Owings v. McKenzie

33 S.W. 802, 133 Mo. 323, 1896 Mo. LEXIS 135
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 10, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by53 cases

This text of 33 S.W. 802 (Owings v. McKenzie) 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
Owings v. McKenzie, 33 S.W. 802, 133 Mo. 323, 1896 Mo. LEXIS 135 (Mo. 1896).

Opinions

Robinson, J.

This is a suit by plaintiff, the original payee in a note secured by deed of trust on land, for a personal judgment against the maker thereof and his grantees who purchased the property securing the note agreeing as. a part of the consideration for such conveyance, to assume the payment of the notes in suit together with another note mentioned in the deed of trust. We give the following facts of the case (as same appear in appellant’s statement), that the origin, history, and nature of the transaction between the contending parties may be fully understood.

[327]*327• Plaintiff, Mrs. Owings, in November, 1886, sold a tract of land to defendant McKenzie; and for a balance of the purchase money McKenzie gave her his two promissory notes for equal amounts, one maturing in two years and the other in three years after date, secured by a deed of trust on the property. Before the maturity of these notes, McKenzie sold the property to his codefendants, Tilhof, Green, and Muehlbach, and they in turn sold to Canine, both deeds being made subject to the prior deed of trust, and the respective grantees assumed and agreed to pay the notes as a part of the consideration of the conveyances. The deed of trust contained the usual provision that, if default be made in the payment of either note, or any interest thereon, according to the terms thereof, then both of said notes should become immediately due and payable, and the trustee, at the request of the legal holder of said notes, might proceed to sell, etc. At the time the two year note matured, Canine was the owner of the property, and shortly thereafter, by agreement between him and Mrs. Owings, this note was extended for three months, but there was no valuable consideration for this extension. After its expiration, the time of payment of the unpaid balance on this note was again extended three months, to May 27, 1889, in consideration of one per cent additional interest.

After both notes had matured by their face, the trustee, at the request of plaintiff, was about to sell the property, when Canine, in order to stop the sale, agreed to pay, on account of costs and accumulated interest, the sum of $500, and at the time put up $100 of the amount. Plaintiffs, after waiting for a week for the balance of said sum, again' ordered a sale, which was made in May, 1891. All of the defendants were represented at the sale. The proceeds of the sale [328]*328paid the costs, paid the two year note in full, and paid a part of the three year note. This suit was brought on the three year note, to recover the unpaid balance thereof.

Defendants’ answers pleaded an extension by agreement between plaintiff and Canine of both notes, for a definite time, and for a valuable consideration, without defendants’ knowledge or consent. Also that the property was much more valuable at the time the notes were given and the extension made on the first or two years note than it was at the time the property was sold under the deed of trust.

On this issue the trial court refused to hear defendant’s evidence. The record does disclose, however, that the property was originally sold by McKenzie to Green and Tilhof for the sum of $14,000 and of this sum the two notes of $3,760 each were a part of the consideration, and that at the trustee’s sale the property only brought $3,500. The evidence showed an extension, as stated, of the two year note, but that no agreement was ever made relative to the extension of the note in suit.

One instruction for plaintiff was refused to the effect, “that although the two year note was so extended, yet this did not relieve the defendants from liability on the note in suit;” and for the defendants McKenzie, Tilhof, and Muehlbach who alone filed answers, a corresponding instruction stating the proposition in the affirmative, as follows, was given:

“2. The jury are instructed that if you believe from the evidence that the note sued on and the deed of trust given to secure the same and offered in evidence with the other note therein described were executed each as a part of and all constituting one and the same transaction, and that the plaintiff, Prudence G. Owings, knew of the conveyance of the land in the [329]*329deed of trust described by defendant McKenzie, to defendants Tilhof and Muehlbach and William Green, and of said defendants and said Green to R. B. Canine, and of the assumption of payment of the indebtedness by said respective grantees in said deeds contained, and without their consent, for a valuable consideration for the payment of additionál interest, by agreement with Canine extended the time for'a certain or definite time for payment for either or both of said notes, then you will find for the defendants who did not consent to such extension.”

On the issues thus presented by the instructions the jury returned a verdict for defendant on which in due time judgment was rendered and to reverse which this appeal is prosecuted.

Several very interesting and vexed questions in the adjudications of this court have been raised and discussed by the learned counsel in the able and elaborate briefs filed herein, suchas, “what is the relation of the holder of the notes, to the maker and the respective grantees, and what the effect of an extension without notice on the original maker and subsequent grantees,” the plaintiff contending that as to the holder of the notes, both maker and grantee are principal debtors, and that, as such, an extension of time granted to one by the holder of the notes will not operate to release the others; the defendant contending that in such cases as between the parties the purchaser, having assumed the payment of an existing mortgage, thereby becomes the principal debtor, and the mortgagor and maker of the note are securities for the debt merely, and that an extension of time of payment of the mortgage debt by an agreement between the holder of it and the purchaser without the concurrence of the mortgagor discharged him and all subsequent purchasers under him from all liability. Also the question as to [330]*330what extent notes and deeds of trust or mortgages given to secure them shall be construed as one instrument. And what the effect of a provision in a deed of trust.' securing a series of notes ‘ 'that the failure to pay the first will mature all others of the series” will have upon the last of the series, as to questions of rescission, demand, and notice, as if matured by expiration of time as indicated on their face.

Under the particular facts of this case we think it can be disposed of without a full review of all the points raised by the learned counsel and we will discuss only such questions as in our judgment are absolutely decisive of the question necessarily involved.

If the note in suit did not become due absolutely for all purposes on the failure of the payment of the first note at the end of two years then the court erred in refusing plaintiff’s fourth instruction and in giving for defendant this second instruction, and this case must be reversed. Or if the extension granted on the two year note did not operate as a matter of law to release the maker and first grantee of liability on both notes, then error was made by the court in giving the same, and in refusing instruction numbered 4 for plaintiff. The plaintiff might have brought suit on the first note at its maturity against any and all of the defendants for a personal judgment.

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Bluebook (online)
33 S.W. 802, 133 Mo. 323, 1896 Mo. LEXIS 135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/owings-v-mckenzie-mo-1896.