This action was commenced October 17, 1889, by Pendleton, the plaintiff and appellant, against Cowling, Towner, Shober, and Adams, to recover the amount of the principal and interest of certain promissory notes. The court below sustained, December 30, 1890, the demurrer of Shober and Adams to the second amended complaint, and, upon the election of the plaintiff to abide by his pleadings, entered judgment for said defendants for their costs.
We are required to review this ruling, and the material facts should be fully stated. It appears that Pendleton owned, April 7, 1887, a certain tract of land in the county of Jackson, State of Missouri, and then sold it to Cowling for the sum of §>91,000, of which the sum of $31,000 was paid in cash. Cowling executed to Pendleton three promissory notes, of $20,000 each, for the remainder of the purchase price, which were due, respectively, in one, two, and three years from such date, with interest at the rate of eight per cent per annum, and were signed by T. F. Sneding, as security for Cowling. Pendleton then delivered to Cowling a warranty deed for the land, which was recorded April 7, 1887, in said county of Jackson. At the same time Cowling executed to W. S. Wells a deed of trust upon the premises to secure the payment of the notes, which was likewise recorded. This instrument provided that if Cowling and Sneding should fail to pay the notes, or any part thereof, when any of them became due, the whole should become payable. The first note matured April 10, 1888, and was not paid.
Cowling sold, October 17,1887, this land to Towner, Shober, and Adams for the sum of $201,501, but the deed was executed
This instrument, which was signed and acknowledged solely by Towner, contains the following recitals: That Towner, Shober, and Adams have purchased of Cowling the land described in the foregoing deeds, “for the price and sum oi $201,500, all of said consideration being paid save the deferred payment of three notes of $20,000 each, secured by a deed of trust executed by Parnell C. Cowling to James Pendleton, . . . . and subject to the conditions of the deed;” that the interest of purchasers is as follows: Towner, three fifths; Adams, one fifth; and Shober, one fifth; that said parties “have consented and agreed that for their mutual benefit, convenience, and accommodation, and for the purpose oi facilitating the sale and management of said real estate, and the transfer thereof in case of sale, the conveyance of said real estate be made to the said Oscar M. Towner, subject to a deed of trust to secure the aforesaid deferred payments: Now, therefore, in consideration of the premises, the said Oscar M. Towner hereby expressly declares that he holds the above-described real estate in trust for himself, and all the parties hereinbefore named, according to their respective interests hereinbefore stated; and the said Oscar M. Towner hereby promises and agrees and binds himself to sell and convey the real estate in accordance with the direction of said parties in interest, and appropriate the proceeds derived from said sale in the manner directed by all of said parties in interest, and to hold said real estate as aforesaid until all of said parties shall direct otherwise.' Iu
The complaint sets forth the statutes of the State of Missouri, which require declarations of trust to be in writing, and signed by the party who is legally enabled to declare the same. It is further alleged that Towner, Shober, and Adams jointly assumed the payment of the said notes, and that Shober and Adams accepted the declaration oi trust. Wells, as the trustee, sold August 23, 1888, the land for the sum of $20,131, “ under the provisions of the deed of trust,” and the amount, after deducting the expenses of the sale, was credited upon the first of said notes.
Does 'the complaint state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action? It is conceded that no other written instruments ■were executed by the parties than those which are mentioned in the complaint, and the liability of the respondents to pay the foregoing notes depends upon their interpretation. Counsel have treated the case upon this theory, and we have been governed accordingly, in considering the legal propositions which have been discussed. When, therefore, it is alleged that Shober and Adams “jointly assumed with the said Towner the payment of the aforesaid three notes,” it must be understood that this language refers to the effect of the deeds and declaration of trust, and not to acts which are not set forth in these documents or the complaint.
This action was commenced in the courts of the Territory of Montana, and the amount in controversy was sufficient to give to the aggrieved party the right of appeal to the Supreme Court of the United States. If our judgment can be reviewed, the right of the parties must be settled by the decisions of that
It is alleged in the complaint that the respondents accepted the deed from Cowling, and also the declaration of trust by Towner, but it does not appear that Towner or Shober or Adams ever performed any act concerning this land, or enjoyed the possession thereof. The diligent labor of counsel, and an independent examination upon our part, have failed to produce an authority possessing the remarkable features which have been detailed. The conveyances and deed of trust, which are referred to in the complaint, are not pleaded in hoeo verba, and their effect is not always defined with certainty. It should be borne in mind that this is not an action for the foreclosure ot the deed of trust and the recovery of a judgment against Shober and Adams for the deficiency. The property has been disposed of by the trustee in the State of Missouri, and, according to our view, there is only one question for our solution. Did the respondents, by virtue of the foregoing documents, become liable for the payment of such deficiency ? This is answered by the conditions of the contracts of the parties. The deed from Cowling to Towner contained this clause: “All of said notes and interest thereon the grantee assumes and agrees to pay.” The grantee was Towner and not Shober or Adams, and his assumption of this obligation cannot be disputed. The bare reasons for this transaction are immaterial, but the pertinent fact is that this agreement was not made by Shober or Adams.
Chief Justice Shaw, in Huntington v. Knox, 7 Cush. 371, said: “ When a contract is made by deed under seal, on technical grounds, no one but a party to the deed is liable to be sued upon it; and therefore, if made by an agent or attorney, it must be made in the name of the principal, in order that he may be a party, because otherwise he is not bound by it.” The Supreme Court of the State of Missouri, in Worley v. Dryden,
What, then, is the precise language of Towner in. the declaration of trust ? “ All of said consideration being paid save the deferred payment of three notes of 020,000 each, secured by a deed of trust executed by Parnell C. Cowling to James Pendleton j ” and that the parties thereto have consented that “ the conveyance of said real estate be made to the said Osear M. Towner, subject to a deed of trust to secure the aforesaid deferred payments.” While Towner was the owner of three fifths of this property, he sustained towards Shober and Adams the relation of a trustee for the remainder. (Seymour v. Freer, 8 Wall. 202.) The declaration of trust “ was precisely the instrument which the statute requires to show that the trustee was not the owner of the land by virtue of conveyances to him absolute on their face.” (Wright v. Douglass, 7 N. Y. 564.) “It must also be observed that, if a trust is declared in writing,” says Mr. Perry in his work on Trusts, “ courts never permit parol proof of a trust to contradict an intention expressed upon the face of the instrument itself, for that would be to allow parol evidence to vary, contradict, or annul a written instrument.” (Vol. 1 [2d ed.], §76, and cases cited.)
The authorities hold that the above words of the declaration of trust, if inserted in a deed, do not make the grantee liable for the payment of such an encumbrance upon the land. Mr. Jones, the learned author of the work on Mortgages, says s “ A deed which is merely made subject to a mortgage specified, does not alone render the grantee personally liable for the mortgage debt. To create such liability, there must be such words as will clearly import that the grantee assumed the obligation oí paying the debt. It is not necessary that any particular formal words should be used, but that the intention to impose upon the grantee this obligation should clearly appear. A purchaser of land accepting a deed expressly conveying it subject to a rnortgage, and excepting it from the covenants, is not himself personally liable to pay it, unless he covenants to do so.” (Vol. 1 [1st ed.], § 748, and eases citedj Elliott v. Sackett, 108 U. S.
These contracts were executed within the State of Missouri, in relation to land therein, and it should be noticed that her courts have reiterated these principles. In Hall v. Morgan, 79 Mo. 47, Mr. Justice Sherwood in the opinion said: “Nor is the view entertained that the words ‘subject to a mortgage,’ contained in the deed last referred to, have any bearing on this controversy, since they were only such words as the law would imply.....Unless there was an express agreement to that effect, he (the purchaser) would not be personally liable for the mortgage debt, even though the deed under which he claims had conveyed the property therein mentioned, ‘subject to an outstanding mortgage.’ (2 Washburn on Real Property, 113.) Unless the deed recites words importing on the part of the grantee a personal liability for the debt, such words as are quoted above will be regarded as a merely descriptive clause, or one inserted as restrictive of the covenants of warranty from the grantor. (2 Washburn on Real Property, 209.)” The Supreme Court of that State has also held that, “if a grantee takes a deed containing a recital that the land is subject to a mortgage, which the grantee assumes or agrees to pay, a duty is imposed on him by the acceptance, and the law implies a promise to per
Whenever a judgment has been entered for a deficiency against the grantee of the mortgagor, the obligation is created by the direct assumption of the debt which has been secured. The terms of the declaration of trust are easily understood, and we must disregard the allegations of the complaint which are inconsistent therewith. The plain inference from this instrument is that the respondents have not undertaken to pay said note to the appellant. Its recitals are of matters which, under the authorities, cannot serve as the foundation of a personal liability upon the part of Shoeber and Adams to satisfy the demand of the mortgagee in this action. The complaint fails to show that either of the respondents manifested the intention to assume the payment of the notes to Pendleton, and the action of the court below in sustaining the demurrer was correct.
It is therefore ordered and adjudged that the judgment be affirmed.
Affirmed.