66 Mo. 672 | Mo. | 1877
— This was an action brought in the circuit court of Wayne county, under the statute in relation to the claim and delivery of personal property, for the recovery of “ one circular saw mill, one steam engine, one steam boiler, and the necessary running apparatus thereto belonging.” On the 11th day of April, 1872, the defendants executed a deed of trust, whereby«they conveyed the property sued for to one B. E. Carter, as trustee, to secure the payment of 'certain obligations made by them to the plaintiff. On the 22d day of July, 1872, the trustee, assuming to act under the power conferred upon him by the trust deed, sold said property to the plaintiff at public sale, and executed to him a bill of sale, or rather a formal deed, therefor. The sale took place at the court-house door in Centreville, Reynolds county, the place appointed in the deed, but the property was not present at the sale, and was not actually delivered to the plaintiff. The defendants having refused to surrender the same, plaintiff instituted the present action. At the trial plaintiff offered in
The only evidence of a sale and purchase by the plaintiff, was the instrument in form of a deed, made to him by the trustee. There was no proof of its execution, nor was there any evxdence ox tne truth of the x-ecitals it contained; nor were the recitals themselves made prima facie evidence of their truth by the provisions of the deed of trust. This instrument was, therefore, impropeiiy admitted in evidence. Neilson v. The County of Chariton, 60 Mo. 386; Vail v. Jacobs, 62 Mo. 130.
Nor was the affidavit of the trustee competent evidence. He should have been intx’oduced as a witness. Sec-^on ^ sta'tu'*;e “ relation to advertisements, is inapplicable to a case like the present.
The defendants offeretl to prove that the deed of trust under which the plaintiff claimed, was satisfied aixd extinguished by the payment of the debt thereby secured to be paid, before the sale made by the trustee thereunder; but the coux’t rejected the testimony holding, as declared in one of the instructions, “ that the sale of personal property by a tx’ustee under a deed duly executed and regular upon its face, cannot be attacked in a collateral proceeding, and can only be attacked by the grantor in the deed of trust, or those clainxing under him by a direct proceeding to set the same aside.” Testimony showing that the power of sale conferred upon the trustee had been extinguished by payment of the debt, is undoubtedly admissible in a case like the present,, as the
The defendants should also have been permitted to show, if they could, that part of the property seized by the sheriff as appurtenant to the engine and machinery of the mill, was not a part thereof when the trust deed was executed, and was not included therein. Whether it passed as after acquired property, was a question of law for the court on the facts proven. ■For the errors above indicated, the judgment of the circuit
court will be reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed.