81 Mo. App. 169 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1899
On May 4, 1885, the plaintiff for a consideration of $1,500, sold to the defendant William 0. Oundiff an undivided one-half of sixty-two acres of land upon which was located a grist mill. The conveyance was made subject to a mortgage of $300 due Lawrence county. Oundiff executed three notes for the balance of the purchase money, one for $225, one for $335, and one for $340, due respectively in six months, two years and three years after their dates, and each bearing ten per cent interest from date. To secure the notes Oundiff, who owned the other undivided half, executed a deed of trust on the entire property. On the nineteenth day of June, 1897, the plaintiff instituted the present action to foreclose the deed of trust. The following parties were made defendants, viz.: William O. Oundiff and Eliza J., his wife; John 0. Spencer, who was in possession of the land claiming to own it, Jo. J. Porter, the trustee in the deed of trust, and Nancy Kellogg, who held a subsequent incumbrance on the land. At the trial the plaintiff disclaimed a right of foreclosure as to the two notes first maturing, upon the ground, as we assume, that at the date of the institution of the suit both notes were barred by the statute of limitations, no payments having been made thereon. John 0. Spencer defended the action. He admitted the execution and existence of the deed of trust and that plaintiff’s debt had not been paid, but he set forth in his answer facts connected with the title of the land, which if true, would, as against the plaintiff, who was a subsequent purchaser of the property, prevent a judgment of foreclosure, except upon certain terms. To fully understand the nature or purport of this equitable defense it will be necessary to state in detail the facts upon
The plaintiff put in issue the new matter pleaded in the answer. The cause was tried before the court, resulting in a judgment for the plaintiff foreclosing his mortgage for the full amount of the notes.' The defendant John C. Spencer has appealed.
Did an equitable vendor’s lien exist in favor of Dobbins, who was the holder of the two Stakely notes? This question is at the threshold of the case. If such lien did not exist, or if it did exist and the plaintiff was not advised, of it, then the alleged equities asserted by the appellant are without foundation. The plaintiff admits that he knew the notes were outstanding; that they were given to Stakely for a part of the purchase money, and that Dobbins owned them at the time the appellant sold his interest to plaintiff. Did the lien ■exist, or rather had it been waived, is the remaining question ? The plaintiff claimed that it had been waived. • As evidence ■of such waiver he relied on the fact that Stakely had taken personal security on the notes, and he was allowed to testify that prior to his purchase Stakely informed him that it was not his intention to reserve a lien on the land — that he preferred personal security. Against this the appellant testified to the facts stated in his answer, concerning the agreement of the plaintiff to pay the Stakely notes as part of the consideration of his purchase, and he also testified that the plaintiff attended the execution sale under the special execution in favor of Dobbins, and- he there stated that as mortgagee he could not afford to bid on the property as the debts of Dobbins and the county equalled or exceeded the value of the property. The appellant alsoproved that after the sale under theDobbins execution Robert J. Spencer, the purchaser at the sale ejected Lambert and Allison from the premises; that they thereupon sued the plaintiff on the covenants contained in the deed to ■Oundiff, and that in his answer to that suit he averred that
Having determined the existence of the vendor’s lien, and that the plaintiff had knowledge of it and hence bought subject to it, the questions are what are the respective equities of plaintiff and the appellant, and how are they to be preserved and enforced? It is clear that the plaintiff as mortgagee is not concluded by the judgment and sale in the Dobbins suit. He was not a party to the suit. His rights as a subsequent incumbrancer were not destroyed by reason of it. Then as against the appellant upon what terms ought he to be allowed to subject the land to ‘the payment of his debt? Originally his mortgage was subordinate to the claim of Dobbins and the county. If he had then foreclosed his mortgage, he would have been compelled either to have paid off these prior incumbrances, or to have sold subject to them. However, he did not attempt to do this, but waited until the land was sold under the Dobbins judgment, and he then waited until Robert J. Spencer, the purchaser at that sale had satisfied the mortgage debts in favor of the county and then he waited
The appellant’s plea of the statute of' limitations was properly stricken out. In Owens v. McKinzee, 133 Mo. loc. cit. 336, it was decided that the time when a note is due is determined by the note itself, and is not dominated by the provisions of a deed of trust given to secure the note. Plaintiff’s mortgage provided that if default was made in the payment of any of the notes, all of them should become due and payable.
The answer of the appellant converted the action into one in equity, and it should be so reviewed. The rule of practice in this state is, that when the, answer in an action at law sets up an equitable defense with a prayer for affirmative relief, which a court of equity only can give, the issues made by the answer and reply should be tried and reviewed as a case in equity. Estes v. Ery, 91 Mo. loc. cit. 271.
The judgment of the circuit court will be reversed and the cause remanded, with directions to retry the case and enter a decree in accordance with this opinion.
This case was delivered to the Reporter February, 1900.