46 Mo. App. 529 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1891
The statement of this case reported in 33 Mo. App. 505, together with such references as we shall hereinafter make to the evidence and the instructions, when we come to consider the questions arising thereon, it is believed, will be found sufficient for the purposes of this case. The judgment on the former appeal having been reversed and the cause remanded, a second trial has been had resulting in a judgment for the defendant, from which the plaintiff now appeals.
I. The mortgage under which defendant Brown makes claim to the property in dispute recites that it was given to secure a note made by Bailey to him for $400, and the question which we are required to decide is whether the circuit court erred in permitting defendant
The rule is firmly embedded in our equity jurisprudence that, in cases where an instrument does not truly express the agreement of the parties, that the mistake may be shown by parol evidence as well when the defendant is resisting the enforcement of the instrument, as in a direct proceeding to reform it. Johnson v. Houston, 17 Mo. 58; Leitsendorfer v. Delphy, 15 Mo. 167; Miller v. Dunlap, 22 Mo. App. 97; Jones v. Shepley, 90 Mo. 307; Corrigan v. Tiernay, 100 Mo. 276; Hogel v. Lindell, 10 Mo. 493 ; Montaney v. Rock, 10 Mo. 56; Kuntz v. Temple, 43 Mo. 71; Koehring v. Muemminghoff, 61 Mo. 403 ; State ex rel. Nieman v. Koch, 40 Mo. App. 635. This case under the pleadings is an
II. It is further contended that the trial court erred in admitting in evidence, over the objections of the plaintiff, the testimony of defendant Brown- and Wirt as to the acts and admissions of Bailey made in the absence of plaintiff after the execution of both mortgages, and after defendant had taken possession of the property. It is a familiar principle of the law that an assignor or grantor can do no act, nor make any admissions subsequent to the assignment or grant, to impeach or impair the title of his assignee or grantee any more than the acts or admissions of a stranger. Zoll v. Carnahan, 83 Mo. 35; Stewart v. Thomas, 35 Mo. 202; Gutzweiler’s Adm’r v. Lackmann, 39 Mo. 91; Weinrich v. Porter, 47 Mo. 293.
III. The plaintiff’s further insistance is, that the court erred .in permitting the introduction in evidence by defendant of the mortgage deed under which he claimed title to the property. The plaintiff in his petition claimed that he was entitled to the possession of “one mouse-colored mare mule, fourteen hands high, about seven years old, and one bay mare mule, fourteen hands high, about eight years old.” The answer in terms admits that the defendants were in possession of the property mentioned in the plaintiff’s petition, etc. The mortgage offered in evidence described “onebrown mare mule, five years old, and one light brown mare mule, five years old.” The plaintiff’s objections to the admission in evidence of the defendant’s mortgage were, first, that it shows on its face that it is not for the same property described in plaintiff’s petition; second, that it contradicts the issues made by the answer, and, third, that the colors of the mules described in the petition and answer and the defendant’s mortgage were not the same.
Manifestly the mortgage description of the mules is different from that in the petition. The descriptive terms employed are not the same, nor can we say that these terms have a like signification and meaning, or that they may be employed interchangeably. The term “ bay ” is defined as applied to horses, to be red or reddish, inclining to chestnut. No definition is given in the works of lexicographers, to which we have had access, of the compound term, “mouse-colored.” Zoology informs us that a mouse is a small, rodent quadruped, and it. may be inferred that, “a mouse-colored” mule would wear the color of that rodent, whatever it may be termed. We should be inclined to hold that the two descriptions by their terms do not cover the same property, and that the- admission of defendant’s mortgage was
IV. The plaintiff complains of the action of the court in refusing this instruction asked by him, viz. : “6. The court instructs the jury that if you should find and believe from all the evidence in the case that at the time of the contracting of the indebtedness described in plaintiff’s chattel mortgage (if it was contracted) between Bailey, Sparks and Brinker, that defendant’s mortgage embraced all the property then owned by Bailey, and that afterwards and before the institution of this suit the said defendant Brown permitted Bailey to remain in possession of the property and apply the proceeds to his (Bailey’s) own use, then said mortgage, although but for such conduct was valid, was by such conduct of Brown rendered fraudulent as to plaintiff, and you should so find.” We think this complaint well founded, and that the court should have given the plaintiff the benefit of the rule it asserts. The defendant’s mortgage covered, besides the mules in controversy, five head of horses, two-thirds of forty-five acres of corn in the field, two-thirds of sixty acres of wheat in the stack, wagon, reaper, cultivators, with other property of the value of upwards of $1,000. There was evidence adduced tending to show that Bailey, the mortgagor, with the consent of the defendant was permitted to sell and dispose of any of the mortgaged property that he chose and to appropriate the proceeds to his own purposes. • This we think rendered the mortgage void as to the plaintiff, an existing creditor, claiming the mules as a security for his debt under a junior mortgage. McCarty v. Miller
Y. The defendant’s fourth- instruction which told the jury, viz,: “The court instructs the jury that, although they may believe from the evidence in the case that the note of plaintiff from Bailey read m evidence is unpaid, yet if they further believe from the evidence that plaintiff instituted this suit and took possession of the property in question, with the intent and for the purpose of hindering or delaying or defrauding defendant in the collection of his- debt against Bailey, if they find and believe said Bailey was indebted to defendant, and for the purpose of delivering, and that he did deliver said property to said Bailey for his use and benefit, then plaintiff cannot recover, and the jury will find the issues for the defendant, ’ ’ was improperly given. There was no evidence upon which to base it. If the plaintiff, in good faith, pursued his legal remedy to obtain possession of the property, and to subject it to' sale under his mortgage, certainly no inference could arise from this fact alone that it was his intention to thereby aid Bailey in defrauding Brown in the collection of his claim; even if it was Bailey’s intent, when he notified plaintiff that defendant had taken possession of the property, to induce him to bring the suit, and, when the property was taken into his possession under the writ, to in that way reacquire the possession himself, there is no evidence, direct or inferential, that plaintiff had knowledge of such intent or participated in it. Plaintiff could not be guilty of fraud, unless he participated in the fraudulent intent of Bailey. State v. Hope, 102 Mo. 410.
It results from these considerations that the judgment of the circuit court must be reversed and the cause remanded.