— Albert A. Arnett, being the owner of lots three, four, seven and eight in block three, Wagner’s addition .to the city of Memphis, Missouri, on November 12, 1897, executed a mortgage of that date on said lots to John M. ■Jayne to secure a debt to him of $246.55.
Afterwards, by deed dated July 12, 1898, the said Arnett, for a recited consideration of $450, conveyed said lots three, four, seven and eight, to George O. Forrester, warranting title “except indebtedness to J. M. Jayne and except on lots 3 and 4 to building and loan association, but none of said indebtedness is assumed by said George C. Forrester.”'
Afterwards, by deed dated July 21, 1898, the said Forrester, for a recited consideration of $450, conveyed said lots seven and eight to the appellant Theo. H. Wiegner, warranting-title “except as to all liens and incumbrances against said property which said second party (Wiegner) assumes,” and on the same day the said Wiegner. executed a deed of trust of that date conveying said lots “seven and eight” to the said Forrester in trust to secure the payment of his note for $347.25 payable to the said John M. Jayne. .The deed and deed of trust last aforesaid were on the same day filed for record at 11 o’clock SO minutes a. m. and on the same day this-suit was instituted, and notice lis pendens thereof was filed at “11 o’clock 25 minutes a. m.” The said Arnetts, Jayne, Forrester and Wiegner were made parties, defendant. The petition charging in substance that a mutual mistake was made in describing the premises in the deed of trust from! Arnett to the association as' lots three and four, when -lots seven and-
To the petition, Arnett and wife made no answer. The ■other defendants, Jayne, Forrester and Wiegner, answered separately,- joining issue upon the allegations of the- petition.
At the trial the chancellor caused a jury to be impaneled to whom he submitted the following questions:
“1. Did he (Wiegner) know that a mistake had been made in-placing trust deed to building and loan association by Arnett on lots 3 and 4 instead of on lots 7 and 8 at the time he received deed from Forrester ?
“2. Did he at the time he received deed from Forrester, have knowledge and information sufficient, pertaining to the mistake of Arnett and the building and loan association in placing the trust deed of said Arnett to said building and loan association on lots 3 and 4 instead of on lots 7 and 8, to put an ordinary prudent business man on guard and inquiry ?”
To which the jury returned the following answers:
“We the jury answer interrogatory No. 1, Tes; and we answer interrogatory No. 2, Tes. Isaac Oolvan, Foreman.”
The trial resulted in the following decree, from which ■defendant Wiegner alone appeals:
“And said cause coming on for further trial before the court, and the court having heard all the evidence and adopting the findings of the jury aforesaid, doth find that the defendants, Albert A. Arnett and Sarah L. Arnett, on March 15, 1898, made, executed and delivered to plaintiff a trust deed to secure the sum of $800 and that it was the intention
Jayne, who is a lawyer, seems to have been the first one of these parties to discover the mistake, and he evidently determined to profit by it. It is not clear just when he did make the discovery, but according to his own story, it was about the time he prepared the deed from Arnett to Forrester. Forrester was Jayne’s brother-in-law, and although that deed recites a consideration of $150, the amount actually paid Arnett for the deed was only $100, said Jayne furnished the money. It is evident that at this time these two understood each other and the situation clearly, and that Forrester was to share in the profit. The evidence tended to prove that soon after Arnett executed the deed to Forrester, he “skipped the country,” leaving debts unpaid, among them a small amount due appellant Wiegner An open account, who was surety for him also on a note to the bank for $75. That
“I was going home and walked on up^ to the comer with Wiegner, and Forrester came up and called to Wiegner. I says to Wiegner, "'There is Forrester, and we will ask him.’ We asked him if he bought Mr. Arnett’s property, and he said he did. Wiegner asked him what he paid for the property, . . . how much there was against it, and how much the building and loan association had against the house and two lots, and he (Forrester) said they didn’t have anything against it, and Mr. Wiegner said they did. They talked awhile and Wiegner said, ‘I will go with you and investigate in the morning, to see whether the building and loan association has a mortgage on the house and two lots.’ Wiegner insisted that tire building and loan had a mortgage on the house and two lots, and Forrester said they did not; he said if they had any mortgage it was on the other property.”
Wiegner, in the course of his testimony, said: “Mr. Forrester told me there was only $52 against the property . . I asked Jayne about the title, and he told me to look it up . . He told me Mr. Forrester had informed me
And thus conscious as he was of the fact that the association had made a loan to Arnett on his house and the two lots on which it was located, secured by a. deed of trust thereon, he came, saw and satisfied himself that the association’s deed of trust was not on those lots, without looking at the records of it, without making any inquiry whatever about it, .or seeking to acquire any information in regard to it. He knew that in the very books lying open before him that deed of trust was recorded. A glance at that record would have disclosed the mistake, for no one knew better than he, that the association wo-uld not have loaned $800 on the two vacant lots worth 'only $150. He would not take that glance. He would not even step into the office of the secretary of the association of which he was a member, and learn the truth of the matter.
There was evidently a race between them and the association as to who should get their papers to record first, and when Jayne and Wiegner reached the recorder’s office with their papers they found the association attorneys there, with their papers and notice lis pendens, five minutes ahead of them.
Now a glance at the deal itself. The- consideration recited in tbe deed from Forrester to Wiegner is $450.' The consideration in fact was the note of Wiegner to Jayne, secured by Wiegner’s deed of trust on the property for $347.25, balance due Jayne on his mortgage on- the property, $52.75, and Wiegner’s check given to Forrester for $50. Thus Wiegner, for $400, promised and assumed, and $50 paid, gets property worth $800, giving him a net profit of $350, to- console him for any little loss his friendship for Arnett may have- cost him. Jayne in Wiegner’s note, gets the $100 back that he furnished Forrester to make the purchase from Arnett, and $247.25 net profit to compensate him for his professional skill' in concocting and carrying out the scheme, and Forrester gets $50 for the use of his name, and any little strain the affair may have had upon his conscience. The division seems to have been eminently fair and equitable inter sese. The only ugly feature, about it to the eye of a chancellor is the fact that the values they thus apportioned and divided between themselves, in equity and good conscience, did not belong to them at all, but to the respondent association, and they knew it. Hpon the evidence, of which we have only given a glimpse, it is no great compliment to the perspicacity of the chancellor and his jury that they easily saw through this whole transac
The appellant was not an innocent purchaser without notice if he knew of the mistake in the deed of trust of the-association, or was conscious of having the means of such knowledge and did not use them, as an ordinarily prudent and diligent person would have done. [Taaffe v. Kelley,
The decree is for the right party and ought to be affirmed. It is accordingly so ordered.
