McCaughn v. Young

85 Miss. 277
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by55 cases

This text of 85 Miss. 277 (McCaughn v. Young) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCaughn v. Young, 85 Miss. 277 (Mich. 1904).

Opinion

Truly, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action of ejectment instituted by George Young, appellee. On the trial hereof in the circuit court, plaintiff, having established his record title, closed his case. At the conclusion of the testimony for the defendant, McOaughn, appellant here, the court gave a peremptory instruction for the plaintiff, and this action of the court is assigned as error.

It is well settled in our state that, where a peremptory instruction is given, the losing party is entitled, upon the review of the action of the court, to have all facts in his favor considered as true. A peremptory instruction is proper only in cases where, with all the facts in evidence taken as true, with every inference from them, they fail to maintain the issue. Whitney v. Cook, 53 Miss., 551; Railroad Co. v. Boehms, 70 Miss., 11 (12 South. Rep., 23). Appellant, therefore, is entitled to have all the facts testified to in his behalf accepted as true upon our consideration of this record. Those facts are: That George Young, prior to 1885, had been the owner of the land in controversy»; that about that date he executed a trust deed, or mortgage with power of sale, on the land to W. I. Crowley, beneficiary, and IT. C. Johnson, trustee; that this instrument was foreclosed by public sale on January 11, 1887, at which sale A. B. Bozelle became the highest bidder, and the [287]*287land was struck off to him, and a deed executed by the trustee conveying the land; that Young was aware of the fact that his land was about to be sold, and was advised of Nozelle’s intention to purchase, and, after the sale, was notified by Nozelle that he had bought the land and claimed it under the deed from the trustee; that thereafter Nozelle paid the taxes upon the land in his own name or that of his wife, entered into possession, erected a sawmill upon an adjoining tract, cut all the timber suitable for milling from the land, and sold the remainder to parties for cross-tie purposes; and he publicly offered the land for sale, and executed trust deeds thereon to secure a certain indebtedness which he owed. Under one of such trust deeds, after Nozelle had left the state in 1892,the property was sold and purchased by the Adams Machine Company, which remained in possession, paying taxes, and offering the same to the public for sale, until the year 1900, when appellee purchased from the machine company and entered into actual occupancy, cutting and deadening timber and clearing the land for cultivation, and had, prior to the institution of this suit, on the 29th of August, 1902, cleared seven and three-fourth acres and deadened half the entire tract. It was further in proof by several witnesses that Young knew of the claim that Nozelle made to the land, and knew that the land had been sold under the trust deed which he had executed in favor of Johnson, trustee; and that on one occasion, after appellant had entered into occupancy of the land, the appellee had a conversation with him, in which he spoke of desiring to purchase some land, but made no claim to having any interest in the title to this land, for which he afterwards instituted this suit.

The court, in its ruling on the motion to exclude the testir mony in behalf of the defendant, stated that the proof failed to show that the defendant, McCaughn, had acquired title to the land, either by conveyance or adverse possession. To sustain this ruling of the court, it is said by counsel for appellee, as to the first ground, that the action of the court was correct [288]*288in holding that appellant had no title by conveyance, for the reason that the trust deed which the witnesses testified that Young had executed to Johnson, trustee, was not of record, and its loss not sufficiently proven. Under the general rule, as stated, the facts testified to in behalf of appellant upon every issue must be accepted on this hearing as true. We find, therefore, that the fact of the existence of the trust deed or mortgage is proven by the direct and positive testimony of the witness Rozelle, who stated that he had seen the instrument in question, had read it on the very day on which the land had been sold under its terms; that it was executed by George Young, whose signature he knew; that the beneficiary was Orowley, an'd the trustee Johnson; that he was familiar with the mode of foreclosure of such instruments, and, so far as he knew, the sale in question was regularly and formally made by public outcry to the highest bidder, and a deed executed by the trustee, in pursuance of such sale, and delivered to him as purchaser. This proof of existence, in the absence of all contradiction, was ample, and the proof of loss of the instrument, so as to account for its non-production and justify the admission of testimony of its contents, equally so. More than fifteen years after the foreclosure and sale under the lost instrument had elapsed before the institution of this suit. During that time the beneficiary had died, his storehouse burned, with a large part of his business papers, search had been made among all his papers known still to be in existence, the trustee had died, and actual search was made among all his papers where a trust deed might probably have been. In addition, search was made of all records of the proper chancery clerk’s office, without success. Under such circumstances, in viewr of the great lapse of time and the various changes wrought by death, this proof was sufficient to make proper the admission of secondary evidence as to the contents of the lost instrument.

It is said, however, that, granting the existence and loss of the instrument, still the deed from the trustee to Rozelle, pur[289]*289porting to convey the land in question, was void because of its failure to contain recitations showing the power under which the trustee made the sale, and that the terms and conditions of the instrument under which the sale was alleged to have been made had been substantially complied with. The deed under consideration simply states that the grantor Johnson, “as trustee,” in consideration of a certain sum in cash paid to him “as trustee,” conveys the land now in controversy to Rozell, the grantee. The deed contains no reference to any grant of power to the trustee authorizing him to act, and there is no recital of the performance of any of the formalities usually incident to foreclosure of similar trust deeds, or mortgages with power of sale, such as are always inserted by the careful conveyancer. The established rule is that a trustee who undertakes to execute a trust, vested in him by a sale of the trust estate must follow the mode, manner, and terms prescribed by the deed under which he claims grant of power, and the sale will not be valid if there is any material failure in this regard. If, as a matter of fact, the directions of the trust deed be adhered to in all substantial matters, the mere failure to recite in the deed the power under which.the trustee acted, or that the conditions of the trust in conducting the sale were observed, will” not, as a matter of law, annul the sale or invalidate the deed executed by the trustee to the purchaser. 2 Jones on Mort., sec. 1889. When a deed executed by a trustee purports to convey as trustee a certain estate, the presumption of law is, not only that the recitals of the deed are true, but that all essential conditions were complied with in making the sale.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
85 Miss. 277, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccaughn-v-young-miss-1904.