Schanewerk v. Hoberecht

22 S.W. 949, 117 Mo. 22, 1893 Mo. LEXIS 329
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 19, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 22 S.W. 949 (Schanewerk v. Hoberecht) 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
Schanewerk v. Hoberecht, 22 S.W. 949, 117 Mo. 22, 1893 Mo. LEXIS 329 (Mo. 1893).

Opinion

Brace, J.

— This is an action in ejectment for two lots in the town of Cole Camp, Benton county. The petition is in common form, and the answer is a general [24]*24denial. Trial before the court without a jury and judgment for the plaintiff. The defendant brings the case here by writ of error.

The plaintiff to show title, first, read in evidence a deed of trust duly executed by the defendant, bearing date the twenty-fourth of April, 1883, conveying the premises to Garret Keiffer in trust to secure the payment of three promissory notes of the same date, executed by defendant to Henry Mahnkin and Claus Mahnkin, each for the sum of $933.35, payable one, two and three years after date; and in default of payment, the said trustee, “ or in the event of his sickness, death or absence from the county of Benton or other disability or refusal to act,” the sheriff of said county, “upon request of the holder,” was therein authorized to sell the premises “at public vendue for cash at the court house door in the county of Benton, first giving twenty days’ notice, etc.; next, a deed from John W. Payton, sheriff of Benton county, acting under said deed of trust on account of the refusal of the trustee therein named to act, dated January 30, 1888, conveying the premises to plaintiff in pursuance of a sale that day made by him thereof in compliance with the power conferred in said deed of trust.

To defeat the plaintiff’s recovery upon this title, by showing an out-standing title in another, the defendant read in evidence a deed from said trustee, dated June 23, 1885, executed in pursuance of a sale made that day by him to one Prank Schanewerk in compliance with the terms of said deed of trust and recorded August 31, 1885; and offered to read in evidence a deed recorded the' same day from Y. Newell, sheriff of said county, dated July 24, 1885, conveying the premises to the said Prank Schanewerk, executed in pursuance of a sale made by said sheriff on that day, duly advertised by the trustee in accordance with the requirements of said [25]*25deed of trust, but which sale the said trustee refused to make. This deed was excluded by the court on the objection of the plaintiff, for the reason that it showed that the land was advertised by the trustee and the sale made by the sheriff.

The plaintiff in rebuttal introduced parol evidence tending to prove that for many years there stood in the court house square in the town of Warsaw, a courthouse erected by said county, in which all its courts were regularly held; also a small house of one room, some fifty to seventy-five feet from the court house, used as a county clerk’s office. That for several years prior to the sale by Keiffer, the trustee, to Frank Schanewerk in 1885, “said court house had been abandoned and torn down, not even the foundation remaining.” That after the abandonment of said court house, the county court held its sessions in said county clerk’s office, and the circuit court held its sessions in a building known as the Christian church, situate' “across one block and two streets from said court house square” in said town. This was the situation when the sales were made to Frank Schanewerk, except that it was also shown that at that time there was another small one-room building in the square used as a circuit clerk and recorder’s office.

The property was first offered for sale in front of the county clerk’s office between one and two o’clock p. m., there being present about fifteen persons; and “bid off” by one P. D. Hastain, who refused to payfor it. About two qr three hours afterwards, and when there was present only about one-third of the number as at the first offer, the property was again offered for sale at the same place and knocked off to the said Frank Schanewerk upon his bid of $500. Thereupon the trustee announced that he would sell said property also at the 'church and he and all the crowd except Hastain [26]*26repaired to the church, and the property was again offered for sale at the door of said church and bid off by Frank Schanewerk for $500. And in pursuance of these proceedings the deed of June 23, 1885, was made to him. At the time the sales were being made, no court of any kind was being held in the county clerk’s office or in said church building.

It was also shown that Newell who, as sheriff and trustee made the second deed offered in evidence but rejected by the court, sold the property both in front of the county clerk’s office and at said church, and that it was bid off at both places by Frank Schanewerk at $500.

The power of sale given in the deed of trust, was restricted to a sale “at the court house door in the-county of Benton,” the time of which sale had been-previously advertised for twenty days. This power is-the creature of contract, and not of law, and must be-strictly followed, in order to render its exercise legitimate. The evidence shows that at the time the sale was made the old court house had been torn down and not a vestige of it remained, and that the new oneafterwards erected upon the same site had not yet been built. But it does not show what the situation was-when the deed of trust was made. So that, conceding-that we might resort to the circumstances attending the transaction for assistance in ascertaining the intention-of the grantor, we have nothing to go to in this case-except the deed. The letter of the deed is that the sale must be made at the court house door, i. e., that one sale of the property shall be made, at one door, of one particular court house; not that several sales’ shall be made at different times, at the door of several court houses, as was attempted in this case.

The old county clerk’s office in the public square-in which the county court held its sessions, might for [27]*27some of the purposes of that court, be called a court house, and the church temporarily provided for the circuit court to hold its session in, might (at least when that court was in session) be held to be the court house for judicial proceedings in that cou/rt. Kane v. McCown, 55 Mo. 181; Bouldin v. Ewart, 63 Mo. 331. But it must be remembered that we are here dealing with a power created in a private contract, by a person using language in its usual and ordinary signification, and when he says “court house in Benton county,” nothing else appearing, he means the house provided by the county for the purpose, and in which are held the sessions of the various courts of the county (Hambright v. Brockman, 59 Mo. 52), and in which are generally the offices of the county officials. For that is the meaning usually and ordinarily given to the term “court house in a county of Missouri.”

The evidence in this case discloses that not one of the sales of the property made, prior to the one under which the plaintiff claims, was made- at the door of the court house in Benton county as thus defined, unless a part can be made equal to the whole. In the recent case of Stewart v. Brown, 112 Mo. 171, in which four opinions were delivered in court in banc, the questions briefly discussed in this paragraph were very deliberately considered and the previous decisions reviewed, and we are all agreed that none of the sales to Frank Schanewerk in this case can be upheld under that or any of the previous decisions of this court.

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Bluebook (online)
22 S.W. 949, 117 Mo. 22, 1893 Mo. LEXIS 329, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schanewerk-v-hoberecht-mo-1893.