89 Mo. 162 | Mo. | 1886
This is an appeal from a decree of the Johnson circuit court enjoining the defendants from selling the property in question under their deed of trust.
Whatever rights the defendants as second mortgagees have, must be determined from the face of the recorded deeds ; for there is no evidence in the case which impeaches the fairness of any of the deeds or sales through which the plaintiff derives Ms title. The claim of the defendants is, and must be, that when Amanda Bettes acquired the property back from Atherton, the purchaser under the first deed of trust, their deed of trust became a subsisting charge on the property and continued such as against Plum. The general rule is stated in 2 Jones on Mortgages [3Ed.] section 1887, as follows :
In Hilton v. Bissell, 1 Sandf. Ch. 407, B purchased the premises subject to two mortgages, both of which he assumed to pay. The senior mortgagee foreclosed his mortgage, making the junior mortgagee, the mortgageors, and B, defendants. B became the purchaser at the sale for the amount payable on the first mortgage, under the decree of foreclosure. The second moitgagee subsequently sought to foreclose his mortgage, and B set up his purchase under the first foreclosure sale, and claimed to hold the premises discharged of the second mortgage. This plea the court disallowed and said, looking beyond the forms through which B affected the arrangement, it was a payment of the first mortgage, and that he was bound by his covenants to make such payment, and would not be permitted to take advantage of his own wrong; and that he would be considered the owner of the land subject to the second mortgage. The cases of Tompkins v. Halstead, 21 Wis. 118, and Stiger v. Mahone, 24 N. J. Eq. 426, are like Hilton v. Bissell. In all these cases the purchaser of the equity of redemption had assumed and agreed to pay the mortgages as part of the consideration of the purchase. So in Otter v. Vaux, 6 DeG., M. & G., 638, it was the debtor himself, as well as mortgageor, who sought to defeat the second mortgage by a purchase indirectly under a power contained in the first mortgage. In some of these cases, as also in Thompson v. Heywood, 129 Mass. 401, there was also an element of fraud on the part of the purchaser under the first mortgages. Taking no special account of this element of fraud in those cases, and which is not found in the case at bar, still the present case is essentially different from them. Here Amanda
In Otter v. Vaux, supra, it was said ’if the purchase had been strictly from a third person who had for himself purchased under the power contained in the first mortgage, that might give rise to a difficult question. It was there contended that the purchase by the mortgageor should be treated as a purchase from a stranger,, and that contention gave rise to the suggestion. In Episcopal Church v. Mack, 17 Cent. L. J. 372, the church owned "the lot subject to a mortgage to Bell, and then sold the same to Mack, reserving an easement in
While these authorities are not decisive of the question here in hand, we think they in a general way support the conclusions before announced in. this case. There being no other question here for consideration, the judgment is affirmed.