Crump v. McMurtry

8 Mo. 408
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJanuary 15, 1844
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 8 Mo. 408 (Crump v. McMurtry) 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
Crump v. McMurtry, 8 Mo. 408 (Mo. 1844).

Opinion

Scott, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This was a hill in chancery filed by T. Crump, N. E. Branham, and others, securities in a bond executed by them, together with J. M. McClelland and Compton, to Levi McMurtry. McClelland, the principal in the bond, and Compton, one of the securities, were made defendants together with McMurtry. The facts, as stated in the bill, are as follows: McMurtry sold a tract of land to McClelland for $5,760, to he paid by three'equal instalments of $1,920 each, on the 25th October, 1836, 1837, and 1838. These instalments were secured by the notes of McClelland. Most of the first instalment was paid, and in January, 1838, McMurtry commenced suit by attachment for the recovery of the balance of the first instalment and the second instalment. The attachment was levied on nine horses and other personal property of McClelland. It was afterwards agreed between McMurtry and McClelland, that if McClelland would secure a thousand dollars of the note for the payment of the second instalment then in' suit, with personal security bearing ten per cent, interest, McMurtry would accept the same in lieu of, and as collateral security for, an equal amount of said note, and would release the horses from the attachment. Accordingly, afterwards, on the 4th January, McClelland, as principal, and the complainants, together with the defendant Compton, as securities, executed their bond to McMurtry, due twelve months after date, with ten per cent, interest. This bond was delivered to McMurtry, who released the horses from the attachment. After, in June, 1838, it was agreed between Mc-Murtry and McClelland, that the latter should withdraw his plea in abatement of the attachment, and plead to the merits, and that McMurtry should pay all the costs incurred by the attachment; that, at the ensuing term of the court, McMurtry should have judgment for the balance due on the two notes, after allowing all credits to which McClelland, on settlement, was entitled; that the personal property then subject to the attachment should he sold, and the proceeds applied to the satisfaction of the judgment to be rendered at the ensuing term; that, if the bond for $1,000, of the 4th January, 1838, should be paid, the amount should he credited upon the judgment to be taken, and that the said bond was collateral security for so much of the second instalment; that the judgment to be taken, when satisfied, would operate as an extinguishment of said bond, and that the land sold was bound in equity for the two notes then in suit, but should not be sold under execution upon the j udgment to be obtained in the suit then pending. In pursuance of this agreement at the October term, 1838, judgment was rendered against Mc-Clelland for $1,994 95, besides costs. At the July term, 1839, judgment was obtained on the bond for $1,000, against McClelland and his securities; and at the November term of the same year, a recovery was had on the note for the last instalment. The proceeds of the sale of the personal property taken under the attachment, amounting to $480, was applied in part satisfaction of the judgment of October term, 1838. In April, 1840, McMurtry sued out executions on the three judgments, by virtue of which the land sold by McMurtry to McClelland was levied upon, an,d, at the July term, sold for $2,400. This sum was, by the sheriff, first applied in satisfaction of the judgment of October, 1838, the execution [412]*412on which was returned satisfied, and the residue, amounting to $607, was applied to the judgment on the note for the last instalment. The prayer of the bill is, that the judgment on the bond for $1,000 be declared to be extinguished, and the collection thereof be perpetually enjoined and for general relief.

McMurtry answers, and denies that the bond for $1,000 was given or received as collateral security for a like amount of the note for the second instalment. He denies that he authorized the sheriff to apply the money arising from the sale of the land in the manner it was done, and avers, that he instructed the sheriff to apply it, first, in satisfaction of the judgment on the note for the last instalment, and the residue to the judgment of October of 1838. He further slates, that he instituted proceedings in the Callaway Circuit Court to correct and amend the returns of the sheriff to the several executions, which resulted in an order of the court, setting aside so much of the return on the execution on the judgment of October, 1838, as states that it is returned satisfied; and so much of the return on the execution issued on the judgment rendered in the suit on the note for the last instalment, as applies the residue of the money arising from the sale of the land, is also set aside, leaving the facts of the levy and sale contained in the return on the execution on the judgment of October, 1838, remaining on the same. The other facts charged in the hill are admitted by McMurtry. McClelland, in his answer, admitted the facts charged in the bill, and the same were taken as confessed against Compton.

After the execution of the bond of the 4th January, 1838, for $1,000, by Mc-Clelland and his securities, McClelland took from McMurtry the following receipt, viz.: — “ Received of Mr. J. W. McClelland a bond, with the following securities : T. Crump, N. E. Branham, V. D. Boone, B. G. D. Mosley, and Compton —for-$1,000, which I promise to credit J. W. McClelland’s bond that was due to me in October, 1837. “ Levi McMiiiitey.”

The following is so much of the agreement of June, 1838, referred to in the bill, as is deemed material. If McClelland and his securities will further secure, if McMurtry requires it when due, a note for $1,000, its payment shall be extended at same interest due in January next, for twelve months. If it be paid, it is to be a credit on the amount of the above-named judgment, (the judgment of October, 1838,) as it stands as collateral security to the note sued upon for that amount, and McMurtry is not to sell McClelland’s land in Callaway county, now in Mc-Clelland’s possession, under the execution on the judgment to be given at the next term, this land being now bound in equity for the payment of the notes sued upon. If the judgment to be rendered at the next term be fully paid, it extinguishes the note .mentioned above for the payment of a $1,000.

On the hearing, the court entered a decree dismissing the bill, from which the complainants appealed.

The complainants insist, that by the agreement of June, 1838, between McMurtry and McClelland, the bond for a thousand dollars became collateral security for a like amount of the second instalment, and that although the securities to the bond were not parties to that agreement, yet in equity they are entitled to all advantages secured by it, as fully as though they had executed it. After asserting this prin[413]*413ciple, they maintain, that the judgment of October, 1838, was a lien on the land sold, and therefore entiled to payment in preference to the judgment of November, 1839 ; that the securities in the bond for $1,000 had a right to be substituted, in relation to this lien, in the place of McMurtry, the judgment creditor; and Mc-Murtry, by the sale under the execution, having discharged the land from the lien, thereby released the sureties.

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Bluebook (online)
8 Mo. 408, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crump-v-mcmurtry-mo-1844.