Talley v. Buchanan

185 S.W.2d 23, 353 Mo. 912, 1945 Mo. LEXIS 442
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 5, 1945
DocketNo. 39111.
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 185 S.W.2d 23 (Talley v. Buchanan) 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
Talley v. Buchanan, 185 S.W.2d 23, 353 Mo. 912, 1945 Mo. LEXIS 442 (Mo. 1945).

Opinion

*915 DOUGLAS, J.

This is an action to enjoin the sheriff of Jackson County from selling real property under an execution and to prevent the holder of a judgment- from asserting any claim against the property.

John R. Morgan acquired two adjoining -apartment buildings in Kansas City. He borrowed from Betty Buchanan the amounts of the down payments he made in purchasing each apartment. An insurance company held a first mortgage and the Chrisman-Sawyer bank of Independence a second blanket mortgage covering both of them. Morgan became financially distressed. Proceedings were started to foreclose the first mortgage. They were stopped upon Morgan’s producing receipted tax bills covering the properties and upon his making certain payments. The check which Morgan gave in payment of the tax bills was not paid but was returned by the bank so that the taxes were still not satisfied. The holder of the first mortgage then insisted Morgan have nothing further to do with the management of the properties. He thereupon deeded them to his wife who took over the management and collected the rents. Mrs. Morgan turned to her daughter, plaintiff Cyrena R. Talley, for help in keeping up the payments. Cyrena and her husband, plaintiff Forrest A. Talley, made payments which totalled $3,006.16 in an attempt to meet the obligations of. the deeds of trust and maintenance expenses. A garnishment of the rents due apparently stimulated the bank to action in foreclosing the second mortgage for the nonpayment of two years’ delinquent taxes. The Talleys made plans for a line of credit at their bank to finance the purchase of the apartments at the foreclosure sale. They were sent by their bank to the Chrisman-Sawyer bank where they learned the upset price at the sale would be the amount of the second mortgage and cost of foreclosure ór a total of $3,822.96. They were advised by the officials of the latter bank to write off the money they had already paid on the apartments and were discouraged from bidding for them for the reason real estate values were then depressed and apartments a bad risk. However, at the sale the Talleys bid in *916 the apartments at the upset price. The Chrisman-Sawyer bank loaned them the amount of their payment secured by a second mortgage on tbe apartments. The Talleys put up no cash for the purchase. They bought the apartments subject to the first mortgage and also subject to the unpaid taxes which amounted to about $3,000. '

About a year later Morgan took bankruptcy. In his schedules he stated the plaintiffs held the title to the apartments for him; the foreclosure was for the purpose of shutting out other creditors and that the equity “is actually my equity subject to the rights of Talley and wife who I owe $1,500.” He also stated the Talleys “bought in my apartments for me, to return same when I repay them. ’ ’ The trustee in bankruptcy seemingly was unsuccessful in having Morgan’s alleged equity in the apartments included in the bankrupt’s estate. At the time Morgan was to be discharged from bankruptcy Betty Buchanan objected to his discharge but withdrew her objections when he gave her his promissory note for $10,378. She later got judgment on the note and instructed the sheriff to levy on the apartments and sell Morgan’s interest in them. The sheriff made the levy and was advertising the apartments for sale when the Talleys filed this suit to enjoin the sale.

The defendants’ answer alleged the Talleys obtained the apartments under an agreement with Morgan for the purpose of defrauding his creditors and in pursuance of the agreement they provoked the foreclosure; and the Talleys hold the title in trust for Morgan.

The chancellor found the evidence did not sustain the allegations of defendants’ answer; the foreclosure sale was regular and valid; the plaintiffs were the absolute owners of the apartments; and the apartments were not subject to the lien of Betty Buchanan’s judgment. He cancelled the levy and enjoined defendants from proceeding with the execution sale. Defendants appealed.

N'o question is raised about the propriety of subjecting the apartments to the lien of the second deed of trust which was foreclosed. Good faith in so doing must be conceded. The only charge concerns the foreclosure itself. The evidence fails to sustain the charge that it was based on fictitious grounds or induced by collusion. At the time of the foreclosure sale the deed of trust was in default. The default for nonpayment of taxes was chargeable directly to Morgan himself. The default was bona fide. It had existed for a longer time than usually is permitted. There was no inducement, not even a request, by the Talleys that the bank commence foreclosure proceedings. There was no prearrangement with the bank that the sale would be made to the Talleys. The identity of the purchaser was left to the bidding at the sale, the conduct of which is not attacked. The fact the bank advanced credit to the Talleys for the amount of their bid is no evidence of any collusion, nor can any inference of unfair dealing be drawn from it. The amount paid plus the amount of the *917 delinquent taxes assumed by the Talleys added to the sum the Talleys had already advanced for the property more than exceeded the value of the equity. The conveyance to them was in nowise a voluntary conveyance.

The facts of this case do not bring it within the eases relied on by appellants. In Woodard v. Mastin et al., 106 Mo. 324, 17 S. W. 308, overruled on other grounds, the court found on a different state of facts that a foreclosure sale was for the purpose of defrauding creditors and stockholders so as to gain control of a company, and termed jt “a plain, straightforward fraud.” Nor is Miller v. Leeper, 120 Mo. 466, 25 S. W. 378, also overruled on other grounds, apposite because of the difference in facts. The holding in that case was that property bought by a debtor’s wife with money obtained by placing on the debtor’s property an encumbrance in the execution of which the debtor joined, was fraudulent as to creditors. The ruling in Citizens Bank of Pleasant Hill v. Robinson, 342 Mo. 697, 117 S. W. (2d) 263 is likewise not applicable. A foreclosure was set aside in that ease because there was no actual bona fide default but a fictitious one was prearranged for the express purpose of bringing about a foreclosure.

The Talleys introduced as part of the plaintiffs’ case the entire record of Morgan’s bankruptcy proceedings in an attempt to show that Morgan had been discharged from liability on his debt to Betty Buchanan. They did not offer merely the schedule showing the debt and the discharge, nor did they attempt to restrict their offer of the entire proceedings for the specific purpose of showing the debt was discharged. They put in the entire proceedings without qualification or limitation. Even though the statements were contained in evidence the Talleys themselves introduced, the Talleys were not conclusively bound by them because there was other evidence introduced by the Talleys which contradicted the statements. This evidence was that they, the Talleys, were the absolute owners of the apartments. Had the statements been the only evidence offered by the Talleys about the ownership of the property they would be in no position to deny them, having introduced them, and in such a case would be bound by them.

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Bluebook (online)
185 S.W.2d 23, 353 Mo. 912, 1945 Mo. LEXIS 442, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/talley-v-buchanan-mo-1945.