79 Mo. App. 248 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1899
In 1890 defendants executed a deed of trust upon sixty-two and one-Jialf acres of land to secure $3,000, then borrowed by them from O. S. Blanchard. Twenty acres of the land thus conveyed were previously encumbered by a trust deed, which was foreclosed in 1894 by sale to Norah O. McDaniel. The second deed of trust was foreclosed, and plaintiff who had become the assignee of the note secured thereby purchased the property described in the deed of trust. For failure of title to the twenty acres sold under the preceding deed of trust, she brings the present action upon the covenants implied from the use of the words, “grant, bargain and sell,” in the trustee’s deed under which she purchased.
The answer admits the foregoing facts, and avers that plaintiff’s bid of $2,900 was equal to the amount remaining due on the note assigned to her; that she purchased the land described in the trust deed with the full knowledge that twenty acres thereof had been conveyed under foreclosure of a former deed of trust; that the amount of her bid was sufficient to pay her note, which was canceled and delivered to
The replication denied the facts stated in the answer, except the averment therein that the land was worth $200 per acre. The cause was tried by the court, a jury being-waived, and judgment rendered for plaintiff for $1,000, from which defendants appealed.
The first error assigned is that the court had no jurisdiction to try the case. The record shows that the regular judge of the court was disqualified by an application for change of venue on account of objections to him, and that Hon. O. H. Travers was selected as special judge to try the case; that he duly qualified as such and entered upon the discharge of his duties, whereupon the defendants moved for a change of venue on account of objections to him, which he overruled, and thereafter voluntarily resigned his position as special judge, whereupon the parties failing to agree to the selection of another special judge, the clerk held an election, whereat Hon. G-. A. Watson, was duly elected. The special election so held by the clerk was correct. E. S. 1889, secs. 3323, 3325 and 3329. The ruling of the preceding special judge, Hon. O. H. Travers, denying a second motion of defendants for change of venue on the same ground alleged in their former motion, was also correct. State v. Anderson, 96 Mo. loc. eit. 247. As the defendants were not entitled to a change of venue from the special judge, the selection of a second special judge, upon the voluntary resignation of the first special judge, was not governed by the provisions of section 2262, Eevised Statutes 1889, as amended in Session Acts of 1895, pages 92 and 93 but was governed by section 3325, hence this assignment of error is ruled against appellants.
Finding no reversible error in the record, the judgment is affirmed. Judge Bland concurs; “Judge Biggs is of the opinion that the refusal of Mr. Travers to act as special judge after he had qualified, left the'case in the same condition as if he had refused to serve in the outstart, and that upon his refusal to act it became the duty of the circuit judge to grant a change of venue as the parties did not consent to another election and did not agree on some one else to try the case. He is therefore of the opinion that Mr. Watson had no jurisdiction to try the case.”