Lincoln Trust Co. v. Title Guaranty Trust Co.

237 S.W. 744, 292 Mo. 1, 1922 Mo. LEXIS 187
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 9, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 237 S.W. 744 (Lincoln Trust Co. v. Title Guaranty Trust Co.) 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
Lincoln Trust Co. v. Title Guaranty Trust Co., 237 S.W. 744, 292 Mo. 1, 1922 Mo. LEXIS 187 (Mo. 1922).

Opinion

ELDER, J.

This is a suit involving taxes for the year 1914 assessed against two parcels of real estate situated. at the southwest corner of Seventh and Chestnut Streets in the city of St. Louis, upon which stands what is now known as the Title Guaranty Building. The action brought is by plaintiff as assignee of the owners of the property, who had paid the said taxes, against defendant *6 as assignee of leases to the property, seeking* to recover the taxes so paid.

The petition finally stood upon is in two counts — one for taxes on property owned by one George W. Dulaney, and the other for taxes on the adjoining lot owned by one Charles F. Pommer. The Dulaney lot was acquired by him in 1914 from Robert S. Brookings, subject to a ninety-nine year lease made by Brookings on March 1, 1898, to Orman J. McCawley, wherein it was covenanted that the lessee “will also pay all general taxes, rates, charges and assessments that may, from time to time, be lawfully levied or assessed upon said premises and the improvements thereon for or during the period of said lease, by any legal authority whatsoever, and all special taxes, assessments, rates and charges of every nature that may be lawfully levied, assessed or become payable upon said premises and improvements in or during the entire term of this lease. That if he shall fail to pay such taxes, rates, charges and assessments, whether general or special, within the time required by law, said lessor, his heirs, legal representatives or assigns, may pay the same and demand repayment thereof from said lessee or from anyone holding said premises under him, and said lessee agrees to repay all such moneys to the lessor within thirty days after such demand, together with interest thereon at the rate of eight per cent per annum after the date of the payment made by said lessor.”

The said lease further provided that if the lessee failed to pay “the said rates, taxes, assessments and charges legally required or demanded of said premises and improvements, within ninety days after the time when the same shall become legally due and payable, whether said taxes shallbe assessed either to said lessor or to said lessee, or to anyone succeeding either of them in title,” and if such failure continued for sixty days after notice from the lessor stating the existence of such default, then, at the option of the lessor, a forfeiture of the lease might be declared. The lease also provided that the words “lessor” and “lessee” should include “all persons taking in *7 succession and any right of the respective parties to the indenture.”

The Pommer lot was leased by him in 1894, for a period of ninety-nine years, to William B. Wells, upon covenants similar in all essential respects to the lease from Brookings to McCawley above mentioned.

The leases to both McCawley and Wells were subsequently assigned to the Lincoln Real Estate & Building Company, which company in 1905 assigned the same to the Lincoln Trust & Title Company, On October 12,1909, the Lincoln Trust & Title Company assigned both of said leases to the Title Guaranty Trust Company, defendant herein.

On April 1,1898, the Lincoln Real Estate & Building Company, then owner of both leasehold estates, executed a first mortgage deed of trust to Lincoln Trust Company, trustee, plaintiff herein, to secure bonds in the sum of $300,000, which it proposed to sell for the purpose of raising funds to erect the building now on said property. Among other things it was provided by said deed of trust that the said Lincoln Real Estate & Building Company, as party of the first part, “will promptly pay, within the times required by law, all taxes, rates, levies and assessments lawfully levied or assessed upon all and singular the property hereby mortgaged; . . . that if it shall at any time fail to so perform and observe the covenants, provisions and agreements of the said lease the said party of the second part or third part herein shall be entitled to perform the covenant or agreement or provision in respect of which the said first party has been delinquent or become in default. . . . Said first party further covenants that in the event of a default by it at any time in the performance of any of the covenants aforesaid, the said party of the second part, or any of the holder or holders of the bonds or obligations hereby secured, may, at its or his or their election, pay any sum of money necessary to be paid in order to discharge any charge or lien against the premises aforesaid, and arising out of such default on the part of the first party, or *8 to redeem or release the said premises upon the consequences of any such'default on the part of said first party; and the said first party hereby further covenants and agrees that in such event it will, upon demand, repay unto the party or person making such payment the amount thereof, together with interest thereon at the rate of eight per cent per annum from the time of such payment to the day of the repayment of said money.”

On April 1,1905, the Lincoln Real Estate & Building Company executed its further consolidated mortgage deed of trust to Missouri-Lincoln Trust Company, trustees, on the two leasehold estates, for the purpose of securing the payment of its consolidated mortgage bonds to the amount of $550,000, three hundred thousand dollars thereof to be issued for the purpose of refunding the first mortgage bonds and the balance to provide additional funds for building purposes. The covenants of said consolidated deed of trust with respect to the payment of taxes and the rights of the trustee or bond-holders to perform any agreements defaulted in, were substantially the same as contained in the first mortgage deed of trust above mentioned:

On January 29,1915, by written instrument defendant Title Guaranty Trust Company assigned the two leasehold estates in question to one Joseph Gahn. At the time of this assignment the taxes for 1914, amounting in the aggregate to $13,290.40, had not been paid and the assignment was made subject to said taxes, which the assignee assumed and agreed to pay. By operation of law the taxes were payable on or before December 31, 1914, and became delinquent on January 1, 1915, subject to an additional charge for interest and penalties. Said assignment was also made subject to the covenants contained in the original leases from Brookings and Pommer, and to the covenants contained in both the first and consolidated mortgages given by the Lincoln Real Estate & Building Company. Joseph Gahn took possession under the assignment and collected the rents, through his agent, for the months of February and March, 1915.

*9 Under date of January 29, 1915', Joseph. Gahn assigned both leasehold estates, subject to the covenants of the original leases and of the first and consolidated mortgages aforesaid, to one T. J. Eonayne, acting for Williams and Montgomery. Said assignment was also made subject to taxes for the year 1914, which Eonayne assumed and agreed to pay. This assignment was not recorded until April 5, 1915. •

On March 1, 1915, quarterly installments of rent for the premises became due and the then owner of the leasehold estates, either Gahn or Eonayne, defaulted in the payment thereof.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
237 S.W. 744, 292 Mo. 1, 1922 Mo. LEXIS 187, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lincoln-trust-co-v-title-guaranty-trust-co-mo-1922.