138 Mo. 369 | Mo. | 1897
This is an action to reform and foreclose a mortgage upon real estate in Callaway county. Suit was brought July 9, 1890, in the circuit court of Callaway county, but afterward, by proper proceedings, removed for trial to the circuit court of Jackson county, where, upon trial, a decree was rendered as hereinafter stated.
The mortgage was given to secure the payment of fifteen negotiable promissory notes for the sum of $5,000 each, with interest after maturity at the rate of seven per cent per annum, executed by the defendants, George W. O. Boberts and Nathan Blevins, at Chicago, on the nineteenth day of July, 1889, and made payable to the order of the defendants, Conrad H. Lebold and John M. Fisher, by the firm name of Lebold & Fisher, at the banking house of Lebold, Fisher & Co., at Abilene, in the State of Kansas.
Two of the notes were payable in four mouths, two in five months, two in six months, two in seven months, two in eight months, two in nine months, two in ten months, and one in eleven months after their date. The consideration for the notes was the conveyance by said defendants, Conrad H. Lebold and John M. Fisher, to the said defendant, George W. C. Bohrer, of a large tract of land in Callaway county, Missouri, described in the petition.
The mortgage was upon this same land, was executed by George W. O. Bohrer and Maggie Bohrer, his wife, was dated July 19, 1889, acknowledged by
There was no such promissory note as the one described in the mortgage, which was clearly intended and designed by all the parties to it to secure the payment of the fifteen notes, aggregating $75,000, given for the purchase money of the land, but by mistake it purported to secure one note for $75,000.
Lebold, Fisher & Company was a firm of bankers doing business at Abilene, in the State of Kansas, composed of Conrad H. Lebold and John M. Fisher. The samp persons were also partners in some other kinds .of business under the firm Píame of Lebold & Fisher. The ten notes first maturing were all indorsed by Lebold & Fisher to the order of Lebold, Fisher & Company, and were afterward, and before their maturity, sold by Lebold, Fisher & Company, one to each of' ten different parties to this suit, Lebold, Fisher & Company indorsing each of them before such sale. One of the four months notes became in this manner the property of the First National Bank of Mauch Chunk, Pennsylvania, one of the plaintiffs. The other nine of the ten in like manner became the property respectively of the plaintiff, the First National Bank of Oxford, New York; the defendants, Hanover Savings Fund Society of Hanover, Pennsylvania; B. R. Abbe; the People’s Bank of Newport, Pennsylvania;
On October 31, 1889, Lebold, Fisher & Company made a general assignment of all their property and effects for the equal benefit of their creditors under the laws of the State of Kansas, to Clarence F. Mead. This assignment was recorded on the same day. On the twenty-seventh day of November, 1889, the defendant, John Johntz, was elected assignee of the estate of the insolvent firm, and qualified, and assumed the performance of his duties. As such assignee he came into possession of the last maturing five of the fifteen notes.
The defendant, George W. C. Rohrer, acquired his title to the real estate covered by the mortgage, by a deed from John M. Fisher and Conrad H. Lebold and their wives, dated November 13, 1888, acknowledged November 30, 1888, and filed for record in the office of the recorder of Callaway county, November 4, 1889. The defendant, George W. C. Rohrer, and his wife executed to the defendant, George W. Hurd, a deed for the property, dated November 2,1889, acknowledged by George W. G: Rohrer, November 4, 1889, and by his wife, November 2, 1889, and recorded November 4, 1889. The deed from Lebold and Fisher to Rohrer, and the mortgage from Rohrer to Lebold and Fisher, were recorded before the deed from Rohrer to Hurd. Although the conveyance to Hurd was absolute in form, it was taken by him as vice-president and agent of the First National Bank of Abilene, Kansas, as
.The appellants, Lamon V. Harkness, Walter Wyman and Lamon D. H. Russell, constituted the firm of Harkness, Wyman & Russell. The defendant, George W. C. Rohrer, executed his note for $4,400, dated at Abilene, Kansas, September 13,1889, payable six months after date to the order of Lebold, Fisher & Company, which they afterward sold and indorsed to Harkness, Wyman & Russell. They brought suit on it by attachment against George W. O. Rohrer, the maker, and Lebold & Fisher, the indorsers, in February, 1890, in the circuit court of Callaway county, and levied an attachment upon the land described in the mortgage. The defendants in that suit were brought into court by publication, and special judgment was rendered against them on May 9, 1890.
The deed from Lebold & Fisher to Rohrer, and the mortgage from Rohrer to Lebold & Fisher were withheld from record by an arrangement between John M. Fisher and Rohrer, the reason being that by recording them it might interfere with a sale of the property. The deed and mortgage about the time of the assignment of Lebold, Fisher & Co. were found by C. F. Mead who had been their attorney, and who became their assignee, among their papers, and at his direction they were at once sent for record by Fisher. None of the notes were due at the time the deed and mortgage were recorded. They were not only not due at that time, but they recited upon their face that they were given “for purchase money,” and the parties who purchased the ten notes were informed that they were secured by mortgage on the land purchased by Rohrer from Lebold & Fisher. ‘
The answer of Harkness, Wyman & Russell ad
Their answer further alleged that ■ the mortgage from Rohrer and' the deed to him from Lebold & Fisher were made with the intent on the part of Lebold & Fisher and Rohrer to defraud, hinder and delay them and others as their creditors, and to cover up the lands so conveyed and mortgaged and prevent their subjection to the debts of the creditors of Lebold & Fisher and Rohrer, and that the plaintiffs took the notes mentioned in the petition with knowledge of such fraudulent intent, and ought not, therefore, to have precedence or priority over the attachment liens of the defendants. It also denied all allegations of the petition not specially admitted.
The decree was for the reformation and foreclosure
From the judgment rendered Harkness, Wyman & Russell appealed and bring the case here for review.
The first question for consideration is as to the effect of withholding from the record the deed from Lebold & Fisher to Rohrer, and the mortgage from Rohrer to Lebold & Fisher to secure the payment of the purchase money for the land, upon Harkness, Wyman & Russell as the holders of one of the notes. It is contended by appellants that it was a fraud upon them. That the law gives to the creditor the right to rely upon the apparent property of the debtor in extending to him credit either in the creation of an indebtedness or in any subsequent renewal thereof, and will hold as fraudulent any device or secret trust by which the creditor is deceived as to the apparent property of his debtor, or deprived of the right to look to such property for the satisfaction of his debt.
A sufficient answer to this contention is that no such question is presented by their pleadings in which the only allegation of fraud is, that the mortgage sought to be corrected and foreclosed by plaintiffs, as well as a deed, absolute in form, for the same lands
The rule is that where a pleading charges fraud the facts constituting the fraud must be alleged. Clough v. Holden, 115 Mo. 336; Hoester v. Sammelmann, 101 Mo. 619; Reed v. Bolt, 100 Mo. 62; Cox v. Esteb, 68 Mo. 110; Bank v. Doran, 109 Mo. 40; Smith v. Sims, 77 Mo. 269; Newham v. Kenton, 79 Mo. 382. No ground for holding the deed and mortgage void upon facts not within the scope and meaning of the pleadings, can be considered by this court, and if appellants had purposed assailing the deed aud mortgage upon the ground of fraud, because of their having been withheld from the record for a fraudulent purpose, they should have so alleged in their pleadings.
But if sufficiently pleaded the evidence in support of it was not sufficient upon which to predicate a judgment or decree upon that theory of the case. In order to do so, the agreement to withhold the deed and mortgage from record for an indefinite time, without more, was not sufficient, but the agreement must have been made for the purpose of deceiving others, or must have had that effect.
In Bank v. Buck, 123 Mo. 141, there was an understanding between the bank and Buck & McCrosky, when the deeds were accepted by the bank that they should be withheld from record until the bank deemed it necessary to record them for its protection, but, in making this agreement, the parties thereto were not
Buck & McCrosky were the apparent owners of large real estate property. One of the depositors in the bank of Buck & McCrosky and a party to the suit by the name of King examined the records in the recorder’s office of the county about a month before they made an assignment, to see what property they owned. He found nothing suspicious and continued his deposit account. A month or so before the assignment another depositor and party to'the suit by the name of Coberly became suspicious and called upon Buck for a statement; Buck said that he owned the property in litigation, the Maple Avenue farm and other land which he named. With these statements Coberly let his account amounting to about $10-,000 stand. These depositors knew nothing about the unrecorded deeds held by the plaintiff, but supposed Buck was the owner of the properties thereby conveyed and of which he at all times had possession.
The court said: “Now, Buck & McCrosky were by means of these deeds enabled, in part at least, to obtain credit with the plaintiff to three times the amount of their capital in their banking business, and to incur a further contingent liability on re-discounts to twice the amount of such capital. They were daily creating debts at their place of business in DeKalb county, and this fact must have been well known to the plaintiff, for the business relations existing between it and them as disclosed by the evidence before recited gave the plaintiff such knowledge. Buck was in possession of the property, and he and McCrosky were doing business in a part of it, and he was the apparent and reputed owner of all of it. Had these deeds been recorded, depositors and home creditors would have been put upon their guard. Withholding the deeds from record for so long
But in the case in hand neither of the appellants testified as a witness on the trial; there was no evidence that they were misled or induced to give credit by the fact of the apparent ownership, or that they would not have purchased the note if they had known that Lebold & Fisher had sold the property to Rohrer and in return taken from him a -mortgage on the whole of it to secure the payment of the purchase money.
Nor was there any evidence that either Harkness, Wyman or Russell ever at any time before they purchased the note, knew that Lebold & Fisher had ever owned the land embraced in the deed and mortgage, or that they purchased the note on the faith of the ownership of the property. On the other hand the evidence showed that at the time they purchased the note Rohrer, Lebold, Fisher & Company were all
Another contention is that neither the noteholders in this suit nor Mr. Hurd can claim protection as innocent mortgagees or purchasers, so as to cut off the appellants’ right to avoid the deed and mortgage.
Whatever the rule may be elsewhere, it is well settled in this State that the purchaser in good faith for value before maturity of a negotiable promissory note secured by mortgage upon real estate, takes the security, which passes as incident to the note, free from the equities or any private arrangement between the original parties. Patterson v. Booth, 103 Mo. 403; Logan v. Smith, 62 Mo. 455.
In Hagerman v. Sutton, 91 Mo. 519, it is said: “The next point for consideration is the effect of plaintiff’s purchase of the note, which was secured by the mortgage. When plaintiff purchased the note the mortgage passed with it as an incident thereto. This has been the rule since an early day in this State. And when a note is under due, when transferred, and is negotiable, the presumption arises of want of notice, which presumption holds good till countervailing proof
The same rule was announced in Mayes v. Robinson, 93 Mo. 114, in which it was said: “If the defendant took the note discharged of any equities to which it was subject in the hands of the payee, the deed of trust passed to him discharged of such equities to the same extent. Logan v. Smith, 62 Mo. 455. The deed of trust, being incident to the note, partook of the negotiability of its principal. Hagerman v. Sutton, 91 Mo. 519, and authorities cited. If the defendant was a bona fide holder of the note for value before maturity, without notice, he was in equal measure such bona fide holder of the deed of trust.”
But conceding that the noteholders were bound to take notice of the condition of the record, which showed at the time they became the purchasers of the notes the title to the land to be in Lebold & Fisher, and for the sake of the argument that the condition of the record was sufficient to put them on inquiry as to the reason why the deed and mortgage were withheld from record; and if they had done so they .would have