Hayden v. Cornelius, Lamme & Payne

12 Mo. 321
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJanuary 15, 1849
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 12 Mo. 321 (Hayden v. Cornelius, Lamme & Payne) 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
Hayden v. Cornelius, Lamme & Payne, 12 Mo. 321 (Mo. 1849).

Opinion

Napton, judge,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was a bill in chancery. The facts which may be assumed from the bill, answer and exhibits, were these :

About the 19th Nov., 1841, Cornelius, being on the eve of insolvency, and willing to secure certain persons who were his securities for large amounts, executed two conveyances to these securities for property which they consented to estimate at $10, 500. The first conveyance was made to Payne, Wood, Lamme, J. W. Harris. C. R. Harris, Todd and Murrill, and embraced several tracts of land and town lots. The consideration of this deed was $7,500, and the deed contained the words grant, bargain and sell, and also a clause of general warranty. The second deed transferred some slaves, judgments, &c., for $3,000, secured to he paid by the grantees, who were the same persons in the first deed named. On the same day a third deed was executed by the grantees in the first two deeds to Payne and Lamme, as trustees to sell the property conveyed by the first deeds and appropriate rateably to the extinguishment of certain debts of Cornelius, for which the grantees were already responsible. This deed recited that in consideration of the sale by Cornelius, Payne, one of the grantees, had executed his obligation to pay $1,180 20 on a certain bond in which he was security for Cornelius, and Payne, Woods & Co., had executed their obligation to pay $1,299 on another bond in which they [323]*323were securities, and so on enumerating all the different obligations which the securities who were grantees had given to extinguish a certain portion of Cornelius’ liabilities. Among these it was recited that Lamme and Payne as trustees had executed their obligation to pay H. Cave $502 60 on a bond in which Joel H. Hayden stood securities In consideration of these obligations, Woods and wife, C. R. Harris and wife, J. W. Harris, Murrill and wife and Todd and wife; conveyed the property to Lamme and Payne in trust to pay off the several sums thus enumerated to be due from Cornelius to his creditors.

The obligation upon which the present suit is based, is the. one executed by Lamme and Payne to pay off a portion of Cornelius’ note to Cave, on which the complainant Hayden, was security. This obligation is as follows :

Know all men by these presents, that for and in consideration of the sale and conveyance of certain real and personal estate, by W. Cornelius and wife to us and others, we hereby bind ourselves and heirs, executors, &c., to pay the sum of five hundred and two dollars and sixty cents, on a certain bond given and executed by said W. Cornelius and Joel H. Hayden security to Henry Cave, and now being in suit in the Boone circuit court, and to save said Cornelius from the payment of said amount on said note and all interest arising thereon from this date, 19th Nov., 1841.

DAVID S. LAMME, trustee,

MOSES U. PAYNE, trustee.”

Hayden, the complainant, had been compelled to pay this note to Cave—Cornelius was insolvent and a non-resident—and the object of the bill was to compel Lamme and Payne to pay the said sum of $502-60 and interest according to the tenor of this obligation, which Hayden, as security, considered himself entitled to the benefit of, in equity.

The answer of the defendants placed their defence upon two grounds. They assert that the complainant, although not present at the first meetings of the securities, was yet advised of the arrangements which had been agreed upon before they were consummated, and that he approved of and sanctioned them—that he fully understood that he was to share the fate of the other securities, and if the property conveyed to the trustees, did not bring the full sum of $10,500, then the securities were to lose rateably. They alleged that the deed of trust to Lamme and Payne was made as well for Hayden’s benefit as for the benefit of [324]*324the other securities therein named, and that they (Lamme and Payne) acted for Hayden in signing the obligation they gave to Cornelius to pay off $502 60 on the Cave note. They declare that they called upon the complainant to give them some written acknowledgment of the transaction, but he refused to do so, and insisted on their responsibility to him for the full amount of $502 60.

The answer and evidence further showed that the property conveyed by Cornelius was encumbered with judgments and mechanics’ liens to the amount of two or three thousand dollars, which encumbrances the trustees were compelled to remove, in consequence of which the trustees did not realize more than three-fourths of the nominal value of the property. The trustees therefore insisted in their answer that Hayden must share the fate of the other securities under the deed of trust, and that they were not bound to pay him the whole amount of the $502 60 at the expense of the other securities, but only his rateable portion thereof.

Another position taken in their answer was, that if Hayden repudiated the trust deed, and denied his obligation to share the fate of the other securities, he then stood only in the place of Cornelius, and as Cornelius warranted the title of the property conveyed in his deed, against incumbrances, and incumbrances existed which they were compelled to remove, Cornelius could not compel the fulfilment of their contract in a court of equity. Cornelius being insolvent and a non-resident, was not entitled, as they insisted, to force the payment of the whole amount of the $502 60, which they had undertaken to pay, without first making good the damages which they had sustained by reason of his breach of warranty. A court of equity would not turn them round to their action at law upon the warranty, when it was obvious from the fact of his insolvency and non-residence, that such action would be unavailing. And the trustees insisted that Hayden,the complainant, if he renounces the benefit or burthens of the trust understood between the securities, can occupy no other or better ground than Cornelius himself.

To sustain their position that Hayden actually consented to the disposition of Cornelius’ property as understood by the other securities, the defendants introduced two witnesses, Woods and Todd, each of whom were grantees in the deeds from Cornelius, and parties to the trust deed made to Lamme and Payne. These witnesses were objected to, and exceptions taken to their testimony.

Woods testified that he was applied to by Hayden to know the partic[325]*325ulars of the deeds made by Cornelius to his creditors and of the arrangement about the property—that after inquiring of Payne and Harris, two of the parties, he told Haden the contents of the deeds,, whereupon Haden stated that all he wanted was to fare as the other creditors did, who signed the deed. Witness informed Hayden that the property was to be divided pro rata among the securities, at which Hayden expressed himself well satisfied. Witness did not know of Hayden’s being present at any of the meetings, or at the execution of any of the deeds.

Todd stated that he was present at two meetings of the securities, one in the night time at the counting house of Cornelius, and the other next morning—both previous to the execution of the deeds. Hayden was present at the last meeting, and had a good deal of conversation with some of the other securities, but witness did not recollect any thing that was said.

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Related

Fink v. Hey
42 Mo. App. 295 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1890)

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Bluebook (online)
12 Mo. 321, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hayden-v-cornelius-lamme-payne-mo-1849.