117 Mo. 508 | Mo. | 1893
The suit is ejectment in the usual form, to recover a parcel of land twenty-two rods and six feet long by fifteen rods and seven feet wide, in McDonald county. The answer admitted the possession of McIntosh as tenant of his codefendant, J. D. Shields, but denied all other allegations. It also set up the following special defense:
“Defendants, for further answer, say and aver that at one time in the year 1886, defendant, Shields, gave to one John A. Kunkel a note for the sum of $270, to bear interest at the rate of ten per cent, per annum, to secure which he executed, a mortgage upon the property sued for herein, to the said Kunkel, but the same has been long paid and satisfied, so no ground of action could exist on that account against him; notwithstanding which defendants are advised, and aver that plaintiff pretends to make some claim of right to the possession of the land as a pretended assignee of the said mortgage after condition broken.
“Defendant Shields, while protesting that the said mortgage was long ago satisfied, comes and offers to pay into the court, for the benefit of the lawful owner of the said mortgage debt, all and every sum and amount which may appear from the evidence in this case to be and remain unpaid thereon, if any, if it be found that the plaintiff is vested with the rights of the said mortgagee.”
The reply admits the execution and delivery of the note and mortgage by J. D. Shields, but denies that he ever paid the note or satisfied the mortgage as charged in the answer.
In support of his title plaintiff offered in evidence, the following deeds: First. Mortgagee’s deed from John A. Kunkel to J. C. Seabourn, dated October 29,
The record of the mortgage from defendant Shields to Kunkel, showed an entry of satisfaction on the margin, dated October 16, 1886, and signed by Kunkel, the mortgagee.
In explanation of that entry of satisfaction Kunkel testified that prior to the entry he had undertaken to sell the property under his mortgage, but misdescribed the land in both, the advertisement and deed. At this sale Seabourn was also the purchaser, paying therefor $305, which paid the debt and cost, and $17 or $18 over, which was paid to shields, as mortgagor, to whom was delivered the note and mortgage, and he then entered satisfaction. That, on learning of the misdescription of the land in the previous sale and deed, at request of the purchaser and Shields, he resold the property merely to correct the mistake. On this sale nothing was paid. .
The evidence also tended to show that these purchases at mortgage’s sale were made by Seabourn. at the request of Shields, his son, Abe, and Gus .Corum and Seabourn undertook it for the benefit of defendant Shields. Seabourn gave them an agreement to convey as they should direct upon repaying him. The parties borrowed the money to pay for the land and Seabourn
There was conflict in the evidence as to who was in possession of the property after Seabourn gave it up, which, if important, cannot be intelligently settled from what appears on the abstract.
The facts were tried by a jury and at request of plaintiff the court gave the following instructions:
“The court instructs the jury that if they believe from the evidence that J. D. Shields and wife executed and delivered the mortgage deed to John A. Kunkel, read in evidence, and that after condition broken in said mortgage, said Kunkel attempted to advertise and sell the land therein described, but by mistake failed to describe the said land in the advertisement and the mortgagee’s deed, and that J. C. Seabourn became the purchaser at such sale, and paid the note, interest and costs secured by said mortgage; and if the jury further find that by mistake in the first sale Kunkel entered satisfaction on the margin of the record of the said mortgage, and that thereafter, at the request of J. D. Shields, he advertised and sold the land in said mortgage deed according to the conditions therein, and executed and. delivered to J. C. Seabourn the mortgagee’s deed read in evidence, then such conveyance vested the legal title to the land in controversy in*516 Seabourn, and that J. D. Shields is stopped from denying Seabourn’s title, or those claiming under him; and the successive conveyances from Seabourn and others, claiming under him, had the effect to vest in plaintiff all right and title of defendant Shields.”
Defendant asked but the court refused to so instruct, first, that payment of the mortgage debt by Seabourn, the surrender of the note to Shields, and the entry of satisfaction of the mortgage on the record extinguished the power of sale, and the second sale and deed thereunder were nullities; second, though the attempted sales may have operated as an assignment of the debt and mortgage to Seabourn, yet plaintiff, by the conveyances to him, succeeded to no such rights under the mortgage as would entitle him to recover in ejectment from the mortgagor; third, that under the pleadings and evidence defendant Shields should have been permitted to recover.
I. It is conceded that the first sale attempted by the mortgagee, in failing to decribe the land, either in the advertisement or deed, did not pass to the purchaser the legal title to the property sold. The same result would follow a conveyance, with a like error by the owner. It is insisted, however, by defendants that the sale and payment of the purchase money in discharge of the mortgage debt gave the purchaser no equitable right to the security but operated as a complete and absolute discharge of the debt and mortgage. To that proposition we do not yield assent.
An assignment of a mortgage, in order to transfer the entire legal and equitable interest of the mortgagee must be by deed containing such words of grant as will show an intention of the parties to make a complete transfer. When a formal assignment is thus made, and the bond, note, or other evidence of the debt is assigned and delivered, the assignee will be
An equitable assignment does not require these formalities. In this state the mere assignment of the debt carries with it the mortgage, as an incident, which may be enforced by the assignee in his own name. And an equitable assignment will be declared and enforced, by way of subrogation, whenever right and justice require that it should be done. So it is held that a sale of the mortgaged premises which is ineffective on account of defects in the execution of the power, will operate as an equitable assignment of the mortgage to the purchaser if he paid the purchase money in good faith, and it was applied to the satisfaction of the mortgage debt. Wilcoxon v. Osborn, 77 Mo. 632; Honaker v. Shough, 55 Mo. 472; Priest v. St. Louis, 103 Mo. 657; 2 Jones on Mortgages, sec. 1678.
The evidence in this case shows that Seabourn purchased in good faith and paid to the mortgagee the purchase price, which was applied to the payment of the debt secured. In this purchase he intended to buy, and supposed he had bought, the mortgaged property. He got nothing in law for the money paid and he was in equity entitled to the security of the mortgage for the amount due on the note when paid.
II. After a foreclosure sale under a mortgage the title of the purchaser comes through the mortgage. The mortgage is not satisfied but forclosed. It is, therefore, in such case improper to make an entry of satisfaction on the record. The entry made by the mortgagee in this case was intended to mean nothing more than that the mortgage had been satisfied by a sale of the premises. It could have no greater effect, at
The evidence shows very conclusively that this entry was made without authority under a mistaken idea of duty, and under the belief that the sale had effectually foreclosed the mortgage. It should not be allowed to stand in the way of the purchaser’s rights.
III. As to the effect of the second sale. By a recent well-considered decision of this court rendered in banc it was held that a sale and conveyance of the mortgaged premises, by a mortgagee or trustee acting under a power, though defectively executed, passed the legal estate to the purchaser subject to the right of redemption. In such case the title passes by a conveyance of the property by one holding the title. Schanewerk v. Hoberecht, ante, p. 22.
The first sale and conveyance here was not of the mortgaged property at all, owing to a misdescription, and the legal title was not affected, but remained in the mortgagee, who held it in trust for the benefit of the equitable assignee of the debt. Though the validity of the second sale may be questioned by reason, of the irregularity arising from the absence of the mortgagee when it was made, and the employment of an agent to conduct it, there can be no doubt thabthe legal title passed to Seabourn by the deed, and under whom plaintiff claims through mesne conveyances.
If defendant has any remedy, it is upon the contract under which Seabourn took and held the title for him, upon which no issue was made or determined in this record.
Y. Under the forclosure sale the legal title of the heirs of Mrs. Shields, wife of defendant, who died before the first sale, if any they had, also passed to the pur
“We see no error in the record and the judgment is affirmed.