200 Mo. App. 427 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1918
— This case stands for itself and another wherein John A. Silvers is plaintiff against these defendants. The two involve the same questions and grow out of the same transactions, and they were consolidated in the circuit court and tried together. Plaintiff Mendell is a judgment creditor, with a junior lien on certain lands. He seeks to recover from defendants certain money claimed to he a surplus left in the hands of defendant January as trustee in a sale under a prior deed of trust.
Plaintiff Silvers seeks to recover the remaining part of the surplus by reason of being the owner by purchase at a foreclosure sale conducted by defendant January as trustee.
The judgment was’for plaintiffs in the trial court.
The matters out of which the case grew are lengthy and greatly involved, much of which need not be noticed here. One Zweigert once, owned a large tract of land in Vernon county. He died owing defendant Howard
He also was indebted to plaintiff Mendell in the sum of $1800. This was allowed against his estate and afterwards in an action in the circuit court, it was made a lien on such real estate subject to the deeds of trust. After Zweigert’s death the bank bought the first deed of trust securing the debt for $8000 and took an assignment of it. The bank then had its deed of trust for $2911 foreclosed and John A. Silvers (plaintiff in the other suit) became the purchaser of the land at the foreclosure sale.
After defendant Howard had his claim of $7000 allowed against Zweigert’s estate he brought suit- against Silvers, Zweigert’s daughter, the Bank and this plaintiff;, wherein he asked that his judgment of allowance be declared a lien on the land mentioned, and he offered in his petition, to pay to the bank the amount of the two notes, in the deeds of trust then held by the bank, but he did not keep such tender good by deposit. He lost the case in the circuit court, but on appeal to the Supreme Court he was successful and that court directed that "the ease should be reversed and remanded with directions to the trial court to enter a decree setting-aside the conveyance from Henry Zweigert to Lizette Zweigert of the lands in controversy and decreeing plaintiff’s judgment to be a lien upon said lands and setting aside the foreclosure sale and the trustee’s deed to Silvers, upon payment to the defendant bank of the principal and interest due upon the two Zweigert notes as of the date # at which this suit was brought and that defendant bank upon said payment assign to plaintiff said notes and deeds of trust securing them, and for costs.”
This judgment of the Supreme Court was rendered in 1917, and in compliance therewith defendant Howard,
It is thus seen that though the Supreme Court set aside Silvers’ purchase under the deed of trust for $2911 he again became the owner of the land by purchasing under this last sale. Silvers paid to the bank all interest due on the' two deeds of trust except the $915, paid by defendant Howard when the bank assigned to him as stated above.
This controversy arises over the disposition which January made of the $27,300 paid to him by Silvers. No question is made on account of January’s payment of court costs, costs of foreclosure and defendant Howard’s judgment for $7000 and interest; nor is- any question made regarding January paying Howard the amount of the principal of the two deeds of trust, and $9.15 interest due before Howard’s offer, which Howard paid the bank when the latter assigned them to him as directed by the Supreme Court. The only objection is on account of his payment to Howard out of the surplus in his hands, interest on the debts secured by these deeds of trust from the first of November, 1911, the day he instituted his action, until the 15th day of September, 1917, the day he paid the bank, amounting, at 8 per cent, to $5458.69. The' theory of defendants is that the offer made by Howard in his petition, though unaccompanied by a deposit in court, itself, to use words of counsel, “is a sufficient tender to effect redemption,” and therefore Howard became the owner, of the two deeds of trust and entitled to the interest thereon between thé‘ date of his tender and the day he paid them to the bank. It is also their theory that the terms
Tbe rule in this State is that a tender, without payment or deposit in court for tbe creditor, will not discharge tbe obligation. Thus, if one merely offers in bis pleading to pay a secured debt, be does not discharge tbe debt until he actually pays it, or else deposits in court the sum due. [Landis v. Saxon, 89 Mo. 375 (specially approved repeatedly since); Long v. Abstract Co., 252 Mo. 158; Knollenberg v. Nixon, 171 Mo. 445; McGuire v. Brockman, 58 Mo. App. 307.]
A creditor would be put to great hazard if his refusal to accept a mere offer would discharge the debt. That rule would substitue an offer for payment. So if tbe debt is not discharged by an offer, neither is tbe security released. If tbe tender is accompanied by a payment into court it is a release of the security, since tbe creditor has not been put to tbe hazard of losing bis claim outright, for be is at liberty to change his mind and, accept it at any time; and if be loses in court, tbe amount of bis claim is there for him. [Crain v. McGoon, 86 Ill. 431.]
But tbe immediate question before us relates to interest instead of tbe debt itself. In many of tbe cases the expression is used that to have tbe effect of stopping interest alone, tbe tender must be kept good, as by a deposit of the sum tendered. It is so remarked in Ruppet v. Mo. Guar. Ass’n, 158 Mo. 613, 622. It is so stated in Parker v. Beasley, 116 N. C. side page 1, and a number, of other cases cited on side page 7. In other cases tbe statement is found that a mere tender without being kept good by a' deposit, while it will not
But it is recognized in several (if not all) of the foregoing cases that in any event if the party seeking relief desires the cancellation or assignment to himself of a mortgage, the courts will not grant him relief except upon the equitable ground that he pay to the holder of such security the sum due thereon. And so when Howard prosecuted his action to have his judgment declared a lien on the land, and the deeds of trust assigned to him, the Supreme Court, in recognition of the equity rule just stated, rendered the judgment and gave the direction we have already quoted, requiring him to pay off the debts secured by the two deeds of trust. [Howard v. Zweigert, 197 S. W. 46.]
It will be borne in mind that while Howard made an offer to pay the notes in his petition, he did not pay, nor did he carry out his offer by depositing the money in court for the defendants whenever they chose to accept it. He has therefore not lost the use of the money he thus offered. And notwithstanding he has had the profit of that use for the six intervening years, he desires to exact interest on the amount he should pay, to the prejudice of these plaintiffs, thereby, in effect, compelling the notes to yield up interest a second time for the same period, in order that he may be paid what he has not earned. The meaning of the direction given in the judgment of the Supreme Court was not, of course, that Howard should be paid interest his money never earned. Interest due after he brought
Tbe trial judge took the right view of the case and tbe judgment will be affirmed.