121 Mo. 391 | Mo. | 1894
Plaintiff sued in ejectment for a tract of land in New Madrid county.
The petition is in the ordinary form.
The defendants are Margaret and Charles Blessing. They answered separately. The nature of their defenses will appear presently.
Plaintiff’s reply denied the new matter of the answer, and stated that she became owner of the land by purchase at a foreclosure sale (described more fully hereafter); and also charged that the deed under which Charles Blessing claimed was fraudulent and void as to creditors.
The cause was tried by the court without a jury.
Both parties trace title to Henry Blessing. He bought this land by deed, June 4, 1875, recorded in
At the time of his acquiring title, Henry Blessing was indebted to Mr. Marr for rent for the years 1873 and 1874, on account of which Marr brought suit against him in February, 1876, and obtained judgment in the circuit court of New Madrid county, September 23, 1876, for $391.30.
Shortly before the institution of suit by Marr, January 15, 1876, Henry Blessing and his wife, Margaret, executed to their children, Charles and Sarah Blessing (then, respectively, about thirteen and fifteen years of age), in consideration of love and affection, a conveyance of this land, which was all he owned. This deed was recorded, January 18, 1876.
Sarah died later, before her father.
Yery soon after this conveyance, — February 17, 1876, — Henry Blessing executed to Dodd, Brown & Company a note for $504.39, at eight months, and gave them a mortgage to secure it, with power of sale of the land he had previously conveyed to his children. His wife joined in the mortgage, which was duly recorded March 1, 1876.
Subsequently, — March 20, 1877, — he and his wife executed a second mortgage, with power of sale, to Frank Kopp (reciting that it was subject to the Dodd, Brown & Co. mortgage), for the purpose of securing a note for $418, given by Henry Blessing on that day to Frank Kopp, payable three years after date. The consideration of this note was the release of the Marr judgment. This mortgage was recorded on the day of its execution.
Henry Blessing lived on this land with the defendants up to the time of his death in 1882. His wife and son remained there afterwards, and were in possession when this suit was brought, in August.
In these foreclosure proceedings Margaret Blessing and Charles Blessing were defendants, as they are in tbe present case.
TJnder execution issued upon this judgment of foreclosure, a sale was duly bad, at which plaintiff, Mary Kopp, the mother of Frank Kopp, became the purchaser. She received a sheriff’s deed, dated and recorded, March 22, 1886, conveying to her the land in dispute.
Claiming title under this deed, plaintiff brought the present action.
•Defendants rely upon the deed to Charles and Sarah Blessing and upon adverse possesion.
There was oral evidence of the rental value of the property, and also tending to prove that the land had been the homestead of Henry Blessing from the time he acquired it in 1875.
The court gave several declarations of law, and rendered a finding and judgment for defendants. Plaintiff appealed in due form.
Among other rulings, the trial judge approved an instruction at the instance of defendants, as follows: “The court declares the law to be that in this case the decree of the circuit court of New Madrid county, foreclosing the mortgages given by Henry Blessing and wife to Dodd, Brown & Company and to Frank Kopp does not estop defendants from asserting title to the premises by virtue of deed from Henry Blessing and wife to defendant Charles Blessing and his sister, Sarah Blessing.”
To this instruction exception was duly saved. It is now assigned as error, and the formal steps to bring it under review have been duly taken.
It appears that both defendants filed general denials in that case. No right of homestead was set up by either, nor any claim of title adverse to the mortgages which the suit was brought to foreclose. The proceedings therein resulted in a judgment subjecting the land and all the interest and estate of the present (and then) defendants to sale to discharge the secured notes. That judgment was in the statutory form (R. S., 1889, see. 7078), and was accompanied by an elaborate recital by way of finding of the facts, on which the right to foreclose and sell was based, of which an outline has been above given.
That Henry Blessing and his wife had the right to mortgage their homestead is too clear a proposition, under our law, to require more than a reference to the statute. (Laws, 1873, p. 16, same as section 2689, R. S. 1879).
If Charles Blessing asserted a title or interest superior to the mortgage, by virtue of the deed to him and his sister Sarah, of date in January, 1876, he should have it set it up in some manner, when called upon to answer why the land should not be sold in the foreclosure suit to discharge the debt and mortgage made by his father in February, 1876. This he did not do, and hence judgment went against him, directing the sale of his estate in the land to satisfy the mortgages, as already stated. That judgment may have been wholly erroneous in view of the facts disclosed, but the adjudication of a competent court can not be collaterally deprived of
By the Missouri statute touching foreclosure of mortgages it is expressly provided that the petition may be filed ‘‘against the mortgagor and the actual tenants or occupiers of such real estate.” R. S. 1889, section 7078.
Any person claiming an interest in the mortgaged property may be made defendant (R. S. 1889, section 7085), and the purchaser under'a sale on execution pursuant to a statutory judgment in such an action “shall take a title as against the parties to the suit.” (R. S. 1889, section 7089; same as the law in force on that point since the earliest date-mentioned in this record.)
These statutory provisions lay down a very plain rule for the construction of such a judgment as that disclosed by the case in hand. They certainly preclude defendant, Charles Blessing, from asserting (adverse to the judgment) a title which he may have owned when the judgment was rendered, but which he did not then choose to set up.
At the time of the foreclosure sale he was of full age, according to his own admission at the trial of the cause at bar.
If there are 'any valid legal reasons that would give support to the ruling of the trial court as to him, by getting rid of the legal effect of the foreclosure proceedings, they have not been suggested here,' and none occur to us. Mrs. Margaret Blessing joined in due form in the mortgages executed by her husband and is in no position to assert a homestead right against those
Upon the record before us, we are of opinion that there was error in giving defendant’s instruction, above quoted, and that it was prejudicial to plaintiff’s rights upon the merits.
The foreclosure judgment was in 1884, the sale thereunder in 1886, and the present action brought in 1887. There was no time between these dates for the intervention of any bar of limitation that could avail defendants on the facts as they now appear, having reference to their plea of title by adverse possession.
It results from what has been said that the judgment should be reversed, and the cause remanded. It is so ordered.