141 Mo. 175 | Mo. | 1897
— This is an action in ejectment to recover possession of lot number 8 in Curtis addition to the city of Springfield. The petition is in common form. The answer a general denial. Hatfield and Tracy, who were the owners of the premises, on the twenty-seventh .of May, 1889, executed a deed of trust thereon of that date to secure their promissory note for $1,650, payable June 4, 1894, to the Lombard Investment Company. Afterward on the twenty-third of February, 1892, the said Hatfield and Tracy conveyed the premises to P. H. Oliver by deed of that date containing the following stipulation: “This deed is made subject to a deed of trust to the Lombard Investment Company, for the sum of $1,650, and all interest on the same, recorded in the recorder’s office of Greene county, Missouri, in deed of trust record book 26, page 500,
On the twelfth day of April, 1892, the said Oliver, by deed of that date, containing the same stipulation, conveyed the premises to Samuel H. Horine. At this date there was standing on the records of the circuit, court of Greene county,' a judgment in favor of the defendant Baker against the said Horine for $100 and costs. Afterward, on the thirty-first of August, 1892, the said Horine, by deed of that date containing the same stipulation as before, conveyed the premises to John 0. Keet, and on the twenty-second of December, 1892, the said John C. Keet, by his deed of that date containing the same stipulation as before, conveyed the premises to Josiah T. Keet, who thereafter died, and by his last will admitted to probate in March, 1894, appointed his son, the plaintiff James E. Keet, and his wife, Elizabeth Keet, executors thereof.
In June, 1894, the Lombard Investment Company duly assigned in writing and delivered the deed of trust aforesaid, together with the promissory note evidencing the indebtedness, thereby secured, to the plaintiff for the consideration of $1,650.
On the ninth day of July, 1894, the sheriff of Greene county, in pursuance of a sale made on the seventh of July, 1894, under an execution issued upon the judgment aforesaid against Horine, conveyed the premises to the defendant Baker. On the thirty-first of August, 1894, in pursuance of a sale in foreclosure of the deed of trust aforesaid, the trustee conveyed the premises to the plaintiff who, on the sixteenth of March, 1895, instituted this suit. The judgment was for the plaintiff and the defendant appeals.
The only question in the case is, did the legal title of Hatfield and Tracy to the premises pass to the plaintiff by the trustee’sdeed, executed in pursuance of the