Hoffman v. Hogan

137 S.W.2d 441, 345 Mo. 903, 1940 Mo. LEXIS 352
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 21, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 137 S.W.2d 441 (Hoffman v. Hogan) 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
Hoffman v. Hogan, 137 S.W.2d 441, 345 Mo. 903, 1940 Mo. LEXIS 352 (Mo. 1940).

Opinions

This suit was filed by plaintiff Hoffman to quiet title to a tract of land containing 394.28 acres lying in Pemiscot County, Missouri. Defendants, Hogan and Monarch Finance Corporation, filed separate answers wherein they asked the court to set aside certain deeds under which plaintiff claimed title, and to decree title to be in defendant, Mrs. Marguerite Pyatt Hogan, subject to a deed of trust in favor of defendant Monarch Finance Corporation. Defendant, Mrs. Hogan, also asked the court to compel the plaintiff, Hoffman, to account for rents and profits for the years 1934, 1935, 1936 and 1937. Plaintiff filed a reply to these answers asserting ownership to the land. Plaintiff also stated that since he had taken possession, claiming the land as his own, he had made valuable improvements in the way of clearing the land and erecting buildings thereon. That, in a nutshell, is what this suit involves. The pleadings cover one hundred and thirty-two pages of the abstract. Contentions pertaining to various phases of the case will be referred to in the course of the opinion. The trial court found for the defendants on the question of title. The court also rendered an accounting of rents and profits. By its decree it allowed the plaintiff for the improvements and found that defendant, Hogan, owed plaintiff a balance of $1741.18. The court found for plaintiff on defendants' count in ejectment. By the decree plaintiff was permitted to remain in possession of the land until the sum of $1741.18 was paid. From that judgment both plaintiff and defendants appealed.

[1] This being an equitable proceeding, so made by defendants' answer and plaintiff's reply, this court has the duty to try the case de novo. But in such cases due deference is often given to the finding *Page 908 of the trial chancellor, especially on questions of fact over which there was a sharp dispute in the testimony.

Plaintiff based his claim of title on deeds executed by the sheriff of the county pursuant to judgments for drainage taxes and sales had thereunder. In July, 1932, defendant, Marguerite Pyatt Hogan, who will be referred to as Mrs. Hogan, became the owner of the land in controversy, subject to a deed of trust executed by one Fred Boyer. This deed of trust and the notes therein described were then the property of the defendant, Monarch Finance Corporation, located in Peoria, Illinois. Defendant, Mrs. Hogan, and her husband lived near St. Louis, Missouri. In the year 1933, Hogan, acting for his wife, began negotiations with the plaintiff, Hoffman, about the renting or selling of the land in controversy. The tenant on the land at that time was not satisfactory to the Hogans. Hoffman finally agreed to rent one hundred and forty acres of the land for the year 1934, for $250 cash, on condition that the then occupant would be dispossessed. Hoffman recommended the law firm of McKay Peal to Hogan. McKay Peal, acting for Hogan, brought about the eviction of the tenant, and Hoffman took possession of the one hundred and forty acres. He attempted to rent some of the other land but was not successful. He also attempted to obtain a purchaser, but due to farming conditions in general and the deed of trust on the land no purchaser could be found. About that time the Hogans were sued for taxes by the drainage district. McKay Peal were engaged to defend this suit. A plea in abatement was filed. In July, 1934, a judgment was entered and immediately thereafter the land was advertised for sale. A sale was had on August 15, 1934, at which Hoffman became the purchaser. Hoffman paid the cost of the sale and was given deeds to the property by the sheriff. Prior to this Hoffman had asked the Hogans to extend the time for the payment of the rent to September 1, which request was granted. Hoffman, however, never paid the rent. Neither McKay Peal or Hoffman notified the Hogans that a judgment had been entered for the drainage taxes or that the land had been sold. In 1936, Mrs. Hogan wrote Hoffman demanding the payment of the rent. The finance company was demanding interest on its loan. This company had not learned that the land had been sold since they were notified of the tax suit by publication. After the demand for rent was made Hoffman instituted the present suit to quiet title.

[2] The trial court cancelled the deeds executed by the sheriff purporting to convey the land to Hoffman. The court held that the judgments and sales were void. This action of the trial court was manifestly correct. To fully understand the situation we must briefly relate some circumstances that had a bearing on this tax sale. The record discloses that at the time of the tax sale in 1934, and for a number of years prior thereto, farming in Pemiscot County was at a *Page 909 low ebb. Prices of farm products had been such that it was almost impossible for a great number of landowners to derive a sufficient revenue from their land to pay the county, State and drainage taxes. Sales pursuant to tax judgments would not bring a sufficient amount to even pay the taxes and in many cases not even the cost of the suit. Landowners were in danger of losing their holdings, the drainage districts their taxes, and the bondholders their investments. It is said that self-preservation is the first law of nature. So in this case, the circumstances just related prompted landowners of the various drainage districts of the county to organize what was called a tax protective league. The purpose of this organization was to protect the land from being sacrificed at tax sales and to preserve it for the owners. It was mutually understood that the members of the league would not bid against each other but permit the owner to bid the land in at the sales. It was also agreed that bidding by outsiders should be discouraged. Many tracts of land were advertised to be sold on August 15, 1934, the same date on which the Hogan land here in dispute was sold. Members of the taxpayers' league were at the courthouse in great numbers. A Mr. Waugh, an attorney from St. Louis, was there representing the bondholders. He had intended to bid at the sale for the purpose of protecting his client's interest. Shortly before the sale, however, and while Mr. Waugh was in the courthouse on his way to the circuit court room, he was assaulted in the midst of a throng of men. Suffice to say here that Mr. Waugh was so treated that he dared not appear at the sale. Plaintiff, Hoffman, was a member of the league and was present at this time. At the sale he bid in the Hogan property. The evidence justifies the inference that Hoffman knew the Hogans were not informed that the land was to be sold. Hoffman's purchase of this land at the sale violated even the principles of the league of which he was a member, the primary purpose of which was to preserve the land for the then owners. Hoffman took advantage of this situation, since he was a renter on the land, and purchased it for himself by merely paying the cost of the case, which was far less than his bid. We may say that it was customary to make the sales bring the cost and no more. At this very time Hoffman owed the Hogans $250 as rent, and also $281.92, which he had received from the government for retiring nineteen acres of cotton land. The tax attorney for the drainage district was barred from the practice of his profession for a period of six months for misconduct in handling these sales. [See In re Pate, 119 S.W.2d 11.] That case may be read for a detailed account of the manner in which these tax sales were conducted. The sales were mere shams. The facts above related fully justified a cancellation of the deeds executed by the sheriff conveying the land in question to Hoffman.

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Bluebook (online)
137 S.W.2d 441, 345 Mo. 903, 1940 Mo. LEXIS 352, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoffman-v-hogan-mo-1940.