Cockrell v. Taylor

145 S.W.2d 416, 347 Mo. 1, 1940 Mo. LEXIS 468
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 11, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 145 S.W.2d 416 (Cockrell v. Taylor) 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
Cockrell v. Taylor, 145 S.W.2d 416, 347 Mo. 1, 1940 Mo. LEXIS 468 (Mo. 1940).

Opinion

*4 HAYS, P. J.

This is an appeal by the plaintiff from a decree of the Circuit Court of Pemiscot County, Missouri, in favor of the defendants. The suit is one in equity to perfect title to some sixty acres of land and to set aside a sale of said land in foreclosure of a deed of trust which we shall hereafter refer to as the Sanders mortgage. The appellant, who will be spoken of hereafter as plaintiff, claims title under certain conveyances from the grantor in said deed of trust; and respondents Frank B. Tasdor and die Taylor claim title as purchasers from the purchaser at the foreclosure sale. Their co-defendant the National Life Insurance Company, a corporation, is holder of a mortgage from the Taylors. Plaintiff’s petition charges that the foreclosure sale was invalid for several reasons which we shall hereafter separately notice.

By their separate answer the defendants Frank B. Taylor and die Taylor, after admitting their claim to ownership and denying the other allegations of the petition, pleaded that they took title to said land as bona fide purchasers for value and without notice of this plaintiff’s claim. They also pleaded certain facts as an estoppel against the plaintiff and that the issues involved in the present case had been fully adjudicated in a former action in which the plaintiff, although not a formal party to the record, was a real party in interest. Their answer seeks affirmative relief, asking that the title to the *5 land be decreed to be in them; and, in the alternative, that they be subrogated to the rights of the mortgagee under the Sanders mortgage.

The National Life Insurance Company, by its separate answer, admitted its claim of interest in the real estate and pleaded that it too was a bona fide purchaser for value without notice.

To fully understand the contentions of the plaintiff it will be necessary to briefly trace the chain of title prior to the foreclosure of the Sanders mortgage. On and prior to April 1, 1924, one Ola L. Sanders, a sister of the plaintiff, was the fee simple owner of this land. On the last mentioned day she executed and delivered the deed of trust, the foreclosure of which is here in question, to the Liberty Central Trust Company of St. Louis, trustee for the Liberty Central Joint Stock Land Bank. The Trust Company was a Missouri corporation and the Land Bank had its principal office and place of business in St. Louis. In May, 1924, Ola L. Sanders conveyed her equity by general warranty deed to her sister, the plaintiff, subject to the above mentioned deed of trust. In September, 1925, the Liberty Central Joint Stock Land Bank executed, delivered and placed of record a deed of assignment assigning the Sanders deed of trust to the Kansas City Joint Stock Land Bank. In February, 1928, the Federal Farm Loan Board appointed II. M. Langworthy as receiver for the Kansas City Joint Stock Land Bank to liquidate the same. In July, 1931, Langworthv executed, acknowledged, delivered and caused to be recorded a deed of assignment assigning the Sanders mortgage and the note secured thereby to the Phoenix Joint Stock Land Bank. Said assignment states among other things that it was authorized by order of the Federal Farm Loan Board, but the order itself is not put in evidence.

In September, 1931, the Phoenix Bank, by a duly signed and acknowledged instrument, executed by its vice president, assigned said note and deed of trust to the Farm Mortgage Holding Company.

Meanwhile in August, 1928, the sheriff of Pemiscot County executed a deed under general execution purporting to convey the equity theretofore owned by the plaintiff in said land to her sister Ola L. Sanders. Neither the judgment nor execution are shown in the record. On the following day Ola L. Sanders executed a quitclaim deed back to her sister. This quitclaim deed was not recorded until 1936. Mrs. Sanders testified that it was not delivered to the plaintiff until about the time it was recorded, but plaintiff says it Avas delivered to her shortly after its execution.

The Liberty Central Trust Company, named as trustee in the Sanders mortgage, merged and consolidated AA'ith the First National Bank of St. Louis, after AAdiich it ceased to operate as a trustee in any matters. In furtherance of this merger agreement the Trust Company on April 3, 1929, resigned in wilting as trustee under this deed of trust.

*6 The situation in March, 1932, at the time when the steps preliminary to foreclosure were taken, was as above outlined. To further understand the foreclosure procedure, however, certain of the recitals in the Sanders deed of trust must be noted. The mortgage provided that the mortgagor should pay all taxes and that, ‘ ‘ It shall be the privilege of said party of the third part (mortgagee) and assigns in case of default on the part of said party of first part ... to promptly pay all taxes . . . and in the event the said party of the third part . . . shall expend any monej'- to protect the title or possession of said premises, or for such taxes . . . then all such money so expended . . . shall be a new and additional principal sum of money secured by this instrument, and shall be payable on demand, and may be collected with interest thereon at the rate of 8% per annum, from the time of so expending the same.” The mortgage first provided that if any installment on the note or any part thereof should not be paid when due or if general or special taxes were not promptly paid “or if default be made in the due fulfillment of said covenants and agreements or any of them,” the deed of trust might be foreclosed through trustee’s sale. The provisions in regard to trustee’s sale were that the party of the second part, whether acting in person or by attorney in fact, appointed by instrument in writing, or, in ease of death or absence in the county or other disability, or refusal to act, its successors in trust was to proceed to sell the property.

Prior to March, 1932, state, county and drainage district taxes for several years had not been paid bjr either the plaintiff or Mrs. Sanders. These taxes were paid by Langworthy during the time he held the deed of trust.

On behalf of the defendants a Mr. P. E. Bailey testified that in March, 1932, he filed an affidavit to the effect that the trust eompan3r had resigned as trustee in the Circuit Court of Pemiscot County. The original affidavit is missing from the files, but Mr. Bailey certified that what he said was an exact copy thereof and the court received the same in evidence. This affidavit was made by Edward C. Aldwell, vice president of the Farm Mortgage Holding Company, on whose behalf he executed it. It sets out that the Liberty Central Joint Land Bank was the beneficiary named in the Sanders mortgage; that it had assigned said deed of trust and the note secured thereby to the Kansas City Joint Stock Land Bank. It sets out the appointment of Langworthy as receiver and his assignment ‘‘to the Farm Mortgage Holding Company,” and states that the latter compañía was the legal holder of the note and deed of trust. It recounts the merger of the Trust Company with the First National Bank and the fact that the Trust Company was no longer qualified to act as trustee, and had resigned and that the deed of trust contained no specific provisions for the appointment of a substitute trustee. The formal *7

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Bluebook (online)
145 S.W.2d 416, 347 Mo. 1, 1940 Mo. LEXIS 468, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cockrell-v-taylor-mo-1940.