89 Mo. 284 | Mo. | 1886
This suit is founded upon a promissory note executed by defendant and B. B. Clopton, his wife,' not sued herein. It is averred in the petition that the defendant and his wife executed a deed of trust conveying to one Carter, as trustee, certain real estate to secure
Upon the hearing and trial of the cause, the circuit court entered the following judgment and decree :
“That the plaintiff recover of and from the defendant, William H. Clopton, the sum of $2,862.69, with, interest thereon at the rate of ten per cent, per annum until paid, and that he have execution therefor. And the court doth further adjudge and decree that the said defendant, William EL Clopton, have leave, and he is hereby authorized, to redeem the premises described in the deed of trust mentioned in the petition and second amended answer herein, upon his paying to the plaintiff herein, at any time within sixty days from this day, the-
Prom this decree an appeal was prosecuted by defendant to the St. Louis court of appeals, where, on the affirmance of the judgment, he prosecutes his appeal to this court, insisting that the decree is erroneous in not giving him the measure of relief to which he is entitled.
It is manifest that while the decree of the court recognizes the right of defendant to retain the property, it also recognizes the fact that the sale made under the deed of trust was voidable, and that in equity the property remained subject to the payment of the whole debt,
The decree rendered partakes of the nature of a strict foreclosure, a practice which has never prevailed in this state, and which it is said in the case of Davis v. Holmes, 55 Mo. 349, would be a novelty in proceedings on mortgages here. If the sale, as the court must have found, was made under the circumstances set up in defendant’s answer and cross bill, to permit it to stand would be to allow the perpetration of a fraud on defendant, in favor of which the statute of frauds invoked by counsel for plaintiff could not operate, it being well settled that frauds and trusts are not within the operatioof the statute of frauds. Dose v. Bates, 12 Mo. 30; Damschroeder v. Thias, 51 Mo. 100; Gillespie v. Stone, 70 Mo. 505.
Under the circumstances attending the trustee’s sale, and the understanding of the parties as set up in the cross bill, upon which the court must have based its decree, the sale and deeds made in virtue of it should have been set aside, judgment rendered against defendant for the full amount of the note and interest, and ■ taxes paid, if any, the deed of trust foreclosed by ordering a sale of the property to pay the judgment, and awarding a general execution for whatever of the judg
Judgment reversed and cause remanded to be proceeded with in conformity with this opinion.