168 Mo. 337 | Mo. | 1902
— This is a suit in equity to set aside a trustee’s sale undey deed of trust of the following described land situate in Polk county, Missouri, to-wit, the south half of the north half and the northwest quarter of the northeast quarter of section twenty, and the south half of lot one of 'the southeast quarter of section thirty-one, township thirty-five of range twenty-two. The trial resulted in a judgment and decree in favor of plaintiff setting aside the sale, from which defendants, after unavailing motions for new trial and in arrest, appeal.
The petition alleges that on the seventh day of July, 1896, the plaintiff, Henry Hoffman, was the owner of said land. That defendants Adams, McKinney & Leavitt were loan agents for the Missouri Trust Company, and as such made to the plaintiff a loan on said land for nine hundred dollars at seven per cent interest, payable semiannually on the first of January and July; that plaintiffs executed their note for the nine hundred dollars with six per cent interest payable as above stated, and that he and his wife executed a deed of trust on said land to secure the payment of said note and interest. That on the same day they executed ten notes for four and fifty-hundredths dollars each, payable to the defendant Adams; that this represented the other one per cent interest, and executed a deed of trust on the above land to T. G. Rechow as trustee to secure the payment of these notes, which recited that it was subject to the deed of trust for nine
There is no fraud or misconduct charged unless it is contained in the allegation that there were only two bidders and the trustee for that reason ought to have adjourned the sale.
Defendants interposed a demurrer to the petition which was overruled. They then filed answer to the petition in which it is denied that the land was not offered for sale in the smallest legal subdivision. It admits that McCracken, the purchaser, believed the nine-hundred-dollar deed of trust was outstanding, and alleges that the deed of release had not been filed for record at the time of sale, and if there was any suppression of bidding at the sale on that account, it was caused by the wrongful and fraudulent act of plaintiffs in failing to record the deed of release. That the sale was in all respects fairly and openly conducted. It further alleges that on January 16, 1899, defendant McCracken entered into a written agreement with Burdett Thayer, as agent and attorney for plaintiffs by which he agreed to re-convey the premises except eighty acres, and that plaintiffs were to make him a conveyance of that eighty within twelve days, and that plaintiffs violated that agreement. The answer also charges that plaintiffs were not the owners of all the land.
It appears from the record that soon after the execution of the deed of trust plaintiff moved to the State of Minnesota, then to different places, and never notified Adams, McKinney & Leavitt when he changed his place of residence. That soon after moving to-that State he transferred the land in question to his sister who in turn transferred it to his wife. That plaintiff and his wife thereafter transferred it to one Murrell, in whom the title was at the time of the sale under the deed of trust. That on the thirty-first day of March, 1898, the Missouri Trust Company executed to plain
Diligent effort was made by the agents of the trust company to get personal notice on the owner of the land that the note was due for which it was subsequently sold, but the effort was unavailing-.
It was recited in the deed of trust under which the land was sold that it wras subject to a prior mortgage to the Missouri Trust Company of $900. It appeared from the evidence that the trustee offered the land for sale in forty-acre tracts but could get no bid, and that he did all he could to make the land bring the highest price possible. There were from twenty-five to thirty persons present at the sale. The title to the land at the time of the sale, in so far as the records disclose, was in one Murrell, and, as they did not show that the $900 secured by the prior mortgage had been paid, it was understood that the purchaser at the sale would .have to pay about a thousand dollars at least for the land. The trustee had no knowledge that the prior mortgage had been paid off. So that the sale seems to have been made under a mistake of facts without any intention of wronging any person whomsoever.
It is said that the petition fails to state a cause of action, but plaintiff claims that even if this be true, defendants waived the point by answering over after the demurrer to the petition upon that ground was overruled. This position is not, however, well taken, for if there is anything well settled by this court it is, that where a demurrer to a petition has been overruled the defendant, if he answers over, does not thereby waive the objection that the petition fails to state a cause of action. [Paddock v. Somes, 102 Mo. 226, and authorities cited.] And this question may be raised for the first time in this court.
There was no fraud alleged or proven.
The notice of sale recited that the land would be sold “subject to a prior mortgage,” when in fact there was no mortgage on it. It is true there had been a prior mortgage on the land which was executed by plaintiff to secure the payment of a bond for nine hundred dollars, but it had been paid off though the record did not show that fact, nor did defendants have any knowledge of its payment at the time of the sale. Under these circumstances, unless some one was prevented from bidding on the land by said recital, there would be no ground for setting aside the sale because of it. But there was at least one witness who testified that he attended the sale to bid on the land, and that he did not bid for the reason that he learned that there was a prior mortgage on the land for nine hundred dollars.
Defendants were not prejudiced by reason of the' failure of Hoffman to have placed upon record his deed of release, but if the sale is permitted to stand they are greatly benefited thereby, and get the title to two hundred and forty acres of land for forty dollars for which they thought they were paying nine hundred and forty dollars. He owed them no duty to record his deed of release, and upon what principle they can claim it was his duty as to them to record the deed of release or that they were misled to their prejudice because of his failure to do so, we are unable to perceive, and it is only upon some such principle that plaintiff could be held to be estopped by his failure to record the deed.
The evidence shows the land to have been worth at the time of the sale four thousand five hundred dollars. There
Under these circumstances should the judgment of the court below be reversed, and the sale permitted to stand? We think not. To do so would in effect be táking the property of one man and giving it to another.
As a general proposition, inadequacy of consideration is not of itself a distinct principle of relief in equity, but where there is such a great disparity between the actual value of land and the price which it brings at a forced sale as in this case and the land is sold under the mistaken idea that it is incumbered for quite a large sum (in this case $900) when it is not, and bidders are deterred from bidding by reason thereof, a court of equity will not hesitate to set the sale aside.
In Vail v. Jacobs, 62 Mo. 130, it was held that when property is sacrificed under a deed of trust by sale of a little over a tithe of its value, as where property worth from $5,000 to $8,000 was sold for $1,000, the sale will, on timely application, be set aside.
The sale under consideration comes, we think, within the rule announced in that case, and under the circumstances was properly set aside.
Eor these intimations the judgment is affirmed.