Reynolds v. Stepanek

99 S.W.2d 65, 339 Mo. 804, 1936 Mo. LEXIS 590
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 12, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 99 S.W.2d 65 (Reynolds v. Stepanek) 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
Reynolds v. Stepanek, 99 S.W.2d 65, 339 Mo. 804, 1936 Mo. LEXIS 590 (Mo. 1936).

Opinion

*807 HAYS, J.

This is an action in ejectment for the possession of an eighty-acre farm specifically described in the record and situate in Lincoln County. The underlying conveyances as shown in the record are these (dates given are material):

One Henry Eversmeyer was the common source of title. On August 26, 1921, he executed a deed of trust to secure a $3500 loan of the Hannibal Loan & Investment Company, due September 1, 1926.

By warranty deed of March 1, 1926, he conveyed to defendants Stepanek, husband and wife, who assumed payment of the encumbrance just stated.

On March 1, 1926, Stepanek and wife executed a deed of trust to Eno Eversmeyer, appellant herein, to secure a debt of $3000 due in one year. This instrument appears not to have been filed for record until September 17, 1926. It contains a clause stating it was made subject to the loan company’s deed of trust.

Stepanek and wife executed a deed of trust, dated August 30, 1926, and filed for record September 15, 1926, to secure Charles Reynolds, plaintiff, for a loan of $3500 they obtained from him, due in two years. On the same date, September 15, 1926, the loan company’s deed of trust was released on margin of the record, and the note secured thereby was canceled by the recorder of deeds.

The Reynolds deed of trust was for default foreclosed on October 17, 1932; said Reynolds was the purchaser and received deed from the trustee.

Eno Eversmeyer’s deed of trust was foreclosed on November 21, 1932, and said Eversmeyer was the purchaser thereat. The Stepaneks *808 attorned to him immediately thereafter and remained in possession of the premises as his tenants.

Plaintiffs’ petition was in common or statutory form.

The answer of Stepanek and wife was a disclaimer of any interest in the premises and an allegation that their possession was held for their landlord Eno Eversmeyer; who, by leave of court, shortly entered his appearance and filed his separate answer and cross-bill, in substance as follows:

First, a general denial. Next, a right of title and to possession under trustee’s sale; the execution of appellant’s deed of trust on March 1, 1926. It was charged that one C. A. Harper, a justice of the peace and notary public, trustee in the Reynolds deed of trust, prepared same as agent of plaintiffs and then had in hand the Eno Eversmeyer deed of trust; and afterward with the purpose of wrongfully and fraudulently depriving this defendant of the priority of the lien of the latter, did wrongfully direct the recorder of deeds to give priority of record to Reynolds’ mortgage as a first encumbrance, which was wrongfully done with Reynoldsknowledge and consent, and without this defendant’s knowledge, consent or acquiescence. At the Reynolds foreclosure sale, which preceded appellant’s by a few weeks, appellant gave public notice and warning that he claimed priority of his own encumbrance.

We now quote: “And the defendant, for further equitable answer, claims that he is the fee simple owner of the land (describing it), and that the plaintiffs claim to have a title, estate or interest in said real estate. . . . Wherefore, the defendant prays the court to try, ascertain and determine the estate, title and interest of the parties . . . and that the court by its judgment or decree define and adjudge the title, estate and interest of the” parties “severally in and to said real property according to the statute,” etc.

By answer (termed reply) filed to the cross-bill of defendant the plaintiffs set up all the conveyances mentioned above (except defendant’s deed of trust and his trustee’s deed), and alleged that plaintiff Charles Reynolds loaned defendants Stepanek $3500 for the purpose of paying off and satisfying the defendant’s loan secured by the first deed of trust owned by said loan company, pursuant to a prior agreement between the parties that Stepanek and his wife, in obtaining the loan, would execute a first deed of trust on the land referred to. They received from Reynolds said sum and applied same to the payment of the loan company’s debt, satisfied the record of said deed of trust, and duly canceled the note secured by same; whereby, it is alleged, the plaintiffs became subrogated to the right of the loan company under its senior deed of trust. There was a general denial of all matters contained in said answer and cross-bill not admitted in plaintiffs’ reply (answer). The prayer asked judgment for the pos *809 session of tbe lands, damages, monthly rents and profits and for general relief.

To the above answer of plaintiffs, defendant Eno Eversmeyer filed a reply in which he denied the allegations of said answer and alleged that Reynolds was a stranger to the title, a volunteer, and that the money, if any, furnished to extinguish the loan company’s debt rendered Eversmeyer’s deed of trust a superior lien to that of Reynolds, who should be estopped from his equitable claim, and the prayer of defendant’s cross-bill was renewed.

The case was tried to the court. At the conclusion of the trial it was adjudged and decreed “that plaintiffs are, and were on October 18, 1932 (date of alleged ouster), the owners in fee simple of the lands in suit (describing same) and as such owners entitled to the possession of same; that on said date and continuously thereafter the defendant unlawfully withheld the possession;”' that plaintiffs recover damages, rents and profits (assessed) and the possession of the premises and have writ of restitution.

Defendant Eno Eversmeyer, alone, appealed.

Owing to the contentions of the parties a construction of the pleadings becomes necessary, and will determine, at the outset, some minor questions raised.

It was not error for the trial court to deny appellant’s motion to strike plaintiffs’ reply and by such ruling treat appellant’s answer as converting the cause into one in equity. True, in the beginning the case was plain ejectment at law. On .the face of the deeds of conveyance mentioned above, which were introduced in evidence, legal title was apparently in the plaintiffs and, as against appellant’s general denial, if his pleading had stopped with that, the plaintiffs would have been entitled to the possession of the premises on the additional proof of ouster as alleged, and a recovery of damages, rents and profits on proof of same. The same result would have followed notwithstanding appellant’s further plea that title passed, immediately upon the execution of appellant’s deed of trust, to the trustee named therein. This latter, because a mortgage is but a security for the payment of the debt or the discharge of the engagement for which it was originally given, and until the mortgagee enters for breach of condition, and in any respect until final foreclosure, the mortgagor continues the owner of the estate. [Kennett v. Plummer, 28 Mo. 142; Farmers’ Bank v. Bradley, 315 Mo. l. c. 811, 815, 288 S. W. 774; 41 C. J., p. 620, sec. 591.] Regardless of whether or not it had merits, appellant’s motion to strike was waived by his pleading over.

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Bluebook (online)
99 S.W.2d 65, 339 Mo. 804, 1936 Mo. LEXIS 590, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reynolds-v-stepanek-mo-1936.