Marsden v. Nipp

30 S.W.2d 77, 325 Mo. 822, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 501
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 3, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 30 S.W.2d 77 (Marsden v. Nipp) 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
Marsden v. Nipp, 30 S.W.2d 77, 325 Mo. 822, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 501 (Mo. 1930).

Opinions

This is an action in ejectment. The court rendered judgment in favor of plaintiff for possession of the real estate, for $450 damages, with the monthly rents and profits at the rate of $100 a month from April 16, 1927, to the day of restitution of the premises, and for costs. Defendants appealed.

The petition was an ordinary pleading in ejectment. The answer comprised a general denial and an equitable answer and cross-bill praying for affirmative relief. However, the record shows that the equitable answer and cross-bill were withdrawn by defendants' counsel, thus leaving the general denial only as an answer.

The defendants offered no testimony. The evidence adduced for plaintiff warrants the finding that the title to the lands in controversy emanated from the Government. Thomas P. Eaves and Clara L. Eaves were the common source of title. Eaves and his wife acquired the land by a warranty deed from J.B. Alderson and wife, dated January 29, 1918. Eaves and his wife placed two deeds of trust on the land. On December 1, 1921, they executed a deed of trust on said land to the Federal Land Bank of St. Louis to secure notes of even date aggregating $6,000. On December 23, 1921, they executed a second deed of trust on said land to the Farmers Citizens State Bank to secure a note for $3,644.75, dated December 1, 1921, due one year after date, drawing interest at *Page 827 eight per cent annually. On April 9, 1926, said Eaves and wife by warranty deed sold and conveyed the land to defendants. In the second deed of trust, A.O. White was named trustee, and, as default was made in the payment of the note secured by the second deed of trust, the Farmers Citizens Bank, the owner and holder of the note, requested Ray Williams, the Sheriff of Jefferson County, on the information that A.O. White was in Texas, to act as trustee. He agreed, and, after advertising in a Jefferson County newspaper for four weeks, beginning March 24, 1927, and ending April 14, 1927, he did, on April 16, 1927, at the post-office door in the city of DeSoto, Jefferson County, sell the land in controversy to R.A. Marsden, at public auction for $5,825. It seems that the land was sold subject to the first deed of trust, and that there remained in the hands of the sheriff-trustee, after paying the note secured by the second deed of trust, interest thereon and expenses of sale, the sum of $1707.65 to the credit of defendants. On April 22, 1927, the defendants executed an assignment of the sum in the hands of the sheriff-trustee, reading:

"Whereas Daniel E. Nipp and Mattie June Nipp were on April 16, 1927, the owners of the following described land located in Jefferson County, Mo. [describing lands in controversy].

"`Whereas default was made by them in the payment of a certain second deed of trust and note approximately four thousand ($4,000) dollars due to the Farmers Citizens State Bank of DeSoto, Mo., and whereas foreclosure proceedings were had at DeSoto, Mo., by the holder of said note and deed of trust and one Ray Williams, sheriff of said county, as successor trustee, sold said real estate on April 18, 1927, under said foreclosure to one R.A. Marsden and said sheriff-trustee received upon said sale a surplus of over seventeen hundred ($1700) dollars which he now has and holds as belonging to the owners of the equity in said real estate, namely, the undersigned; and whereas the undersigned have engaged Wade L. McCann of St. Louis, Mo., to try and negotiate a new loan for them either upon a first deed of trust or second deed of trust and to aid in securing a good bond in order that they may redeem said real estate; and the undersigned have also engaged the services of Max F. Ruler, an attorney at law of St. Louis, Mo., and Sam McKay, a lawyer of DeSoto, Jefferson County, Mo., to use their best efforts and endeavor for the undersigned to redeem said real estate from said foreclosure sale as provided by the laws of the State of Missouri and upon failure of the court granting right of redemption or our failure to make the required bond, then to file a bill in equity seeking to set aside said sale for unfair dealings as to my said attorneys may deem best; the said Wade L. McCann to pay out of said funds the expenses of said attorneys and their fees according to the order of Max F. Ruler. *Page 828

"`Now, therefore, in consideration of the services already rendered by said McCann, Ruler and McKay and for the services by them to be rendered and on account of the premises and our interest therein, we, the undersigned, hereby sell, set over, assign and transfer unto Wade L. McCann of St. Louis, Mo., and unto his assigns all our right, title and interest in and to the seventeen hundred ($1700) dollars surplus so held by Ray Williams, sheriff, as successor trustee, under aforementioned foreclosure sale; hereby giving and granting unto our said assigns the power and right to receive, collect and receipt for said surplus money; hereby directing and authorizing said Ray Williams to pay said moneys or the net balance remaining after paying the indebtedness, interest and charges of the note and deed of trust foreclosed to the assignee herein; giving and granting to our said assignee and his assigns full power and authority to sign our name to any receipt or document necessary to receive said money. This assignment is intended to convey our interest in said fund and being so coupled with interest is not revocable. It is understood that in event we are successful in redeeming said real estate under redemption proceedings and actually redeeming said premises within twelve (12) month statutory period then this assignment is null and void and of no effect.

"`Executed in duplicate originals at St. Louis, Mo. "`(Signed) DANIEL E. NIPP.'" "`MATTIE JUNE NIPP.'"

The second deed of trust, which was foreclosed, and under which plaintiff claims title, reads in part:

"And the said party of the second part, or in case of his absence, death, refusal to act, or disability in any wise, the (then) acting sheriff of Jefferson County, Missouri, at the request of the legal holder of said note, may proceed to sell the property hereinbefore described, or any part thereof, at public vendue, to the highest bidder, at the post-office door in theCity of St. Louis, Jefferson County, Missouri, for cash, first giving 20 days' public notice of the time, terms and place of sale, and of the property to be sold, by advertisement in some newspaper printed and published in the city of DeSoto, Mo."

The evidence as to the absence of A.O. White, trustee, named in the second deed of trust, tends to show that the cashier of the Farmers Citizens Bank corresponded with him, and that he was in the State of Texas on April 16, 1927. The evidence further shows that the foreclosure sale by the sheriff took place at the post-office door in the city of DeSoto, Jefferson County, Missouri.

A summary of the trustee's deed to plaintiff, as condensed by defendants-appellants in the abstract of the record, reads:

"T.P. Eaves and Clara L. Eaves, his wife, by sheriff, as trustee, to R.A. Marsden. *Page 829

"Trustee's deed under sale dated April 16, 1927, recorded April 18, 1927, in book 107, page 118.

"Consideration fifty-eight hundred twenty-five dollars.

"Acknowledgment is in proper form.

"Bargains, sells and conveys same lands.

"Recites that T.P. Eaves and Clara L. Eaves, his wife, by their deed of trust dated the 23rd day of December, 1921, and recorded in the Recorder's office in Jefferson County, Mo., in book 62, page 148, conveyed to A.O.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 S.W.2d 77, 325 Mo. 822, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 501, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marsden-v-nipp-mo-1930.