61 Mo. 354 | Mo. | 1875
delivered the opinion of the court.
From the record it appears that in 1858, the plaintiff was the owner of twenty acres of land adjoining the town of Pleasant Hill, in Cass county, and that in the same year he sold and conveyed the same by deed of general warranty to the Pacific Railroad Company, and that the deed was duly placed upon record. The railroad company laid out an addition to the town on the tract of land, erected their depot thereon, sold lots, and in consequence it has become valuable. At the January term, 1870, of this court, a decision was rendered in the case of the Pacific Railroad vs. Seely, et al., from which the conclusion was deduced, that the deed from the plaintiff to the railroad company was inoperative, and conveyed no title, and that the real title to the land still remained in the plaintiff. Whilst laboring under this mistaken view of the purport of the decision in the Seely case, the defendant conceived the idea of purchasing from the plaintiff the twenty acre tract which had previously been conveyed to the railroad company. Several interviews were had between the parties, £¡,nd the whole matter was canvassed; both parties were equally
As a defense, the answer alleged that the transaction was illegal, and that there was a failure of consideration for the execution of the notes. On a trial before the court the judgment was for the defendant.
The only point in the case about which there'is any controversy, is the sale and conveyance of the twenty acre tract. It is insisted, first, that that transaction was illegal, by the statute law of this State; and, secondly, that it was fraudulent and against public policy, and therefore an action will not lie upon it. The provision of the statute invoked to sustain this view, is the 52d section of the 3rd article in regard to crimes and punishments. (Wagn. Stat., 462.) The following is the section :
“Every person who shall make, execute or deliver any deed or writing for the conveyance or assurance of any lands, tenements or hereditaments, goods or chattels, which he had previously, by deed or writing, sold, conveyed, mortgaged or assured, or covenanted to convey or assure, to any other person, such first deed being outstanding and in force, and shall
The statute was obviously intended to prevent fraud, and its penalty is denounced against the making of the deed with a fraudulent intent. The simple making of a second deed, whilst a former one is outstanding and in force, without reciting the same, does not constitute the offence, if there is no intention to defraud, and the deed does not have that effect. There must be a fraudulent intent designed to operate to the injury or detriment of some person.
Iu the case of Gilmore vs. Cook (33 Mo., 25) which was an action on promissory notes given for the purchase money for land which had been conveyed to the defendant by a quitclaim deed, the defense was set up, that the plaintiff fraudulently concealed from defendant, at the time of the sale and conveyance, the fact that he' had previously granted to the North Missouri Railroad Company the right of way through the land. At the trial it was shown that the deed to the defendants made no allusion to .the prior grant, but it was proved that the defendants were fully aware of and had knowledge of that fact, and it was held that the matter setup in the answer constituted no defense; that a grantee, by quit-claim deed, who, at the time of his purchase, had notice of previous grant by his grantor, could not allege that he was defrauded.on the ground that the notice was not of a particular kind, as by recital in the deed.
It is plain enough in the present case that there could have been no intention to defraud the defendant; for he was well acquainted with all the facts, and made the first proposition to purchase of the plaintiff. He thought he saw a chatice for a speculation, and was willing to risk his money on the venture. It cannot be said that there was any design to defraud the Pacific Railroad Company, because its deed was on record — its rights were fixed, and the plaintiff had no power
There is nothing in the position advanced, that the contract was so palpably against public policy that it should be held void. If the plaintiff possessed any title .to the property, he bad the legal right to dispose of it. There was nothing illegal in his action, though, in a moral sense, the transaction reflects no credit upon him, nor on the members of his church whom he says he consulted before he made the sale.
The judgment must he reversed and the cause remanded.