Carson v. Lee

219 S.W. 629, 281 Mo. 166, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 7
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 2, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 219 S.W. 629 (Carson v. Lee) 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
Carson v. Lee, 219 S.W. 629, 281 Mo. 166, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 7 (Mo. 1920).

Opinion

GOODE, J.

Plaintiffs, who are the children and only heirs of Addie Howlett and Sterling Price Howlett, both deceased, filed this action to obtain a decree that they be allowedi to reedeem a parcel of land, consisting of seventy acres, from the operation of an alleged mortgage made by tbeir parents. The instrument said to be a mortgage, executed and recorded July 6, 1903, was to Luke Howlett, a. brother of said Price, and was in form a warranty deed, except that it contained this paragraph:

“And said Luke Howlett agrees that said Price and Addie Howlett may at any time within ten years redeem said land and he will upon payment to him of said sum of $4,000 reconvey to them or either of them the said land without payment of any interest. Subject to the. easement of public and railroads, if any, over said land. Purchaser assumes payment of all taxes falling due after the year 1903.”

*171 When that conveyance'was made the title to the land was in Mrs. Addie Howlett, subject to a deed of trust given by Addie and S. P. Howlett, her husband, October 17,1901, to E. J. Deal, trustee, to secure the payment of a note >for eight hundred dollars, due in three years, to J. J. Russell, which incumbrance the deed to Luke Howlett bound the latter to pay, as later he did. Price Howlett had conveyed the land to Addie in consideration of love and effection, September 18, 1805, or eight years before the conveyance to Luke. He was in embarrassed circumstances when the latter conveyance was made by himself and wife; creditors were pressing him and judgments had been rendered against him. Neither of the' grantors owed Luke anything at the date of the deed, but he was surety for Price on four notes to three banks, the notes ranging in amount from two hundred to sixty dollars, Luke testified. These notes and other debts of Price, to the amount of $3500, were paid by Luke, and as a balance of $440 of the purchase price of $4000 remained, this was paid to Addie and Price Howlett, the grantors. Mrs. Addie Howlett died March 30, 1006, and after-wards, on December 30, 1907, Luke Howlett and his wife Mable and S. Price Howlett sold and conveyed the land in question to defendant, Charles L. Lee, for five thousand dollars, of which sum Luke HoWlett received four thousand dollars and Price one thousand. By. the advice of his attorney, Lee exacted from the grantors a bond dated January 10, ISO'S, with sureties, in the sum of two thousand dollars, wherein the aforesaid deed by Addie and Price Howlett to Luke Howlett was referred to, with the statement that in the deed “there was" given said Addie Howlett and Si. P. Howlett the right to redeem said land within ten years from the date of said deed.”1 The condition of the bond was this:

“Now if the heirs of said Addie Howlett, deceased, or any one of them, shall have the right to redeem said land, as it is claimed they have, and do redeem said land, then if in that event said Luke Howlett and S. P. Howlett shall pay the said Charles Lee all the sums paid *172 by him for said land and the feasonajble value of all permanent improvements put on said lands by him and hold him safe and harmless from any and all loss on purchase price and permanent improvements biy reason of said property being redeemed and taken from him, than this obligation to be void, otherwise to remain in full force and effect.

“It being fully understood and agreed that if the said land be redeemed the sum paid by the parties redeeming it shall be applied to paying said Lee and protecting him from loss on account of said purchase and redemption. ’ ’

Price Howlett died December 24, 1911. The petition states facts to show the deed in question was executed as a mortgage to secure Luke Howlett in the payment of debts Price owed him, as surety for Price, and in the reimbursement of judgments and other debts of Price he (Luke) agreed to pay out of the consideration of four thousand dollars mentioned in the deed; avers defendant purchased with actual notice of the right and intention of plaintiffs to redeem the land; that they had offered to pay defendant four thousand dollars, with interest at six per cent from July 6, 1913; when, it is averred, interest began to run on the instrument, concluding* with a prayer to be allowed to redeem and for an accounting to ascertain the amount due to defendant, taking into consideration the rents and profits he had received while the land had been in his possession. The answer of defendant admitted the truth of some of the statements of the petition and denied others, to-wit: that Addie and Price Howlett owed any debts to Luke when they conveyed to him; that he was surety for Price; that there were judgment liens on the land at the date of said conveyance.; that defendant had knowledge or information sufficient to form a belief concerning* anyi agreement which might have been made between Addie and Price and Luke concerning the land, other than the agreement contained in the deed; averred Addie died without exercising the right given her by the deed to redeem, referred *173 to the conveyance to defendant, after Addle’s death, by Luke Howlett and wife and Price for five thousand dollars, and said one thousand dollars of the sum “was paid to the said S. Price Howlett as and for the equity of redemption which Addie Howlett and S. Price Howlett, or either of them, had reserved in the conveyance to said Luke Howlett.”

The answer sets up that Luke Howlett took possession of the land as soon as it was conveyed to him, paid all the taxes on it and exercised rights of ownership over it until he conveyed it to defendant, and that since then the defendant “has been in the open, notorious, continuous, hostile and adverse possession,” claiming to be owner, and since July 6,1913, has continued in the like possession. Other matters are stated, but they are 'propositions of law rather than facts, as are some of the things averred in the reply of plaintiffs, among them a denial that defendant’s possession was adverse to plaintiffs and an averment that it was simply the possession of a mortgagee before foreclosure.

The allegations are made in the replication that this action was begun within less than twenty-four years after the cause of action (i. e. the right to redeem) descended to plaintiffs; that when it descended both plaintiffs were under twenty years of age and the action was ¡filed before Norman Howlett was twenty-one, and within three years after the disability of G-eraldine Howlett Carson was remioved. She was twenty-three years old February 10, 1916, and Norman was twenty December 12, 1916, or throe months after the petition was filed on September 8, 1916. The attorney who drew the deed1 asserted to be a mortgage, was Hon. J. J. Bussell, and several items of his testimony touch upon the intention of the parties:

“I remember in an indefinite way that they said Price might want to get the place back and Luke had agreed that if he wanted to redeem the place he could do so at any time within, ten years, and the deed was written to express their intentions the best I knew how to express them at the time. To my best recollection the *174 . whole agreement was to the effect as expressed in the deed. ...

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Bluebook (online)
219 S.W. 629, 281 Mo. 166, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carson-v-lee-mo-1920.