Williams v. Walker

62 S.W.2d 840, 333 Mo. 322, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 636
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedAugust 3, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 62 S.W.2d 840 (Williams v. Walker) 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
Williams v. Walker, 62 S.W.2d 840, 333 Mo. 322, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 636 (Mo. 1933).

Opinions

This suit was to determine the title to 108 acres of land in Dunklin County. All parties claim under J.A. Williams, who died seized of said land February 5, 1921. Plaintiffs are his children. His wife did not survive him. This suit is in two counts: Count One alleged that plaintiffs owned the land, but that defendants claim some interest in it, and prayed the court to try, ascertain and determine the title and adjudge plaintiffs to be the owners in fee simple thereof; Count Two was ejectment.

Defendant E.J. Walker filed a separate answer denying plaintiffs' title and claimed the fee to twenty-eight acres of the land, which J.A. Williams had never mortgaged. He alleged that he purchased this twenty-eight acres of land, together with the other eighty acres described in plaintiffs' petition, from the administrator of plaintiffs' father's estate on May 5, 1922. He further alleged that, as a part of the purchase price of the whole 108 acres, he agreed to pay off the two mortgages on the eighty acres made by plaintiffs' father; that he did pay off the second mortgage, paid all interest on the first mortgage until it matured in 1928, and paid the taxes since 1922; but *Page 325 that he did not pay the principal of the first mortgage, when the same matured, because plaintiffs then claimed title to the land. Defendant then stated that he was entitled to and prayed for an equitable lien upon this eighty acres of the land for the amounts he had advanced to pay the second mortgage, interest and taxes on it and for interest on these advances, against any interest plaintiffs might have in this eighty acres of the land. His answer to the second count was a general denial.

Plaintiffs, in reply to this answer, made general denial of the new matter and further alleged that forty acres of the land, to-wit, the southwest quarter of the southwest quarter, section 18, township 21, range 10, was the homestead of their father; and that the first mortgage on the land "was on the 5th day of May, 1922, fully paid off and discharged and from that time to the present has not been a binding obligation against the land."

Defendants M.F. and E.L. Walker (sons of defendant E.J. Walker) filed a separate answer in which they denied plaintiffs' title to the eighty acres mortgaged by plaintiffs' father as above stated and alleged that they were the owners of this eighty acres by reason of acquiring the title thereto of the purchaser at the foreclosure sale under the first mortgage. Plaintiffs' reply to this answer was a general denial and also a specific denial that the first mortgage was a binding obligation because, as it alleged, this mortgage was fully paid off and discharged on May 5, 1922.

There was not much controversy about the material facts. Plaintiffs' father, J.A. Williams, during his lifetime, on February 23, 1918, executed a first mortgage on eighty acres of the land, including the forty acres which plaintiffs claimed and defendants admitted was his homestead, securing a note to C.A. Kiesler (owned by St. Louis Farm Mortgage Company) of $1650, due February 23, 1928. He also executed a second mortgage on this eighty acres of land to defendant E.J. Walker and his partner securing a note for $1334.35. In 1922, the administrator of the estate of J.A. Williams filed a petition for the sale of all his farm, 108 acres, in the Probate Court of Dunklin County. After proper service and publication, an order of sale was made and thereafter the administrator filed a report of a private sale of the whole 108 acres to E.J. Walker for $6,000. Thereafter, an administrator's deed to the whole 108 acres was delivered to E.J. Walker. This deed recited that E.J. Walker had paid the administrator $6,000, the amount of his bid, and that "the grantor assumes all trust deeds against above described property and agrees to pay off said liens out of the purchase money paid by grantee; to-wit: One deed of trust from J.A. Williams to Missouri Loan and Investment Company in the sum of $1334.35, and one from J.A. Williams to C.A. Kiesler in the sum of $1650." The amount of both of these trust deeds, and accrued interest thereon, was $3740.37. *Page 326 Apparently, E.J. Walker wrote the administrator a check for $6,000 and the administrator then gave him a check for $3740.37. E.J. Walker, however, thought that he held out that amount and gave the administrator his check for the difference. Perhaps the first mortgage could not be paid off because it had not matured. Nevertheless, the second mortgage, of which E.J. Walker was part owner, was immediately canceled and released and several years' delinquent interest was paid on the first mortgage, but the principal of the first mortgage was not paid. When it came due in February, 1928, E.J. Walker did not pay it, and when the representative of the first mortgage holder, came to collect it he told him to go ahead and sell it. It was foreclosed and the eighty acres conveyed by trustee's deed to defendant E.J. Raspberry, the purchaser at the foreclosure sale. Thereafter, this eighty acres was conveyed by Raspberry to the sons of defendant E.J. Walker. They paid nothing for it, but the amount due on the first mortgage and foreclosure expenses were paid to the St. Louis Farm Mortgage Company by E.J. Walker. (Raspberry answered here by a general denial.) Defendant E.J. Walker went into possession of all of the land in 1922 and ever since that time rented it and received the rents and profits therefrom.

The court heard the case without a jury and entered a judgment which made a finding that the forty acres, claimed as plaintiffs' father's homestead in plaintiffs' reply, was his homestead at the time of his death, occupied by him with his two minor children, and was at the time of the value of $1,500 (all of which had been admitted). The court also found that the two deeds of trust were liens on the homestead forty and the forty adjoining it, placed thereon by plaintiffs' father during his lifetime. The court, however, found that both of these mortgages were fully paid off and discharged by the administrator of plaintiffs' father's estate on May 5, 1922, and were thereafter no longer liens against the land. The court further found that the probate sale was void insofar as it affected the homestead forty and that no title to it passed thereby to E.J. Walker. The court further found that the excess of taxes paid by E.J. Walker, over the amount of rents he received, on this forty was $83. The court adjudged title in fee simple in plaintiffs to the homestead forty, and also possession thereof, subject to a lien of $83 thereon in favor of E.J. Walker, and adjudged that none of defendants had any rights therein. Defendants appealed from this judgment.

While the decree made no finding concerning nor disposition of the claim made in plaintiffs' petition to the rest of the land nor the title of any of the parties thereto, the controversy seems to have been limited to the homestead forty and plaintiffs' claim to the rest of the land abandoned by plaintiffs' reply and by admissions during the trial. Plaintiffs made no claim that the unencumbered twenty-eight acres was part of their father's homestead. Likewise, defendants *Page 327 seem to have practically conceded at the trial that the administrator's deed conveyed no title to the homestead forty and to have considered E.J. Walker's only right as to it was to have a lien upon it, for the second mortgage and taxes he paid, if the foreclosure title was not good. Those were the issues tried. None of defendants' answers asked for a complete determination of the title to all of the land, as they could have done under Section 1520, Revised Statutes 1929, so they were not entitled to have a judgment determining their title.

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Bluebook (online)
62 S.W.2d 840, 333 Mo. 322, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 636, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-walker-mo-1933.