176 Mo. 310 | Mo. | 1903
This is an original proceeding by which the relator seeks a writ to prohibit a judge of the circuit court in Jackson county issuing a writ of assistance to put the purchaser into possession of certain real estate which was sold under a decree of that court in a suit to foreclose a deed of trust.
The application for the writ of prohibition is based on two propositions: first, that the suit in which the foreclosure judgment was rendered was an action at law in which relator says no writ of assistance can issue; second, if relator is mistaken in the nature of that suit and it is to be adjudged a suit in equity, then it says the court has exceeded its jurisdiction in ordering the writ of assistance because there had been no confirmation of the sale which was essential to the passing of the title.
I. We have a statutory proceeding to foreclose a mortgage which has been adjudged to be an action at law. Section 4342, Eevised Statutes 1899, provides that a mortgagee may file his petition in the circuit court
That is the statutory proceeding which this court from the beginning has decided to be an action at law as distinguished from a suit in equity. [Thayer v. Campbell, 9 Mo. 281; Riley v. McCord, 24 Mo. 265; Fithian v. Monks, 43 Mo. 502; Pemberton v. Johnson, 46 Mo. 342.] The proceeding there contemplated deals with no uncertain parties and no equivocal titles. Tho parties are the mortgagee on the one side and the mortgagor and the man in possession on the other; the one holding the legal title with a defeasance, the other holding the equity of redemption and the possession; the only duties of the court are to ascertain the amount due on the mortgage debt and pass judgment that the property he sold for the amount so ascertained and that execution issue,for the balance, if any, against the mortgagor ’s other property. "When that is all there' is of substance in a case it is a suit at law, even though the petition denominate it a suit in equity and states the
' But the remedy given by that statute is not exclusive. Courts of equity retain their original jurisdiction and mortgages are still foreclosed through equity jurisprudence. [McClurg v. Phillips, 49 Mo. 315; Hanna v. Davis, 112 Mo. 599; Brim v. Fleming, 135 Mo. 597.] If a case which involves, among other things, the foreclosure of a mortgage must for that reason be limited to the proceeding given in the statute, that proceeding would often be found to be inadequate, because, while under its forms the amount of the debt can be ascertained and the equity of redemption be ordered to be sold to pay it and execution against the mortgagor-awarded for the balance, if any, yet there may be other complications involved which only a court of equity can adjust. [Wolff v. Ward, 104 Mo. 127.] In our code of civil procedure we start out by saying that there shall be but one form of action for the enforcement or protection of private rights which is to be called a civil action (section 539, R. S. 1899), yet we do not say, and it would be futile to say, that we no longer observe the fundamental distinctions that exist between causes that are to be adjudged according to principles of equity and those that are to be measured by the rules of law. And whilst we submit all causes to the judgment of one court of the highest original jurisdiction, yet, in order to render that court competent to fulfill its duty, we have been compelled to clothe its presiding officer not only with the attributes of a law judge, but also with those of a chancellor. Hnder our judicial system, the distinction between law and equity is as clearly observed as it is under the'systems in vogue in those States in which separate courts are held for the disposal of equity causes.
Whether a cause arising in the circuit court is to be judged to be an action at law or a suit in equity must depend on the facts of the case, and although the form
To determine, therefore, whether the foreclosure suit with which we have now to deal was a suit in equity or a proceeding under the statutes, let us first look at the pleadings. According to the petition the facts of the case are as follows: The plaintiff is the holder of past due notes, and a deed of trust to secure them, which were executed in 1892. by the Wyandotte Hall Joint Stock Company (which will hereinafter be called the Stock Company) which was chartered by a special act of the General Assembly in 1857. Wyandotte Lodge No. 35 of the Independent'Order of Odd Fellows (which will hereafter be called the Lodge) is and was in 1857 and had been long prior to that date a voluntary association for charitable and benevolent purposes. The Lodge consisted of about 125 members, and under its constitution, and by-laws James O. McKeehan, L. B. Austin, and Samuel M. Taylor, who are defendants in the suit, are the trustees to own, hold and manage all the property of the Lodge. In 1857 the Lodge, being desirous of acquiring real estate and erecting a house or hall in which to hold its meetings, and being unable in itself to raise the required capital, in order to obtain outside financial assistance, promoted and obtained the incorporation of the Stock Company. It was" provided in the charter that the trustees of the Lodge were to have the privilege of purchasing the stock of the Stock Company, and acting on that right they did purchase and have since held and now hold all the stock of the
At the date of filing the suit the principal note and some of the interest notes were due and unpaid and other breaches of the conditions of the deed had occurred. The insolvency of the corporation, the depreciation of the property in value, its insufficiency to pay the debt, its mismanagement, and misappropriation of the rents by the defendants, are alleged in the petition as reasons why the court should appoint a receiver. It is also alleged that the individual defendants, the trustees, and the officers of the corporation have denied the validity of the plaintiff’s security on the ground that the alleged corporation which was chartered in 1857 had expired by limitation in 1877 under the provision of the general statute limiting the life of corporations to twenty years, and was not in legal .existence in 1892 when the notes and deed of trust were executed. But the petition says that in fact, whatever the law on the point may be, the stockholders and officers of the corporation kept up the organization by annual election of officers and transaction of business, treating it as a live concern, holding it out as such,
The return of the sheriff on the summons is not in the record before us, but we infer from what does appear that the service as to the Stock Company was on Mr. Porterfield as its president. Mr. Porterfield in his own name was allowed to file what in the proceedings is called a plea, which was to the effect that the Stock Company, having been incorporated in 1857, ceased to exist as a corporation in 1877, by force of the twenty years’ limitation; that at the date of the deed of trust in question it had no corporate existence and its alleged acts were null and void.
The individual defendants who are sued as trustees of the Lodge filed an elaborate answer in which they made a specific denial of each material allegation in the petition including that of their own alleged title ia the property, and averred that the Stock Company had ceased to be a corporation in 1877 having expired by limitation, that of the last board of directors two were yet living, that the title to the property owned by the corporation at the date of the expiration of the charter
In the foregoing summary we have- not given the full statements that are set forth in the pleadings as might be necessary if the record in that case were now before us for review on appeal, but only sufficient to show the nature of the suit and the character of the issues of law and of fact that the court had for trial.
The cause was tried by the court upon the pleadings and proofs adduced and there was a finding of all the issues for the plaintiff. On the question of the corporate existence of the stock company at the date of the deed of trust, the court makes a special finding to the effect that from the date of the act of incorporation down to and including that of the execution of the notes and deed of trust, the concern continued to act as a corporation holding regular elections and in all respects behaving as if it were a legal entity, and that the defendants, the trustees of the Lodge, owned all the stock for the use of- the Lodge; and that the Lodge had by a resolution directed its trustees as such stockholders to obtain the loan in question through means of the corporation; that the money was obtained by this means and used for the erection of the building in the name of the Stock Company and had been ever since its erection in the use of the defendants and that therefore they were estopped to deny the corporate existence of the Stock Company.
The court found that there was due on the notes $38,085.26, for which sum and interest it rendered judg
There was an appeal taken by the defendants which is now pending, but as there was no supersedeas, execution issued, a sale occurred at which the respondent Alsop became the purchaser, received the sheriff’s deed which he exhibited to the defendants and their tenants, and demanded possession which they refused. Then he applied to the court which rendered the judgment for a writ of assistance to put him in possession. Notice of this application was duly given to the defendants and their tenants and also to the Lodge which entered a special appearance and filed an answer in which ii claimed to be a corporation and the sole owner in possession of the property and contested the right of Alsop to the writ asked for and the jurisdiction of the court to issue it. The trustees, Austin and Taylor, answered, as did also some of the tenants, all contesting the right of the purchaser to the writ and the authority of the court to issue it. The application came on for hearing upon the petition by the purchaser, the answórs, or returns, of the parties, and the proofs adduced on the issues of fact raised. There was a finding for the petitioner on the facts and the court awarded a writ to put him in possession. There is no necessity, for the purpose of our present inquiry, to set out here the details of the order, its conditions, limitations, etc. The general purport of the order was that, as against the Lodge the trustees and their tenants, the purchaser at the sheriff’s sale was to have possession of the property. Upon the entering of that order the Lodge filed its petition for the writ of prohibition we are now asked to issue.
The foregoing epitome is sufficient to show that there were questions in the case of such a nature as could not be settled in a tribunal proceeding within the limits that circumscribe a court in the trial of an ordinary law suit, questions of a character certainly different from those which were in the minds of the law
If the relator’s idea in reference to the expiration of the life of the corporation is correct, then the court had to deal with a title in the clouds, with no one tangible by the process of the court except those having only the equitable interest, those for whose use the property was acquired. If the statements in the petition are true, the Stock Company acquired and held the title to the property for the sole use and benefit of the Lodge; the Stock Company was the trustee and the Lodge the cestui que trust; the Stock Company held the legal and the Lodge the equitable title. This relation was rendered the more intimate by the Lodge owning though its trustees all the stock in the Stock Company, so that, as to the stock the legal title was in the trustees while the equitable title was in the Lodge. It is said in the answer of the trustees that two of the members of the board of directors, who were such in 1877, when the life of the corporation expired, are still alive, that the legal, title to the property passed to them on the demise of the corporation, and is now held by them. The issue on thát point is not sufficiently tendered, because the names of the alleged surviving directors are not given. The court could not find for the defendants on that issue unless it could locate the title, and that it could not do unless it was informed of the individuals who held it. If, therefore, it is true that the corporation, at the date of the deed of trust, was dead, we have a case (if the statements in the petition are true) in which the trustee is dead but the cestui que trust has assumed management of the property, has put forward certain persons professing to represent the trustee, has induced confidence to be placed in them as such, has obtained a large amount of money through that means, and now denies
We have not intended by anything that is here said to express or intimate any opinion on the merits of the controversy, but only to indicate the nature of the controversy so that we can judge whether it is a suit in equity or an action at law. It is a suit in equity.
II. On one point the decree takes the form of a judgment in personam against the stock company, and this is considered by relator as showing conclusively that the proceeding is an action at law. If the pleadings presented to the court a suit in equity its character would not be changed because the decree, erroneously it may be, in one respect took the form of a judgment at law. If the court, under the pleadings, had no jurisdiction to enter a personal judgment, that much'of the decree would be void, but the rest of it is not dependent on it. And if there was in this case in that particular an excess of jurisdiction, it was on a point that in no manner affected the relator. If what the relator now says about the stock company is true, a judgment against it amounts to nothing^ and at all events relator has no cause to complain of it.
III. Eelator’s next proposition is that, if it is a suit in equity, then title to the property did not pass by the sale and sheriff’s deed, but is held in suspense until the sale shall be confirmed by the court.
The usual course of procedure in courts of chancery in such case was for the officer or special commissioner, who was ordered by the decree to make the sale, to report his act to the court and await its further order; then if the act was confirmed he would make the deed,
It appears that after the sale by the sheriff and the delivery by him of the deed to the purchaser, the latter went with his deed to the parties in possession and demanded to be let into possession as the decree required, but they refused and then the purchaser applied to the
That courts of equity in the exercise of their jurisdiction in the foreclosure of mortgages have the power to issue writs to put the purchasers into possession of the property sold, is a proposition well established. [Jones on Mort. (4 Ed.), sec. 1663; 2 Ency. Pl. and Pr., 975, 978; Wiltsie on Mort. For., sec. 593; Root v. Woodsworth, 150 U. S. 411; Kershaw v. Thompson, 4 John, Ch. *p. 610; Woodsworth v. Tanner, 94 Mo. 124, l. c. 128.]
Under the ancient chancery proceeding it is called a writ of assistance and there is no objection to that name in our.practice. Our statute gives to our courts express authority to issue all writs necessary in the exercise of their jurisdictions. [Sec. 1598, R. S. 1899.]
Nothing we have said in this opinion is intended as passing judgment on any points in the decree or the proceedings which the parties appealing therefrom conceive to be error, but we have viewed the case only from the standpoint of relator who has challenged the validity of the action of the court in awarding a writ of assistance upon the ground that the court in awarding the writ exceeded its jurisdiction. We hold that the court had jurisdiction to issue the writ, and that it was in duty bound to do so if in its own judgment the right and justice of the case demanded it.
The writ of prohibition is denied.