180 Mo. 642 | Mo. | 1904
This is a proceeding in equity to restrain the defendant, Thomas, the sheriff of Howell county, from executing and delivering to the defendant Hogan, a deed to the northwest quarter of the southwest quarter of section 12, township 25, range 8, in Howell county, pursuant to a sale thereof under a certain mortgage thereon made by Aaron Burroughs, and his wife, the plaintiff, on August 3, 1885, to secure to Howell county the sum of five hundred dollars school money, borrowed by him from the county, and to command the sheriff to execute a deed thereto to the plaintiff. The circuit court entered a decree for the plaintiff as prayed, and the defendants appealed.
The case made is this:
On and for many years prior to August 3, 1885, Aaron Burroughs owned the land in controversy, and lived upon it as his homestead, with his wife and children. It did not exceed the size or value allowed by law as a homestead. On the day aforesaid he borrowed five hundred dollars school money from the county, and gave a mortgage on the land to secure the loan, in which his wife joined. In November, 1887, he died, leaving a widow and seven children, all minors. His estate was hopelessly insolvent. He left four thousand dollars life insurance to his wife. She applied the whole of it to the payment of his debts, including three hundred dollars paid to the county on account of the five hundred dollar loan aforesaid. She also received a sum of money, the amount of which is not disclosed, from her father’s estate, and applied that also to the payment of his debts. She also applied her earnings and those of her children to the payment of his debts. She was anxious to save the homestead for herself and her children, and with this end in view, she made an
At this juncture the defendant Hogan appeared on the scene. He held for collection a note for one hundred dollars, dated January 24,1887, which Aaron Burroughs had made to one Alsup, and which had been allowed in 1889 against the estate. The plaintiff was the administratrix of the estate, and as she had been paying up the debts with her own means and earnings as aforesaid, for some thirteen years, the estate had never been wound up. Hogan demanded of the plaintiff and the sheriff that his claim should be paid out of the excess realized from the sale over and above the balance due on the mortgage. Thereupon, the plaintiff bid five hundred dollars. -There was no other bid and the land was knocked down to her. She tendered the sheriff the balance due under the mortgage and costs of foreclosure, aggregating some forty-seven dollars, and demanded a deed. Hogan insisted that she must pay the whole five hundred dollars so bid, and told the sheriff he would hold him'responsible on his bond if he .did not collect the whole bid. The sheriff refused to make a deed to the plaintiff unless she would pay the five hundred dollars, and upon her refusal so to do, he put up the land for sale again on the same day and Hogan became the purchaser for the sum of fifty dollars. The land is worth from twelve hundred and fifty dol
I.
The land was the homestead of Aaron Burroughs, and during his life it was not liable for his debts except such as he charged thereon. [Bank v. Guthrey, 127 Mo. 189; Macke v. Byrd, 131 Mo. 682; Kelsay v. Bank, 166 Mo. l. c. 173; Rose v. Smith, 167 Mo. l. c. 86; Moore v. Wilkerson, 169 Mo. l. c. 337; Spratt v. Early, 169 Mo. l. c. 370; Balz v. Nelson, 171 Mo. l. c. 690.]
The plaintiff, as widow, and her children had an extended estate of homestead in the land. :[R. S. 1879, sec. 2693; R. S. 1889, sec. 5439; R. S. 1899, sec. 3620.] It is not necessary to the determination of this case to consider whether or not this land could be sold at all by order of the probate court, for the payment of the debts of the deceased subject to the extended estate of homestead in the widow and children, or if so, when it could be so sold, because no attempt to so sell it has-yet been made by the probate court, and because the
Neither is it necessary now to decide what, if any, rights the general creditors would have in the surplus of the five hundred dollars bid, over and above the amount necessary to pay the balance due on the mortgage and the costs of the foreclosure. It is enough now to say that the sheriff had no right to consider or adjudge those questions. The duty of the sheriff was to collect, by a sale of the land, the balance due on the mortgage with the costs of foreclosure, and it was his business to know how much that amounted to. If anyone else than the plaintiff had become the purchaser, it would have clearly been his duty to have collected the whole amount bid, and to apply so much thereof as was necessary to the payment of the balance due on the mortgage and the costs of foreclosure, and, according to the terms of the mortgage, which alone gave him authority to act, to turn over the excess to the mortgagor or his legal representative. The plaintiff was his legal representative and hence she was entitled to receive said excess. It would have been an idle ceremony, therefore, to require her to pay the whole amount of the bid to the sheriff, and for him to deduct said amounts therefrom and hand back the balance to her. If such ceremony had been gone through with, Hogan would not have been entitled to demand payment of his claim out of such surplus either from the sheriff or from, the plaintiff. If he wanted to reach such surplus in her hands it would have been necessary for him to invoke the aid of the probate court to compel her to account for such excess as administratrix, and if she had been so held to account, such fund would have enured to the benefit of all the creditors of the estate in the
But whenever the question as to the disposition of the surplus arose, the right of the widow and children to the money thus arising out of the homestead, would necessarily present itself for adjudication, for such excess would represent and stand in the place of the land, and their right to the money would be the same as their right to the homestead. Likewise the plaintiff’s right of subrogation would then arise, and that right if established would be superior to the claims of the general creditors, for it must be noted that she was entitled to protect her homestead rights as against the mortgage and to bid at the foreclosure sale under the mortgage, and the, fact that she was administratrix of the estate did not deprive her of this right. In fact the estate was insolvent. It had no money which she could employ to protect the interests of the general creditors by paying off this mortgage, even if it would have been proper for her to employ funds of the estate to pay off a mortgage on the homestead.
Other considerations suggest themselves with respect to the complications that would arise under such contingencies, but it is useless to pursue the inquiry here for they are not involved in this case.
The judgment of the circuit court is clearly right and it is affirmed.