Morrison v. Herrington

25 S.W. 568, 120 Mo. 665, 1894 Mo. LEXIS 151
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 5, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 25 S.W. 568 (Morrison v. Herrington) 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
Morrison v. Herrington, 25 S.W. 568, 120 Mo. 665, 1894 Mo. LEXIS 151 (Mo. 1894).

Opinion

Black, P. J.

This was- an action of ejectment to recover eighty acres of land in Sullivan county. The petition as first filed contained one count in the usual form. Before the return term of the writ, the plaintiff filed an amended petition, the first- count of which sets out the plaintiff’s title ' and other matters, and prays for equitable relief, namely, that two deeds, one from the sheriff to Edward Clevenger, and the other from Clevenger to the defendant, be set aside and for naught held; the second count is the same as the original petition, that is to say, a count in ejectment. At the return term the defendant moved to strike out the amended petition, because it set up a new and different cause of action from that stated in the original petition, which motion was overruled, and the defendant excepted. Defendant then filed answer to both causes of action. They were both tried at the same time by the court, and the court rendered a decree setting- aside the two deeds, and gave judgment for plaintiff for possession on the second count.

[668]*6681. The court did not err in refusing to strike out the amended petition. It was held in Lumpkin v. Collier, 69 Mo. 170, that the plaintiff could not, by an amendment, change his cause of action from ex contractu to ex clelido, but that and the other cases cited by the ■defendant have no application to the case in hand. Here the plaintiff simply added a cause of action in equity to his ejectment count, and this he had a right to do. A plaintiff may unite in the same petition several causes of action, whether they be such as have been heretofore denominated legal or equitable, or both, where they arise out of the same transaction and .are connected with the same subject of action. R. S. 1889, sec. 2040. Here the causes of action, one legal ■and the other equitable, arose out of transactions connected with the same subject of action. The parties being the same also, there was no misjoinder. Though the court could have granted full and complete relief on. the equity cause of action, even to awarding a writ •of possession, still it is quite common practice to join ■an ejectment count with an equity cause of action in such cases. There can be no doubt but the plaintiff had the right to. file the amended petition. As no ■answer had been .filed, it was not necessary to first •obtain leave to file the amended petition. R. S. 1889, sec. 2102.

2. On the second of April, 1881, William J. Hutchinson executed a deed, whereby he conveyed the eighty acres in question to Mr. Moberly in trust to secure a debt of $550 due to Mr. Haley. The land was sold under this deed of trust on the fourteenth of March, 1885, and Samuel 0. Hutchinson became the purchaser. It is alleged in the equity cause of action that Samuel 0. purchased the land for his brother, William J. Hutchinson, and that Samuel 0. never had ■any interest in it, save the bare legal title.

[669]*669Samuel C. Hutchinson was elected treasurer of' Sullivan county in November, 1884, for a term of two years, and at the expiration of that time was again elected for another like term. The county being under township organization, he became ex officio collector. He gave bond as such collector at the beginning of the first term, which was approved and recorded. By force of section 6736, Revised Statutes, 1879, this bond became a lien on his real estate.

When Samuel C. Hutchinson purchased the land on the fourteenth of March, 1885, at the trustee’s sale, he made a temporarv loan to raise money to pay the-purchase price. On the Test of May, 1885, about a month and a half after that purchase, he conveyed the same-eighty acres to Mr. Darrow in trust to secure his coupon bond for $600, payable to James W. Morrison. He-used the money thus raised in paying off the temporary loan before mentioned. Subsequently and on the-twenty-second of February, 1886, he conveyed the-eighty acres in question and another eighty acre track to the defendant James S. Herrington for the consideration of $2,500. As a part of this consideration, Herrington assumed and agreed to pay the $600 debt secured by the before mentioned deed of trust to Darrow, and also a $700 debt secured by a deed of trust on the other eighty acres. The difference between these two debts and $2,500 was paid in cash to Samuel C. Hutchinson, who paid the difference between the $600 debt and the purchase price of the eighty acres in question over to his brother William. The defendant. Herrington made the purchase of the two eighties from Samuel C. Hutchinson by and through his uncle, Edward Clevenger, who was the agent of the defendant, in making the purchase. Defendant paid the $700 debt as he had agreed. He also paid the annual interest on the $600 debt secured by the deed of trust to Darrow [670]*670as trustee on the eighty acres in suit down to the date of the sheriff’s sale next mentioned. The plaintiff, John H. Morrison, became the owner of the $600 bond in June, 1888.

Samuel C. Hutchinson made default as collector for the first term of office to the amount of about $12,000, and on the fifth of November, 1888, the state ■auditor issued a' distress warrant against him and the sureties on his bond for that amount. The sheriff levied this warrant upon and sold the two eighty acre parcels of land on the eighth of February, 1889, and Edward Clevenger became the purchaser at the price of $100 and received a sheriff’s deed. In June of that year he conveyed both parcels to the defendant, James S. Herrington for a recited consideration of $1,500. It is these two deeds which the plaintiff had set aside under the equity cause of action. The averments made in the petition for that purpose are that Clevenger and the defendant for the purpose of cheating and defrauding the plaintiff out of the $600 debt which the defendant had agreed to pay, made an agreement whereby Clevenger was to and thereafter did purchase in the land at the sale under the distress warrant and then convey it to defendant.

After these transactions had been completed the defendant Herrington declined to pay the $600 debt held by plaintiff, secured by the deed of trust from Samuel C. Hutchinson to Darrow as trustee, and because of such default Darrow sold the property in September, 1889, and the plaintiff became the purchaser.

Two issues of fact still remain to be considered: First, did Samuel 0. Hutchinson purchase the eighty ■acres in question at the sale made by trustee Moberly ■on the fourteenth of March, 1885, for himself,- or did he purchase and hold the same in trust for his brother [671]*671William? Second, did Clevenger buy in the land at the sheriff’s sale under the distress warrant pursuant to the alleged agreement with the defendant for the purpose of defrauding plaintiff out of the $600 deed of trust?

As to the first of these issues, the evidence shows that William J. Hutchinson, the grantor in the Moberly deed of trust, had no means and was in destitute circumstances, and could not pay the debt. He says his brother purchased the land for him and afterwards sold it to defendant Herrington at his request. Samuel testified that he purchased the land for his brother William; that to pay the purchase price he made a temporary loan, and in a month or two paid this loan by getting the $600 from Morrison and securingMonison by the Harrow deed of trust on the same land. When he sold it to defendant he paid the cash received over to his brother. Says he used no money of his own in making- the purchase.

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Bluebook (online)
25 S.W. 568, 120 Mo. 665, 1894 Mo. LEXIS 151, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morrison-v-herrington-mo-1894.