Munday v. Austin

218 S.W.2d 624, 358 Mo. 959, 1949 Mo. LEXIS 550
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 14, 1949
DocketNo. 40996.
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 218 S.W.2d 624 (Munday v. Austin) 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
Munday v. Austin, 218 S.W.2d 624, 358 Mo. 959, 1949 Mo. LEXIS 550 (Mo. 1949).

Opinions

*963 [625]

ELLISON, J.

This is an appeal from the circuit court of the City of St. Louis, wherein the plaintiff-appellant seeks to enjoin the [626] forecloseure of a deed of trust on land, and to cancel the same and the notes secured thereby, on the ground that they were without consideration. The circuit court found for the respondent-defendants and dismissed the appellant’s petition. On her appeal to the St. Louis Court of Appeals, that court transferred the cause to this court [210 SW. (2d) 714] on the ground that it had no appellate jurisdiction, the title to real estate being involved within the meaning of Art. V. Sec. 3, Const. Mo., 1945.

That ruling was made on authority of Nettleton Bank v. McGauhey’s Est., 318 Mo. 948, 953-4(3), 2 SW. (2d) 771, 775(8), ivhich held that a suit to foreclose a mortgage does not involve title to real estate in the constitutional sense, because in such instances the basic title is conceded to be in the mortgagor, and the effort is merely to enforce the mortgage lien resting thereon, whereas a suit to cancel a mortgage on the ground of fraud would involve title because it would destroy the mortgagee’s “muniment of title”, citing Hanna v. So. St. Joseph Land Co., 126 Mo. 1, 10(1), 28 SW. 652, 653(1). On the other hand it has been consistently held that where a suit seeks to cancel or enjoin the foreclosure of a mortgage on the ground that the mortgage debt has been paid, the proceeding does not involve title, and is simply a dispute over the mortgage debt. Loewenstein y“ Queen Ins. Co., 227 Mo. 100, 127(9), 127 SW. 72, 84; Vandeventer v. Flordia Savings Bank, 232 Mo. 618, 622 et seq. (2), 135 SW. 23, 24.

From these decisions it will be seen that where the essential and inherent validity of the mortgage itself is in dispute, title is involved. In other words, the mortgage is regarded , as a part or segment of the title, constituting a cloud on the title.if it is invalid. But if the dispute is merely over the foreclosure of the mortgage or the indebtedness secured thereby, it does not involve title. At least recent decisions have reviewed this question and so held: Peters v. Kirkwood *964 Fed. Sav. & L. Ass'n, 344 Mo. 1067, 1070(2), 130 SW. (2d) 507, 508-9(1-2); Castorina v. Herrmann, 340 Mo. 1026, 1030(1), 104 SW. (2d) 297, 299(1). In the latter ease the question decided was the same as that presented here — whether this court has appellate jurisdiction on the ground that title to real estate is involved when it is sought to cancel a mortgage on the ground that- it was without consideration.

In this ease the facts were as follows. In July, 1940, the defendant-respondent Isabella Fairfax owned the land involved, and- executed thereon the duly recorded deed of trust and sécured notes in suit, the principal note and last interest note being due in three years after date. The trustee in the deed of trust was defendant-respondent Poertner, who was also cashier of a bank. The notes were made payable to the defendant-respondent Austin. He indorsed them in blank and delivered them and the deed of trust to Poertner’s bank as collateral 'to secure his indebtedness to it. The bank so held them for over three years.

During the intervening time in July, 1942, Austin was adjudged a bankrupt on the petition of third parties. In the bankruptcy proceeding his verified schedules and his sworn transcribed testimony before the referee stated that the instaiit notes and deed of ‘ trust were executed to him by the respondent Fairfax as accommodation paper to be used in securing his indebtedness to the above mentioned bank, and did not represent any indebtedness from her to him. This evidence from the bankruptcy records is the sole-proof'on which the plaintiff-appellant Munday relies, to establish as a judicial admission that the notes and' deed of trust were without consideration. Respondents Austin and Fairfax did not testify in the instant cause.

In June, 1943, independent of the bankruptcy, proceeding, the appellant Munday purchased for $430 the land encumbered by the’ deed of trust, with knowledge thereof, at an execution sale under a judgment in favor of a third party antedating the bankruptcy. The judgment was against the respondent Austin as judgment .debtor, and the respondent Fairfax as surety on his appeal bond. The sheriff's deed recited that it assigned, transferred and conveyed to appellant Munday ‘ ‘ all the right, title, interest, claim, estate and property of the [627] said Isabella Fairfax, of, in and to” the land.

Three months thereafter, on September 20,1943, Poertner, as trustee in the deed of trust, at the request of the “legal holder” of the secured notes, which were past due and in default, started foreclosure procedure proceedings by advertisement under the power of sale clause in the deed of trust. At that time the bank still held the secured notes as collateral for respondent Austin’s indebtedness to it. But four days later Austin paid the bank $2000 on his indebtedness and if surrendered the notes and deed of trust to him. Poertner'testified that Austin thereafter told him he “was going to foreclose the deed of *965 trust/* and the publication of the foreclosure notice was not stopped. ’.Thereupon appellant Munday filed the instant injunction suit in October, 1943, against Poertner as trustee, and the respondents Austin and Fairfax. The Aetna Realty Company, a corporation, also was joined as defendant in an amended petition, which alleged that Austin was the dominating stockholder thereof and claimed to have transferred the deed of trust and notes to it. But all the" defendants by separate answers denied these facts and there was no proof' of them. As the record-stands Austin was in possession of the notes arid deed of trust when the suit was filed.'

The chancellor took the cause under advisement and rendered an informal- memorandum opinion finding in favor of the defendant-respondents, dismissing thAplaintiff-appellant’s petition and dissolving' the temporary injunction on the grounds: “that the plaintiff has failed to make a case in that having acquired the property subject ttf the deed of trust and knowing of the existence of said deed of trust at the time that she acquired it and not having been a creditor of the defendant, Benjamin- F. Austin, or any of the other principal defendants, that she has no right to complain nor to attempt to attack the validity of the deed of trust in "question.”

• As will be seen, the necessary effect of the chancellor’s ruling was that since appellant Munday- was not a creditor of respondents Austin and Fairfax, she has no right as execution purchaser to challenge and seek .the-cancellation of the deed of trust on the land after she had purchased it with notice of that eneumbrance-and this regardless „of whether, the deed of -trust and secured notes were without consideration as between those two respondents, and notwithstanding the fact that the bank-had surrendered the notes and deed of trust back to respondent Austin- after maturity and before appellant filed this suit. This is the ultimate issue in the case. We shall return to it after considering other issues raised by the parties.

First, we concede and hold, as respondents contend, that under Sec’s 3022(2) and 3040, 1

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Bluebook (online)
218 S.W.2d 624, 358 Mo. 959, 1949 Mo. LEXIS 550, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/munday-v-austin-mo-1949.