Phillips v. Hardenburg

80 S.W. 891, 181 Mo. 463, 1904 Mo. LEXIS 129
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 10, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 80 S.W. 891 (Phillips v. Hardenburg) 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
Phillips v. Hardenburg, 80 S.W. 891, 181 Mo. 463, 1904 Mo. LEXIS 129 (Mo. 1904).

Opinion

GANTT, P. J.

This is an appeal from a judgment sustaining a demurrer to plaintiff’s petition. The plaintiffs declining to plead further, final judgment was. rendered against them.

"Plaintiff states that on the twenty-fifth day of February, 1888, George Phillips was the owner and in possession of the following described real estate situated in Moniteau county, Missouri, to-wit: all of the northeast quarter of section 31, township 43, range 15, except five acres in the southwest corner of said quarter section, and also except fourteen acres, being a strip on the north side of said quarter section; and all of the northwest quarter of the southeast quarter of said section 31 ¿xcept ten acres in the northwest corner of the said last described quarter section, containing in all one hundred and seventy-one acres; and being so the owner in possession thereof the said George Phillips joining with the plaintiff Nancy Phillips, who was then and there his wife, by a deed of trust, a certified copy of which is herewith filed, the original not being in possession of plaintiffs. [467]*467and can not be filed, conveyed said real estate to the defendant, A. D. Snyder, in trust to secure to the defendant, S. W. Hardenburg, the payment of a promissory note made by said George Phillips to the said S. W. Hardenburg and bearing interest at the rate of eight per cent; said note being for the sum of fourteen hundred dollars and being fully described in said deed of trust; that after the making of said deed said George Phillips contracted and sold said land to the plaintiff,; Charles M. Phillips, and the said plaintiff, Charles M., Phillips, took possession of said land under said contract with the said George Phillips; and has ever since' remained in possession thereof and has made valuable1 and lasting improvements thereon; that afterwards on the third day of February, 1897, the said George Phillips died intestate, leaving as his sole and only heirs, the plaintiff, Nancy Phillips, his widow, and the plaintiff, Charles M. Phillips, his son, and the defendant, James Nail, a son of the deceased daughter of the said George A. Phillips, and Ed Phillips, George A. Phillips, Elmer Phillips and Lizzie O’Neal, children of the said George A. Phillips, who have affirmed the sale of said real estate made by the said George Phillips prior to his death, and now claim no interest in said land; that, by the terms of said sale, the plaintiff, Charles M. Phillips, assumed the payment of said note secured by said deed of trust, which fact was well known to the defendants, S. W. Hardenburg, and A. D. Snyder, and the said S. W. Hardenburg accepted the plaintiff Charles M. Phillips as payor of the debt secured by the deed of trust; that after the death of the said George Phillips, the defendant A. D. Snyder, in pursuance of the power given in said deed of trust, advertised said real estate for sale, and on the twenty-third day of November, 1897, sold the same; that at and prior to said sale, the plaintiff Charles M. Phillips being the equitable owner of said land subject to said deed of trust, it was mutually agreed between him and the defendants S. W. Harden-[468]*468burg and A. D. Snyder, that Charles M. Phillips should bid off the land and execute his own note and deed of trust of whatever might .remain due on the said note; that the said agreement was well known to the persons assembled at the said sale and for that reason they did not bid at the sale, whereby said plaintiff Charles M. Phillips was enabled to bid off the land at the sum of sixteen hundred and seventy-five dollars, and the said real estate was at the time worth more than two thousand dollars; that defendant Hardenburg claimed at the time •that there was due him on the note sixteen hundred dollars and that the costs would be thirty dollars and that the back taxes on the land which-Hardenburg insisted should be included in the amount at which plaintiff Charles M. Phillips bid off the land as aforesaid; that after the sale the said defendant A. H. Snyder, as trustee, instead of conveying said land to plaintiff Charles M. Phillips, by his deed dated November 23, 1897, and recorded in the recorder’s office in Moniteau county in deed book No. 16, page 179, conveyed said real estate to the defendant S. W. Hardenburg, and the said Hardenburg agreed to hold the same, in trust for the use of this plaintiff, Charles M. Phillips, subject to the payment of said note, costs and back taxes; and upon the payment of said-note, costs and back taxes, to convey the said land to the said Charles Phillips; that plaintiff, Charles M. Phillips at the time paid said Hardenburg thirty dollars as costs of said sale; that in truth and in fact the cost of sale was only twenty-five dollars, and five dollars should1 have been credited on the note; ■that afterwards in December, 1897, the said Harden-burg being indebted to the plaintiff, Charles M. Phillips, in the sum of fifty-four dollars, said Hardenburg .agreed instead of paying the money to this plaintiff or ,of crediting the same on this note, to use the same in payment of back taxes accrued on the land before the :sale, and plaintiff supposes and believes he did use the (game in payment of said back taxes. That on the twenty-[469]*469ninth of June, 1898, plaintiff, Charles M. Phillips, paid to the defendant S. W. Hardenbnrg on said note five hogs at the price of twenty-two dollars and fifty cents, and the said Hardenburg agreed to credit same on the said note, and on the twenty-ninth of November, 1898, said plaintiff paid to the defendant, Hardenburg the sum of one hundred and. seventy-five dollars on said note.

“That the deed made by the defendant A. D. Snyder; as trustee, to the' defendant, S. W. Harden-burg, as aforesaid, is not in the possession or under the control of these plaintiffs and can not be filed herewith, but a certified copy thereof is herewith filed. At the time of said sale, the plaintiff, Charles M. Phillips, was in possession of said real estate and has ever since been in possession thereof.

“That on the third day of April, 1900, the defendant S. W. Hardenburg instituted a suit against the plaintiff Charles M. Phillips in the circuit court of Moniteau county, Missouri, for the possession of said land. The said suit was compromised and settled upon the following terms, to-wit: that in consideration that the plaintiff Charles M. Phillips would pay the costs of said suit and would pay the said defendant Hardenburg the sum of three hundred dollars on said note on or before the first day of November, 1900, and would execute a lease for said land agreeing to give one third of the crops grown on the premises as rent if he should fail to make such payment, the said Hardenburg agreed to accept the three hundred dollars as a part payment on the note and cancel the old note and mortgage and convey the land to Phillips and take his note secured by a deed of trust on the land for whatever might be due on the old note. That a paper purporting to contain the contracts and agreements aforesaid was drawn up by the attorney for S. W. Hardenburg, and signed by the plaintiff Charles M. Phillips and said S. W. Harden-burg. That, at the time of signing the paper, plaintiff [470]*470Charles M. Phillips was assured by Hardenburg and his attorney that the rights of said plaintiff in said real estate as hereinbefore set forth were fully protected; that he relied upon said statements of said Hardenburg and his attorney and signed said paper without close examination; that said paper is not in his possession, nor under his control and can not be filed herewith.

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Bluebook (online)
80 S.W. 891, 181 Mo. 463, 1904 Mo. LEXIS 129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-v-hardenburg-mo-1904.