148 Mo. 335 | Mo. | 1899
A bill in equity was filed in this canse to have two deeds executed by plaintiff to Marcus A. Wolff in his lifetime, on September 18 and 19, 1884, declared a mortgage, and for an accounting.
Prior to July, 1884, John H. Bobb and Abraham Siegel were copartners. John H. Bobb was the owner of real estate and as such was accepted by the probate court of St. Louis as surety on many bonds of William 0. Jamison. It appears that on February 2, 1881, Siegel & Bobb borrowed from William C. Jamison and George W. Cline $4,000, and to secure its payment Bobb gave a deed of trust on the property in suit, known as 1403 Olive street in the city of St. Louis.
On July 3, 1884, John H. Bobb borrowed of Marcus A. Wolff and Company $3,600 and gave the following note indorsed by William O. Jamison therefor:
“St. Louis, July 3rd,.1894.
“Two months after date I promise to pay to the order of William C. Jamison, Esq., thirty-six hundred dollars for value received, negotiable and payable without defalcation or discount with interest from-at the rate of-per cent per annum, payable at the Boatmen’s Savings Bank.
(Signed) “JOHN H. BOBB.
(Indorsed) “WILLIAM C. JAMISON.
(Indorsed) “M. A. WOLFF & CO.”
Wolff discounted the note at the rate of eight per cent and that rate was accepted by Bobb. William 0. Jamison became a defaulter for many thousand dollars in July, 1884, to the estates of many decedents and minor children and Bobb as surety became greatly involved also.
John H. Bobb thereupon conveyed all of his property to his old partner Siegel, De Groot and the Planet Property and Financial Company. Bobb himself left the State, so that the ordinary process of law could not be served upon him.
“The said John H. Bobb hereby covenanting that he will warrant and defend the title to the said premises unto, the said party of the second part and unto his -heirs and assigns forever, against the lawful claims and demands of all persons whomsoever, excepting as to the following encumbrances which said party of the second part, for value received, assumed and hereby agrees to pay and discharge, viz.: A deed of trust of record to secure a note of $5,000, upon which $1,000 has been paid leaving a balance of $4,000 on the principal of said note. All interest has been paid on said note up to April, 1884, when payment of said balance ■due on said note was extended for two years from April, 1884, and four interest notes were given payable for $140, each payable respectively in six, twelve, eighteen and twenty-four months after date. All of said notes were made by John H. Bobb and Abraham Siegel. The general taxes for the years 1884 and 1885, and a special tax f&r paving street front of said property now due.”
This deed seems to have been made with great haste, for on the next day another deed to the same real estate was made by Bobb and wife to Wolff in which the consideration is recited to be $7,600 and Wolff assumes the payment of the $4,000 incumbrance to Jamison & Oline, and the interest notes thereon and the taxes for 1884 and 1885 and a special paving tax.
At this time Wolff surrendered to Bobb his note for $3,600. This canceled note was produced on the trial by Bobb.
Plaintiff claims that contemporaneous with this deed
“1. A. Wolff & Oo., Real Estate Agents,
No. 105 North Eighth Street,
St. Louis, Nov. 17th, 1886.
“Mr. John LI. Bobb, City.
“Dear Sir: Do yon desire to redeem (or purchase) the property on Olive street? Though the time is out, I have no objection to do as if you wish now on the terms originally agreed upon. Please let me hear from you at once, and oblige.
Yours truly, M. A. WOLEE.”
We can find no evidence that Bobb accepted the proposition made in this letter or that he ever afterward spoke or wrote to Wolff about the matter during Wolff’s lifetime.
The reasonable value of the property in 1884, at the date of the deed, was probably $7,500 or $8,000. The building was originally a dwelling house and had been rented for $45 or $50 a month, but had been vacant in the summer of 1884 for a long time. In 1894 it was worth $21,000. Soon after the conveyance to Wolff he expended $3,000 in altering the house and increased the rental to $100 per month.
Plaintiff offered as evidence tending to show Wolff was holding the property in trust or as mortgagee certain conversations of Mrs. Lucy Taylor,, a sister of Bobb, with Mr. Wolff. Mrs. Taylor testified that about the time the deed to Wolff was made she met Wolff in Siegel’s store, west side of Broadway near Olive, and he asked her where her brother John was, and she said he had just stepped out and Wolff then said, “You know I am going to do all I can for John, you know I am a friend of yours.”
In Eebruary, 1886, Mrs. Taylor at the instance of her brother requested Wolff to furnish an itemized account of the receipts and disbursements made by him on account of house 1403 Olive Street. At that time Marcus A. Wolff
“M. A. Wolff & Co.
“In account with House 1403 Olive Street, 1884-5-6
“Items of credit beginning Oct. 13, 1884, down to and inclusive of Jany. 15, 1886, aggregated $766. Tbe debits including tbe $3,600 and interest notes, taxes, repairs, water licenses, etc., beginning September 19tb, 1884, and including Eeby. 15, 1886, amounted to $7,583.25, leaving a balance of $6,817.25, wbicb tbe bouse bad cost Wolff to that date, Wolff not having as yet paid off tbe prior mortgage of $4,000.”
Some time in February M. A. Wolff banded tbis statement with vouchers to Mrs. Taylor to give to John H. Bobb, who was still sojourning in East St. Louis, Illinois, saying to ber, “You know that I bold it in trust for your brother John; I told you when tbis took place I would do all I could for him.”
Nothing having, presumably, been beard from Bobb by Marcus A. Wolff, on November 17, 1886, Wolff wrote him tbe letter of that date already noted and copied.
Abraham Siegel testified that in 1891 M. A. Wolff bad a conversation with him in wbicb be said be would be glad if Mr. Bobb would be able to get out of tbe bole if tbe matter was fixed up about tbe Olive street property.
On July 14, 1891, Marcus A. Wolff died intestate, leaving Eliza J. Wolff, bis widow, George P. Wolff, Edward B. Wolff, Alice S. Wolff, and Eliza C. Wolff, bis children,. as bis only surviving heirs. His widow qualified as admin-istratrix July 21, 1891, and bis estate was finally settled April 12, 1894.
No claim was presented by John H. Bobb against the estate of Marcus B. Wolff pending the administration. John H. Bobb was not a party to the partition suit. No effort to redeem the property in suit was ever made by John H. Bobb, until a very few days before the commencement of this suit on September 11, 1894. At that time John H. Bobb called on Edward B. Wolff and exhibited to him what purported to be two telegrams, as follows:
St Louis, July 15th, 1896.
“Marcus A. Wolff, St. Clair Hotel, New York.
“I think I have a chance to sell 1403 Olive street. What will you give me for my equity of redemption in the same.
“JOHN H. BOBB.”
“New York, July 15th.
“John H. Bobb, 318 Chestnut street,
“2nd Story, St. Louis.
“Don’t want to buy; have calculated on your redeeming in September.
“M. A. WOLFE.”
Babb then requested Edward Wolff to give him an account of the receipts and disbursements on account of this property since February, 1886, which Edward Wolff declined to do, saying, “A man can not stand by for one hundred years and then come around and want his property.”
The circuit court rendered a decree for defendants, and plaintiff appeals.
The prima facie presumption, of course obtains in all such cases that the deed is just what it purports to be on its face, an absolute conveyance of land, and the burden is cast upon the grantor to overcome this presumption and establish it as a mortgage by evidence, clear, unequivocal and convincing, otherwise the natural presumption must prevail.
While the courts have applied many tests to disclose the true nature of the transaction, whether an absolute deed or a mortgage, the one sure test and essential requisite has ever been “the continued existence of a debt” from the grantor to the grantee in the deed. If there is no debt, the instrument can not be a mortgage whatever else it may be, but if the investigation develops an existing indebtedness by the grantor to the grantee, evidenced by bond or note or like agreement, not discharged by the conveyance, the courts have with great unanimity construed the deed to be only a mortgage.
Subordinate to this prime test it has been held as sig nificant, the existence of a collateral agreement by the grantor to pay money; his liability to pay interest; the surrender and cancellation of the evidences of debt, or suffering them to remain outstanding; the substitution of other instruments of indebtedness in place of the old; the fact that the grantor is left in possession and an application or negotiation for a loan pending the transaction.
The controversy between learned counsel in this case arises not so much in the different views they advance as
Measuring tbe conduct of tbe plaintiff by these accepted tests, we find that on tbe eighteenth and nineteenth days of September, 1884, be made an absolute deed to tbe property in question to Marcus A. Wolff, tbe ancestor of tbe defendants, for tbe recited consideration of $7,600, said Wolff assuming and binding himself to pay a mortgage of $4,000 then existing against tbe lot. ■ It appears that prior to this time Wolff bad loaned plaintiff $3,600, which bad become due just prior to tbe date of this deed. According to ordinary experience there can be little doubt that tbe payment of tbe debt due from plaintiff Bobb to Wolff, satisfactorily accounts for $3,600 of the expressed consideration of tbe deed and that tbe assumption of tbe previous mortgage for $4,000 supplies tbe remainder thereof. It appears moreover that this amount $7,600 was about tbe fair and reasonable market value of tbe property at that time. Wolff then and there surrendered tbe note of $3,600 to Bobb and took immediate possession of tbe propety and soon thereafter expended $3,000 of bis own money in changing it so that be could more readily lease it.
Did tbe debt of Bobb to Wolff continue? To hold that it did, we must run counter to all ordinary experience in business transactions.
Wolff surrendered tbe note, tbe only evidence of debt be held against Bobb; Bobb from that day on never paid Wolff a cent of interest and Wolff does not demand any. Wolff takes tbe open possession of tbe property and retains it yet. The prima facie case made by tbe deed is not only not rebutted by these facts, but strongly corroborated by every circumstance accompanyng and succeeding tbe transaction. This property has increased marvelously in value, but to test tbe intention of these parties, let us assume it bad depreciated to half its value and Wolff bad sought to estab-
What difficulties would he have encountered ? He no longer has the note. It is plain that the amount of that note entered into the consideration of an absolute deed. Not only that, but there is his written assumption to a third party of Bobb’s debt of $4,000. Would it not tax the credulity of any chancellor to find in the face of these facts that this was only a mortgage? But the case is evén stronger than this.
Had Wolff commenced such a proceeding in his lifetime, he might have testified and possibly convinced a court that he was right, but suppose his administratrix had brought such an action, and had been confronted with the surrendered and canceled note, contemporaneous with the delivery of the absolute deed, can it be questioned what the decree must have been? Our conclusion is that plaintiff on these facts alone has unquestionably failed to establish his claim of a mortgage.
We must not ignore plaintiff’s contention founded upon the letter of Wolff of November 17, 1886. In this letter Wolff offers to permit Bobb to redeem or purchase “on the terms originally agreed upon,” if he does so “at once.” In the face of this written admission it is not to be questioned that there was “originally,”’ at some time, some agreement by which Bohb was to have the- right to redeem or purchase back this' property.
In .what attitude does this place the parties ? The defendants have an absolute deed, have paid the full consideration expressed therein, are and have been in possession since the execution of the deed.
The settled law requires plaintiff to establish what “the terms originally agreed upon” were. Assuming that it secured a right to redeem or purchase, within what time was he to do so? Upon what terms was he allowed to do this,
It might be inferred from tbe letter of' November 17, 1886, that Wolff would have been willing to settle at that time witb Bobb on tbe basis of tbe statement given to Mrs. Taylor, because be bad not then paid off tbe $4,000 mortgage, but Bobb did not close witb him on tbe strength of that offer.
Tbe testimony of Siegel and of Mrs. Taylor, outside of tbe statement and Wolff’s letter, add nothing whatever to plaintiff’s case. Loose, indefinite remarts, such as these, can not form tbe basis of an intelligent decree by a court.
When Wolff made tbe offer of November 17, 1886, be referred to “terms originally agreed upon.” At that time tbe two parties who bad made that agreement were alive. Had Bobb accepted tbe offer and tendered a performance of those terms on bis part, «and Wolff bad failed or refused, tbe courts were open to Bobb and those terms could have been ascertained, but Bobb waited until tbe lips of Wolff were sealed by death, and bis own by tbe law.
What those terms were we do not know, but it is clearly not Wolff’s fault, but -must, under all tbe facts, be charged to Bobb’s own laches.- It by no means follows that in tbe absence of this evidence as to tbe original agreement, we are bound to presume such an undertaking as would convert this deed into a mortgage.
There is much force in the argument of defendant’s counsel, that the letter of Wolff comes nearer establishing that the contract was an agreement to permit Bobb to repurchase, an agreement essentially distinct from a mortgage. [4 Kent’s Com. (12 Ed.), star p. 144; 2 Wash. Real Prop. (5 Ed.), p. 59; 15 Am. and Eng. Ency. of Law, 780.]
The distinction was early made by this court in Slowey v. McMurray, 27 Mo. 113, in which Judge Soott adopts Chancellor Kent’s text with approval to the effect “that if the relation of debtor and creditor remains, and a debt still subsists, it is a mortgage, but if the debt is extinguished by the agreement of the parties or the money advanced was not by way of loan and the grantor has the privilege of refunding if he pleases by a given time, and thereby entitling himself to a reconveyance it is a conditional sale.”
As already said, when Wolff surrendered his note and unconditionally assumed the $4,000 mortgage to another person, the debt was extinguished. There was left no basis for a mortgage, and it is far more consonant with reason and common business experience to say that if this evidence tends to prove any agreement with certainty, it was no more than an agreement to permit Bobb within a limited time which had expired prior' to November 17, 1886, to repurchase the lot, and having failed and not having brought himself within his agreement, he has lost that right. [Turner v. Kerr, 44 Mo. 433; Forrester v. Moore, 77 Mo. 661.]
As to the attempt to show this was an express trust it need only be said there is no evidence-of such a trust, or its terms and all the argument tending to show that laches can not be imputed to a cestui que trust in an express trust must fall with the proposition upon which it is based. No clearer
Bobb, the plaintiff, with full opportunity if not actual knowledge of the course Wolff was pursuing with reference to the property, knowing the rapidity with which it was increasing in value; offered a chance to redeem or purchase it in 1886, supinely sits by and sleeps on his alleged right until the day before the ten years’ limitation had expired, before commencing his suit. He waits until Wolff is dead and his children are deprived of all the evidence on his side and stands by and sees Wolff’s estate finally settled without preferring his claim, and sees the real estate, including the land in suit, partitioned, and never once suggests that he has an equity of redemption in this land.
Under such circumstances, he has no standing in a court of conscience. His inexcusable laches alone should defeat him, if his utter failure to establish that the absolute deed he executed to the ancestor of these defendants was intended only as mortgage did not justify the dismissal of his bill.
The decree of the circuit court was right, and its judgment is affirmed.