Thornton v. Irwin

43 Mo. 153
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJanuary 15, 1869
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 43 Mo. 153 (Thornton v. Irwin) 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
Thornton v. Irwin, 43 Mo. 153 (Mo. 1869).

Opinion

Bliss, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court.

On the 5th of September, 1860, plaintiff drew a bill of five thousand dollars, at four months, payable at the Citizens’ Bank of New Orleans, and procured its indorsement, for his own accommodation, by defendants Irwin, Ranson, and Hedges, which bill was discounted for him at the Kansas City branch of the Union Bank. To secure his indorsers he mortgaged to them certain real estate in Kansas City, including lots 167 and 168. On the 7th of January following, one dayvbefore the maturity of the bill, another bill of the same amount, at three months, drawn and indorsed by the same parties, was procured by plaintiff, discounted by the same bank, and its proceeds applied to the payment of the first bill. On the 10th of April following, the plaintiff paid five [160]*160hundred dollars on the debt, and procured another bill at ninety-days, drawn and indorsed by the same parties, to be discounted by the same bank, and the proceeds were employed in discharge of the second bill. When the last bill matured it was protested, the indorsers were sued, and judgment was obtained against them, which was paid by defendant Irwin. The original mortgage to secure these indorsers contained a power of sale in the mortgagees, and soon after the last bill was paid by Irwin they advertised and sold the land covered by it; and one Hale, by the procurement of Irwin, bid in the property, and, without paying or expending anything upon the purchase, received a deed from the mortgagees, and soon after deeded the property to Irwin. Upon the maturity of the first bill — and upon this matter the chief controversy arises — the said Ranson and Hedges, without the knowledge of Irwin, as he claims, accepted another mortgage of Thornton, covering all the land embraced in the first mortgage except said lots 167 and 168, for the security of the indorsers of the second bill, and authorized the recorder of deeds of Jackson county to enter upon the records satisfaction of the first mortgage, which was done. Thornton was absent from the State at the time of the sale made under the original mortgage, and the property was bid off by Hale for the sum of four thousand eight hundred and sixty-six dollars. Thornton, Ranson, and Hedges had become insolvent, and Irwin remained the only responsible party to the bill.

Thornton filed his petition in equity in the Jackson County Circuit Court, praying that the sale to Hale and defendant Irwin be set aside, that he be permitted to redeem the second mortgage upon the repayment of the amount paid by Irwin, with interest, etc., and for an account of rents and profits, with the general prayer for relief. He sets up at length the transactions of the parties, and bases his claim for relief upon the ground that the first hill -was paid and satisfied on the 7th of January; that Ran-son and Hedges took the second mortgage given to secure defendants’ liability upon the second bill, and which left out said lots 167 and 168, with the consent of Irwin, and that the release and satisfaction of the first mortgage by them was made with his [161]*161approval. He also claimed that the sale to Hale was a mere cover ; that the real purchaser was Irwin, the trustee as well as mortgagee.

The Circuit Court made long and special findings, and found the allegations in relation to the payment of the first note and the satisfaction and discharge of the mortgage to be untrue. But the court also found that Irwin, the mortgagee with power to sell, purchased the mortgaged property at his own sale, through the medium of Hale as his agent, and held that the plaintiff was entitled to redeem. An interlocutory judgment was entered, allowing plaintiff to redeem upon payment of the principal, interest, taxes, etc.; and at the next term, upon the deposit by the plaintiff of the sum of eight thousand six hundred and fifty dollars and fifty cents with the clerk, the amount found due under the interlocutory judgment, the court gave final judgment, canceling the mortgages and setting aside the sale. Defendant Irwin appealed to the District Court, which affirmed the judgment of the Circuit Court, and brings the cause by writ of error to this court.

By the proper motions and excéptions the whole record is brought before us, and we must examine to see whether the judgment of the Circuit Court should be sustained. The first and chief ground upon which the petition seeks relief is the claim that the original bill and mortgage were satisfied. The pleader evidently regarded that as his chief if not only point; and the claim of the plaintiff, so strongly urged, that tho petition afforded no other ground for relief, is at least plausible. I have examined with care all the evidence bearing upon this question, contradictory as it is, and am satisfied that no other reasonable conclusion could be arrived at than that of the Circuit Court. Mr. Harris, cashier of the bank, and one of plaintiff’s witnesses, insists that the first bill was paid and not renewed; but, taking his whole testimony, I find it rather an opinion than statement of fact, and his careless statements in relation to “telegraphic exchanges,” squarely contradicted by the plaintiff himself, do not entitle his opinion to any great weight. The testimony of plaintiff and his witnesses, taken together, shows that the second bill was simply a [162]*162renewal, a.nd not a payment of the first, and that the demand of the price of exchange and the difference between the value of New Orleans and Missouri currency was only a mode, quite too common in banks, of obtaining a higher rate of interest than the law allows.

In relation to the satisfaction of the first mortgage entered of record by Ranson and Hedges, it is not brought home to Irwin. It is true the plaintiff testifies to declarations in regard to it by Irwin that would imply assent, but they are expressly contradicted by him and by the probabilities of the case. A release of his security by an accommodation party to a note or bill is not to be presumed; and even if a parol release, or power to release, were good, the evidence should be clear before it will be found. Not being released, and there being no intention on the part of Irwin to release it, the mortgage will remain as security for the new bills. (Hill. on Mort. ch. 17.)

The plaintiff below also claims that, at the sale of the property by the mortgagees, it was purchased by Irwin, one of them, through the intervention of a third person, and therefore the sale was voidable at the instance of the mortgagor.

The fact was sufficiently proved, and the legal position is well taken. Irwin’s own testimony needs but a slight addition to enable us to find the fact, and that addition is supplied by the conduct of Irwin and Hale at and after the sale. Irwin says that he applied to his friend Hale to make the purchase, and told him that he would save him harmless, that he should lose nothing by it. At the sale, and just after his bid, upon being congratulated upon the purchase, Hale stated to the bystanders, among whom was Irwin, that he had bought for Irwin, though it does not appear that the latter hoard it. Upon leaving town, a deed to Hale was executed by Irwin and the others, and left with Irwin’s attorney ; and immediately on his return a deed from Hale was made to him, and the only money that passed between them was the attorney’s fee for drawing papers and attending the sale, which was paid by Irwin. Hale paid nothing, made nothing, lost nothing, did everything at Irwin’s instance, and it is impossible to resist the conviction that he .acted simply as his friend and agent. The court, [163]

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43 Mo. 153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thornton-v-irwin-mo-1869.