94 Mo. 241 | Mo. | 1887
This cause is before us on plaintiffs’ appeal from a judgment of the circuit court, in
In 1877, after the maturity of these notes, as well as those held by itself, secured on the Olive street lots, the bank transferred and delivered .the same to Wm. McKee, in settlement of a demand held by McKee against it. The notes and the deed, of trust securing their payment were bequeathed by Wm. McKee, now ■deceased, to the defendant, Eliza McKee, who after-
In addition to the facts above stated, it is averred in. the petition, that, on the nineteenth day of May, 1876, the Butchers’ .and Drovers’ Bank entered into an agreement in writing with Thomas Ryan, so much of which as is necessary to a proper determination of the questions involved in the case is as follows: “Inasmuch as Thomas Ryan,, wholesale grocer, by the stringency of the times and the general embarrassment of the country, has become unable, immediately, and as they mature, to meet his- current obligations, and The Butchers’ and Drovers’ Bank, for his relief, and to reestablish him firmly in business, has advanced the sum of twenty-one thousand dollars for the purchase
11 First. That said parties of the first part recognize and declare that the conveyances so by them of the realty hereinbefore mentioned, made nominally to said John P. Gibbons, but in reality for the said bank, are as absolute and unconditional as against said parties of the first part, as in said conveyance expressed, subject to no equity of redemption on the part of said parties, grantors, them, or either of them, and subject to no
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“Fifth. On consideration hereof, said party of the second part, assuming the payment of the taxes and hypothecations, judgments and liens, as in said conveyance expressed, against which said Thomas Ryan does not warrant, covenants to and with said Thomas Ryan, at its own cost and expense, to extinguish the same, and for the sum or sums so to be by it, said bank, paid, to have no reclamation against Thomas Ryan. In witness whereof the said,” etc.
It is also averred in the petition that, contemporaneously with this agreement, said Ryan and wife conveyed to said John P. Gibbons the real estate mentioned in said agreement and including that in controversy in this suit. So much of said deed as bears on the questions arising in the case, is as follows: “This deed, made ‘and entered into this, the nineteenth day of May, in the year of our Lord, eighteen hundred and seventy-six, by and between Thomas Ryan and Annie E. Ryan, his wife, of the city and county of St. Louis, state of Missouri, as parties of the first part, and John P. Gibbons, of the city of St. Louis, as party of the second part, witnesseth: That the said parties of the first part, for and in consideration of the sum of twenty thousand dollars to them cash in hand paid by the said party of the second part, and the receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged, have granted, bargained, and sold, as they do by these their presents grant, bargain, sell, transfer, and convey, unto the said party of the second part, the following pieces or parcels of land, together with the buildings and improvements thereon, lying and being situate in the said city and county of St. Louis, and more particularly known and described as” — the description of the property conveyed we omit.
The habendum clause is as follows: “ To have and
From the facts above stated, Mrs. Christy’s right to enforce the payment of her judgment against Ryan by a sale of the land conveyed, is dependent, first, upon the question whether Ryan, under the terms of the deed, and contemporaneous agreement, had a vendor’s lien which he could have enforced, and, second, if he .had such right, was it acquired by Mrs. Christy, either
That a vendor of land has a lien thereon for unpaid purchase money, enforceable in equity both as against the vendee, and a purchaser from him with notice, even though no express lien is reserved, is well settled in this state. This lien is treated as a constructive or implied trust, and as raised by implication, and the principle on which the lien rests, in the nature of a trust, is, that it would be against conscience to permit a person who has obtained the land of another, to keep it, and not pay the full consideration money. Pratt v. Clark, 57 Mo. 191; 2 Story Eq., secs. 1217-20; Bennett v. Shipley, 82 Mo. 448.
While this rule is firmly fixed, by former adjudications of this court, it is equally well established that the vendor may waive such lien, and the implied trust is never waived, against the intention of the parties, when that intention plainly appears. Hence it is said, in the case of Sullivan v. Ferguson, 40 Mo. 79: “It seems to be settled, where the land is conveyed by deed and with a view to an absolute sale of the property by the vendee to other persons, and to enable him to make a full title to the purchasers, and the vendor takes any other security for the purchase money, though only the personal security of a responsible person, the vendor ’ s lien is to be considered as waived by the agreement and consent of the party.” If, under such circumstances, the lien of the vendor will be deemed, by necessary implication, to be waived, much more will it be so when the vendor has, by express agreement with the vendee, waived it.
It will be observed that the deed made by Ryan
If, as before stated, a vendor’s lien rests upon an implied trust, Ryan expressly waived it, whén he agreed that the land conveyed “ should be subject to no trust, either express or implied,” in his favor. Prom the nature of the business in which the corporation bank was engaged, and the .large amount of real estate conveyed, the presumption may well be indulged .that it was bought with the intention of being sold by the bank, and that the above stipulation was inserted in the agreement in order that it might be sold, without being hampered by any claim of the vendor, either legal or equitable. Under this view of the case a negative answer must be returned to the first question herein stated, and renders a consideration of the second question unnecessary. If it was not intended that Ryan should assert a vendor’s lien for the payment of Mrs. Christy’s judgment against him, which the bank cov
Inasmuch as under the averments of the petition the lien of Mrs. Christy’s judgment against Ryan, rendered in 1875, had expired when the execution was issued upon it in 1879, she could only acquire at the sale made under the execution such interest as Ryan then had in the property, and Ryan having parted with all liis interest by. the deed made to Gibbons, in 1876, she acquired nothing by virtue of her purchase at said sale. Chouteau v. Nuckolls, 20 Mo. 442; Christy v. Flannagan, 14 Mo. App. 253.
The judgment of the circuit courtis hereby affirmed.