121 Mo. 465 | Mo. | 1894
Action to set aside a sale by trustee under deed of trust. On the fifteenth day of November, 1887, Mina R. Sexton and Warren B. Sexton, her husband, 'were the owners of two hundred and forty acres of land in Ray county, upon which they, on that day, negotiated a loan with the Missouri Trust Company of Sedaba, Missouri, for the sum of $1,700, and gave their note in payment thereof, secured by deed of trust which was duly recorded; said note became due and payable on the first day of November, 1892, and had ten interest coupons thereto attached whereby they promised to pay interest on said principal sum semiannually at the rate of seven per cent, per annum from the date of the note to its maturity. '
It is provided in said deed of trust that if said coupon notes or coupons or either of them should not be paid when due, then all of said notes might, at the option of the holder thereof, become due and payable and the said B. H. Ingram, trustee, should proceed to sell said real estate, for cash, at the courthouse door, in the county of Ray, first giving twenty days notice of the time, terms and place of sale, by publication in
On the eighth day of July, 1887, said Warren B. Sexton and his wife, Mina R. Sexton, became indebted to the plaintiff, Hardwicke, in the sum of $1,700, to secure the payment of which, they executed to him their jjromissory note, due on the eighth day of July, 1889, the interest, if not annually paid, to become as principal and bear the same rate of interest, and for the purpose of securing its payment they executed and delivered to the plaintiff, Haff, as trustee, their certain deed of trust on said land, which was also duly recorded in said Ray county.
The land, at the time of the sale, was worth $4,000 and brought $1,850. It was all sold in one body, but the grantors in the deeds of trust did not request that it be sold otherwise. One forty acres of it was sold a few days after the trustee’s sale to the defendant Deacy for $800.
None of the parties to the first deed of trust are made parties to this action. The petition contains the following allegations:
“Plaintiffs state that, although said note to said Missouri Trust Company was not due for so long a time, yet the said Warren B. Sexton, conspiring with defendants, the Central Bank and defendant Hamilton, to cheat, wrong, swindle and defraud said Hardwicke, who had a subsequent lien on said land, declined to pay the interest on said note to said company, and, by false statements and representations made to them, the said trust company (at a time when the said trust company did not want to make a sale under said deed of trust) procured that said lands should be offered for sale by said B. H. Ingram, the trustee for said trust company under their said deed of trust, and plaintiffs state that by a false and fraudulent representation made by .said*469 Sexton be did procure that said lands should be set up under a pretended advertisement and that the same was exposed for sale at a pretended sale of said lands by said Ingram on the twentieth day of August, 1888.
“Plaintiffs state that said Sexton, in conspiracy with defendant Central Bank procured that said lands be bid in at said pretended sale by their mutual coun-sellor as also their mutual confidential adviser, Robert H. Hamilton, defendant herein, and that, a pretended deed be made to said defendant Hamilton, the same that is recorded in record book 44, page 183, of the deed record of Ray county, Missouri.
“Plaintiffs state that said deed so made to said Hamilton is void and is inoperative, except as an assignment of the interest of the said Missouri Trust Company on account of the following facts:
“Prior to making of said pretended sale by said Ingram, said Warren B. Sexton and defendant Robert H. Hamilton and defendant Central Bank confederated and conspired to cheat and defraud plaintiff Hardwicke out of his said debt and his security therefor in this, that said Hardwicke lived in Clay county, Missouri, and did not take the newspaper in which said real estate was pretended to be advertised; that the defendants aforesaid knew these facts; that said Warren B. Sexton was, or claimed to be, indebted to said Central Bank, which indebtedness was unsecured, and in order that said Central Bank might overreach and take advantage of said Hardwicke and defeat him in collecting his said debt and deprive him of the benefits of said deed of trust to plaintiffs and defeat his lien on said real estate and vest the title to said real estate in said Central Bank or secure one for their benefit for securing the debt of said Central Bank for a nominal consideration free and clear of the deed of trust securing the debt of plaintiff Hardwicke, said defendant conceived the idea*470 of allowing default to be made in the payment of the interest on said note to said Missouri Trust Company and by fraudulent representations to said Missouri Trust Company and said Ingram procuring a sale of said real estate collusively and without plaintiff Hardwicke’s knowledge and having said Hamilton buy in said real estate for the benefit of said Central Bank at a nominal consideration and that, pursuant to such fraudulent arrangement, said Sexton failed and refused, without defendant Hardwicke’s knowledge, to pay off and discharge one of said interest or coupon notes when the same became due, and fraudulently and falsely represented to said Missouri Trust Company and said Ingram that he had sold said real estate to a person who assumed the payment of the note to said Missouri Trust Company and who had refused to pay saidintei’-est or coupon notes and who had decided to forfeit and give up said real estate and had abandoned the same and that he wished said deed of trust foreclosed in order that he might be protected and that he might again get the title to said property in his own name and procure a new loan and that by such and other fraudulent representations said Missouri Trust Company was induced to permit said Ingram to make an attempted or pretended sale of said real estate.
‘■'That believing said false and fraudulent representations, said Missouri Trust Company requested said Ingram to sell said real estate, and said Ingram caused a notice of said sale, or pretended notice, to be published in a newspaper published in Richmond, Missouri, and had said pretended sale, but believing that .the sale was consented to by all parties concerned, and that the price at which it should be sold, and who should secure the purchase, was agreed upon and consented to by all parties who had any interest in said real estate (he not knowing at that time of plaintiffs’*471 interest), and believing that said sale was made solely to transfer the title to said Sexton or to some one whom said Sexton might designate, and that such transfer was consented to by all the parties concerned; failed to exercise proper care in executing the trust reposed in him, in that he failed to sell said real estate in separate and distinct parcels, although said real estate lay in two separate and noncontiguous parcels, and would have sold for a great deal more had it been sold in separate parcels than when sold all together; and failed to exercise proper care in exciting competition at said sale among bidders; and failed to exercise ordinary care and prudence in procuring an adequate price for said real estate, but instead of exercising such care, allowed said real estate to be sold to said defendant Hamilton, for the benefit of defendant Central Bank, for the nominal and inadequate price of $1,860, though said real estate was well worth $7,000, and if said sale had been fairly conducted, and said land sold in separate parcels it would have sold for over $5,000 at said sale.
“That said Sexton, at the time said deed of trust was given securing said note to said Hardwicke, promised and assured said Hardwicke that all interest on the debt secured by said deed of trust to said Ingram would be paid promptly when due, and said Sexton failed to keep said promise, although said Hardwicke believed that said Sexton would make such payments as he had agreed when said deed of trust was given. That said defendants Hamilton and Central Bank well knew at the time said sale was made that plaintiff Hardwicke held a note secured by a second deed of trust on said real estate, and they knew that said Sexton was endeavoring to defraud plaintiff Hard-wicke out of his security for said note, and knew that said Sexton was endeavoring to conceal all knowledge*472 from said Hardwieke of said pretended sale, and knowing these facts they joined with and lent their aid to said Sexton in perpetrating said fraud.
■ ‘‘Plaintiffs further state that, if said Hardwieke had had any knowledge of said pretended sale, he would have bid, or caused to be bid, at least $4,000 for said real estate; but, not seeing or hearing of said pretended advertisement, and believing said Sexton would keep said coupon notes paid when the same became due, as he assumed he would, he had no knowledge of said pretended sale until some time after it was made.
“Plaintiffs further state that said pretended sale was made for a nominal and grossly inadequate price on account of the misrepresentations made to Ingram, and that said Ingram failed to properly exercise and perform his duties as trustee in accepting such a grossly inadequate price.
“Plaintiffs further state that said Ingram further failed to properly exercise his duties as trustee in offering said land for sale all in one body, and not selling it in parcels, when said land lay in separate and noncontiguous parcels and a great deal of it was in timber and would have sold, if sold in separate parcels, for over $5,000.
“Plaintiffs state that, by reason of the failure of said Ingram to. properly exercise the trust imposed upon him, and by reason of the fraudulent concealment of said pretended sale from plaintiffs, that said land sold for a nominal sum, instead of selling for more than enough to pay off and discharge both said note to said Missouri Trust Company and said note to plaintiff Hardwieke; and that, as said Sextons are insolvent, plaintiff Hardwieke will lose his money loaned to said Sextons, if said sale is not set aside and declared void.”
The fraud charged is the keeping of the plaintiff Hardwicke in ignorance of the trustee’s sale and inducing the Missouri Trust Company to make it so that defendant bank might buy in the property at less than its value and thus deprive him of his security and the means of collecting his debt. Fraud is never presumed but must be proved, yet it is not necessary that it be shown by direct evidence; it may be established by facts and circumstances and the burden of proof rests upon him who asserts it to make it manifest. The conspiracy charged was between Warren B. Sexton and the Central bank.
In the absence of fraud or some undue advantage being taken, the law imposes no duty upon a person holding a prior mortgage or deed of trust to notify one holding a similar subsequent or junior lien or incum-brance upon the same property of his intention to sell
The only persons by whose statements Hardwicke was deceived were Warren B. Sexton and Esteb Sexton promising to keep the interest to the Trust Company paid up and Esteb to look after his interest in the property, which they failed to do; but the evidence did not in any manner connect the defendants with any of these promises or their violation. Sexton testified that he had no arrangement with Central bank in regard to the sale and purchase of the property and no evidence was introduced to the contrary except inferentially. He was not present at the sale. The sale was advertised in one of the weekly papers published in Ray county. It was open to the public and at the usual hour, where every person had an opportunity to bid that felt so inclined. No combination between bidders has been shown and no unfairness or fraud.
Mere inadequacy of price, unattended by fraud or unfair dealing, is not a distinct ground for setting aside a sale (Philips v. Stewart, 59 Mo. 491) and in this case there, was no such inadequacy of price as would justify the inference of fraud from that fact alone.
Ingram testified that when offering the land for sale he made public inquiry if there was any person present who desired to bid on any subdivision, and, meeting with no response, he sold all the land at one sale. One who takes so perilous a form of security as a second mortgage, must ever be on the alert, lest by his want of diligence, he may suffer the loss of his debt thereby secured. In this case plaintiff Hardwicke unfortunately depended upon the promises of those who either intentionally deceived him, or inadvertently neglected his interests, with which the evidence fails to connect the defendants and for which they are