39 Mo. App. 635 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1890
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is a contest between plaintiff and defendant involving the question of the ownership of certain rents alleged to have been collected by the defendant. The court sustained a demurrer to the petition, and, the plaintiff declining to plead further, the court dismissed his bill, and entered judgment against him for costs. The correctness of this ruling is the only question presented for our consideration.
The facts upon which the plaintiff predicated his right of recovery may be stated as follows: On the twelfth day of March, 1887, one Felix Raeman and wife executed, acknowledged and delivered to one William F. Smith, as trustee, a deed of trust, by which they conveyed to Smith three separate tracts or parcels of land to secure the payment of a negotiable promissory note of even date for three thousand dollars, in which one Charles Williams was payee and Raeman was the maker. The note was made payable six months after its date with interest after maturity at the rate of ten per cent, per annum. The property conveyed was improved, and was subsequently rented by Raeman to various tenants. The deed of trust, after describing and conveying the real estate, contained the following additional matter,
At the time of the execution of this deed of trust the various notes secured by the prior deeds of trust were unpaid, and it was admitted that the deeds of trust were prior liens to that created by the Smith deed of trust. The prior deeds of trust contained the same provisions in reference to the possession of the premises, the assignment of the future rents, and the right to collect the same from the tenants occupying the premises, as in the Smith deed of trust.
On the twelfth day of April, 1887, Raeman made a general assignment under the statute, and on the third day of May, 1887, his assignee sold the equity of redemption owned by Raeman to the defendant. Prior to ' this the plaintiff had become the owner of the Williams note secured by the Smith deed of trust, and, on the day of defendant’s said purchase, he was notified by the plaintiff that the latter claimed the rents of the Raeman real estate, and that he was entitled to demand and receive the same nnder the provisions of the Smith deed of trust. The defendant disputed this. Afterwards ‘ on the thirtieth day of November, 1887, the parties entered into the following stipulation, to-wit:
“I, William Keane, owner of the equity of redemption in the Evans avenue lots and improvements, and the lot and improvements on Lay avenue, St. Louis, Missouri, said property being partly described*642 in a certain deed of trust, executed by Felix Raeman and wife to Charles Williams, trustee, and recorded in the office of recorder of deeds of the city of St. Louis, Missouri, in book 812, at page 492, do hereby waive the making demand by Jeptha H. Simpson of me, or of the tenants occupying the property, and premises aforesaid, and for the rents thereof, and do hereby stipulate and agree with the said Jeptha H. Simpson, who is the holder of the note for three thousand dollars ($3000.00), secured by said deed of trust, that a demand on such tenants for said rents shall be considered as having been made by him as of the date thereof, and the failure to make actual demand of the said tenants of said several premises shall in no way prejudice any right of said Simpson to said rents, in case he would be entitled to same in law, if such demand had actually been made, which right, however, I do not admit or concede, and nothing herein contained is to be held or construed to be an admission or assent upon my part that said Simpson, as-the holder of said notes, or otherwise, has now, or ever had, any claim or right whatsoever- to said rents, or any part' thereof, or that under said deed of trust he is, or can be, at any time, or in any wise, entitled to said rents, or any part thereof, or entitled to make demand for the same, or any part thereof.
“(Signed) Wm. Keawe.”
On the fifth day of September,' 1887, Raeman died, and on the seventh day of July, 1888, the notes secured by the prior deed of trust being due and unpaid, the property was, at the request of the owner of the indebtedness, sold by the trustee named in the prior deeds of trust, and at the sale the sum of ten thousand, six hundred and fifty dollars was realized; and after paying the expenses of the sale, and the amount of prior indebtedness, there remained only the sum of twelve hundred and sixty-three dollars and thirteen cents, which was paid to plaintiff as second
The defendant was permitted to remain in possession of the property as the owner of Raeman’s equity of redemption, and to collect the rents from the date of his purchase up to the date of the sale under the prior deeds of trust.
Under the foregoing state of facts the plaintiff maintained that in equity he had the right to compel the defendant to account to him as beneficiary under the Smith deed of trust for all rents collected from tenants occupying the mortgaged premises; in other words, that, under the provisions of the Smith deed of trust, no proceedings to enforce the plaintiff’s claim to subsequent rents, or his right to the actual possession, were necessary to make his right to the rents and profits of the mortgaged property complete; but he could at any time, by merely notifying the defendant and the tenants that he claimed the rents, create an obligation against defendant for all rents collected by him after notice, and that a court of equity would enforce such obligation.
A mbrtgage of real estate is now regarded merely as security for the debt, and the general rule is that, until the mortgagee enters for breach of condition, or until a receiver is appointed in foreclosure or other proceedings, or until final judgment of foreclosure, the mortgagor is regarded as the owner of the property, and can deal with it as such so long as he is permitted to remain in possession. Kennett v. Plummer, 28 Mo. 142. So long as the mortgagee refrains from taking possession, or neglects to enforce his rights under the mortgage, the mortgagor has the right to rent the mortgaged premises and to collect the rents, and he is in no way answerable to the mortgagee therefor. In re Life Association, 96 Mo. 632; White v. Wear, 4 Mo. App. 341. And in such a case the mortgagee would have no
The plaintiff ’ s counsel insist that, by virtue of the mortgage, the “entire possession” of the premises, which would necessarily include the actual possession, was delivered to the trustee, and that this was done to avoid the expense of a receiver, and to place the beneficiary in such a position that he could, in case of default, proceed readily to collect the rents by demanding the same from the tenants. If this construction is to prevail, then the provisions concerning such possession in the Smith deed of trust became inoperative, for the very simple reason that the prior deeds of trust contained similar provisions, and Raeman, at the time of the execution of the second deed of trust, had no possession upon which the Smith deed could operate. Under plaintiff’s theory, the seizin in law and fact of the mortgaged property was then held by the trustee in the prior deeds of trust.
Again the plaintiff claims that a demand only by him for the rents was necessary because, by the terms of his mortgage, there was an absolute assignment of the rents and income of the premises as a part of the security for the payment of his debt, i. e., the future rents were pledged absolutely to pay his debt. If he is right in this, then a similar disposition of the same income had been previously make in the older deeds of trust, and as the petition showed that, at the time the plaintiff made his demand, a portion of the debts mentioned in the prior deeds was due, it necessarily followed, as a matter of law, that, at the time the plaintiff demanded the rents, the absolnte ownership of and right to them were vested in the trustee in the prior
Lastly, it is urged that a fair construction of the deed of trust shows that there was an agreement for the payment of rents, before sale, in liquidation of the debts thereby secured, and that, in such a case, all the law required of the plaintiff, in order to avail himself of the rents, was to make a demand therefor. Under this view, we are again troubled with the superior rights and equities of the original mortgagees, and we are at a loss to know how the plaintiff could, by mere notice to defendant, create a fund out of the rents which he could insist, as a matter of right, should be applied to the extinguishment of his debt.
But, if we lay out of view the prior deeds of trust, we cannot see upon what principle this case can be taken out of the operation of the general rule. We do not think that the assignment of the rents can be regarded as an absolute assignment for the payment of the debt secured, for there is nothing in the deed of trust requiring the mortgagor to pay rent in liquidation of the debt, and nothing to indicate an intention to accumulate rents for any such purpose; but, on the contrary, it is quite clear to us that the assignment of the rents was conditional, and made only to enable the beneficiary to compel future tenants to pay him rents. McKircher v. Hawley, 16 Johns. 289.
We have looked at the case from the various standpoints suggested by counsel, and, upon no theory of law known to us, can the plaintiff’s'right of recovery be maintained. It is clearly expressed in the deed of trust that Raeman should hold the actual possession of the property subject to nominal rent, and collect the rents therefrom until default; and this view disposes
We are of the opinion that the judgment was for the right party, and it will, therefore, be affirmed. All the judges concurring, it is so ordered.