Mayberry v. Clark

297 S.W. 39, 317 Mo. 442
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 23, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 297 S.W. 39 (Mayberry v. Clark) 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
Mayberry v. Clark, 297 S.W. 39, 317 Mo. 442 (Mo. 1927).

Opinion

*445 WHITE, P. J.

The purpose of this action, brought in the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis, was to have an accounting between the plaintiff and the defendant, and redeem certain real estate claimed by plaintiff and held by defendant in his own name as security for debts which plaintiff alleged had been paid.

In January, 1915, the plaintiff owed the defendant $1200, evidenced by a promissory note. At that time the plaintiff and defendant lived in Wood River, Illinois. One W. L. Layton had the record title to 400 acres in Wayne County, Illinois; the land belonged to plaintiff Mayberry. Layton was a clerk in the office of P. J. Soucy, a real estate agent in East St. Louis. Mayberry had a desk in the same office. There is no dispute but that Layton was a straw man.

On January 7, 1915, Layton, at the direction of Mayberry, conveyed the 400 acres in Wayne County to Clark, defendant, Mayberry asserts for the purpose of securing the $1200 note. Clark claims here that he purchased the land in consideration of his canceling of the note. One John K. Wright, uncle of Mayberry, was surety on the note. The note was not surrendered at the time of the conveyance. Clark swore at the trial that he could not find it at that time, and that he later sent it to Wright. Mayberry swore that the note was never surrendered; denied that he received it, and said he had no *446 knowledge that Wright received it. It is undisputed that, at the time the conveyance was made, Clark agreed not to sue on the note. The land was encumbered. A mortgage of $1800 was against 160-acres of the tract, and a mortgage of $1600 was against the remaining 240 acres. The $1800 mortgage had been foreclosed, but under the law of Illinois the time for redemption had not expired. Clark later advanced the money to redeem, and paid off the debt, which amounted to $2005.80.

The plaintiff enlisted and went into the war in 1917. He served over seas until the summer of 1919, when he returned to Bast St. Louis. During his absence Clark permitted the taxes on the 400-acre tract to go unpaid; he let the interest accumulate on the $1600 mortgage on the 240 acres. That mortgage had been foreclosed, but the redemption period had not expired. Mayberry went to the county seat of Wayne County, found out the amount necessary to redeem the 240 acres from the mortgage and taxes, $2800, and drew on Clark at Wood River for the amount, which Clark paid, taking Mayberry’s note for it.

Mayberry then negotiated a trade of the 400 acres for what was termed “the Allen Farm” of 274 acres, in Hamilton county, Illinois. Of the Wayne County tract 360 acres was exchanged for the Allen Farm. In making the trade, $1500 “to boot” had to be paid to Allen; Clark advanced the money, and the 274 acres was conveyed to him. This was in January, 1921. The remaining 40 of the 400 acres was sold by Mayberry, Clark executing the deed, for $600, which was paid to him.

In July, 1921, a trade was negotiated by Mayberry, as the evidence shows, by which the 274 acres in Hamilton County, Illinois, was traded for two lots, upon which were apartment houses, at 3933 and 3937 West Pine Boulevard, St. Louis, Missouri, subject to two mortgages, one on each lot for $14,000. Three thousand dollars on one of the mortgages fell due, and Clark advanced the money to pay it. In November, 1922, Clark came to St. Louis, and obtained a loan for $16,500. He gave as security a second mortgage on each of the properties for $8,250. He turned the proceeds over to the First Trust & Savings Bank at Wood River, Illinois, of which he had been president. After this suit was brought Clark conveyed the apartment to L. Y. George of Edwardsville, Illinois, who acted as trustee for his creditors.

The trial court, after hearing the evidence, rendered judgment December 17, 1923, finding that Clark held the several tracts of land as security for indebtedness which the plaintiff owed him; the 400 acres in Wayne County, later the 274 acres in Hamilton County, Illinois, for which the first was exchanged, and later still the apartment properties in St. Louis, for which the latter was exchanged; that the defendant had wrongfully placed two deeds of trust on the *447 Pine Street property,- whereby he realized the sum of $16,500, which he wrongfully appropriated; that he had received the rents on said property during the time he held it,- for which he should account. The court ordered an accounting between the plaintiff and the defendant, charging Clark with all the money he had réceived from-the several properties, and giving him credit for all he had paid out on the same, with interest from the dates of such payments;. The court then appointed one Matt Sherer special master to take the accounting and report to the court. On March 22, 1924, the master filed his report, finding that the indebtedness of plaintiff to Clark, including all that Clark had paid out in redeeming the Illinois property, for taxes and other purposes, in connection with the property, to be $9,898. He found that Clark had received $600, realized from the 40 acres sold in Wayne County, Illinois, in 1921; that he had received as rentals $7,985.98 on the St. Louis properties. To this was added interest1 on those two items from the time he had received the money. He was also charged with the money realized from the mortgage placed upon the St. Louis property of $16,500;:a total of $25,470.92, which, after subtracting the $9898 due him by plaintiff left a balance of $15,572.92, for which judgment was entered for the plaintiff and against the defendant. The original judgment divested the title to the Pine Street property from Clark and vested it in the plaintiff. From the judgment the defendant appealed.

I. It is claimed by defendant that the petition does not declare on an action to redeem from a mortgage, but that the effect of the allegation is that the defendant held the land in 'trust for the plaintiff.

The defendant pleaded and introduced in evidence Section 9, Chapter 59, of the Eevised Statutes of Illinois, which provides that all declarations of trust or conveyances of any land shall be manifested and proved by some writing signed by the party who is by law enabled to declare such trust, etc., or by his last will in writing, or else it shall be utterly void and of no effect. Provided that resulting trusts, or trusts created by construction, implication or operation of law need not be in writing, and the same may be proved by parol. The law of Illinois is the same as it is in Missouri, to the effect that a deed absolute upon its face, if the title is1 held to secure- the payment of a debt, is an equitable mortgage and the mortgagor or grantor may redeem on discharging the debt. 'The Illinois statute does not affect this case if, in fact, the conveyances to Clark were to secure a debt.

The petition alleges that when the 400-acre tract in Wayne County was conveyed to the defendant, it was arranged and under *448

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Bluebook (online)
297 S.W. 39, 317 Mo. 442, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayberry-v-clark-mo-1927.