr. Forman’s fee and the other deed of trust as security for the pre-existing indebtedness of Fry to the Bank of Versailles were executed on the 22nd of June, 1898, and the writ of error was not sued out in the action to foreclose the Peirsol mortgage until the 29th of June, 1898, the purchaser under such deeds of trust obtained a better title than the plaintiff acquired by this purchase at the sale under the decree foreclosing said Peirsol’s mortgage, notwithstanding there was no new consideration for the bank’s deed of trust, and the other was to the defendants’ attorney for his fee in the foreclosure suit, and both of them were executed before the time for filing the bill of exceptions had expired, and although the circuit court in the first judgment in the foreclosure suit did not undertake to cancel or affect the lien of the Peirsol mortgage, but simply entered a judgment for the defendant) in that action. The circuit court gave judgment for the plaintiff for the possession of the land in suit and for rents and profits since its purchase, and rendered judgment accordingly. The case is here on appeal by the defendants from this judgment.

I. The mortgage under which plaintiff purchased was executed by John C. Peirsol and wife on the first day of April, 1893, and was duly filed for record in the office of the recorder of Morgan county, Missouri, May 10,1893.

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Bluebook (online)
91 S.W. 472, 192 Mo. 552, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-trustees-of-westminster-college-v-fry-mo-1905.