166 Mo. 262 | Mo. | 1901
Stephenson owned a small farm in Howell county; the tract of land on which his farm was located,
“The court finds that the trustee’s sale was at an unusual hour and that the amount of sale was inadequate and that Joe Carr -was not an innocent purchaser within the meaning of the law, but that said Carr, having paid a valuable consideration for said lands, should be and is subrogated to all the rights of Mattie McCowen, and the note and mortgage in question. And there is now due on the same $570, and it is therefore decreed that if defendant shall, on or before the seventh day of December, 1895, pay said Carr the sum of $570, the title to said land be vested in him, and if he fail to pay the said sum within that 'date, then he shall be divested of all right and title to said land, and that plaintiff have possession thereof with $5 per month from this date and that restitution issue therefor. G. A. Chapman to be-appointed to act as agent for both parties to adjust matters and costs.”
The- petition alleged that Carr refused to receive the money when offered him, and the object sought by the petition W'as to set aside the execution on -which Carr obtained possession of the property, and which issued on the ninth of December, 1895, and under which he was put into possession on the next day thereafter, and also to set aside and' cancel a deed made by Carr to Kilpatrick on January 30, 1897, and two deeds to Hall made on June 23, 1897, by Kilpatrick; that plaintiff be permitted to redeem, etc., and that defendants be divested of all title to said land and the same be vested in plaintiff, etc. The
The evidence, in brief, showed that plaintiff had borrowed the money from Canterbury; that the latter had taken and accepted the security offered by plaintiff, and had laid it up in the bank, where Canterbury had the money on deposit; and that on Saturday, the seventh day of December, Canterbury went to Carr and offered to pay him the money, and Carr said “he wouldn’t accept the money from him; he would have to see, his attorney.”
On the previous day, Friday, the sixth of December, plaintiff went to Carr, and talked to him about paying him the money, when he told plaintiff, that “he didn’t have to take money and he would not take it.” To other witnesses, Carr made similar remarks about his intended non-acceptance of the money.
Nothing is better settled than that the actual production of the money may be waived by him to whom it is due, refusing to accept the sum thus due, and such refusal makes the proffer to pay as good as though the money were counted down. [Berthold v. Reyburn, 37 Mo. 586; Whelan v. Reilly, 61 Mo. loc. cit. 568, and cas. cit.; Walsh v. St. Louis, etc., Ass’n, 101 Mo. 534.]
As to defendant Hall, it is in evidence that Hull, who took him to look at the land (which the former subsequently bought), told him “that Stephenson used to own the land, and that there was some dispute about the title.”
Evidence of this sort does not appear as to Kilpatrick, but we must not forget to remember that the transactions in
But in addition to that, the defendants Kilpatrick and Hall attempt the role of .innocent purchasers; but while they demurred to the evidence of plaintiff, they introduced no evidence whatever to support their assertion of being innocent purchasers, even conceding their answers good in this regard.
But the plea of being an innocent purchaser is an affirma
Moreover, the petition charges defendants Kilpatrick and Hall with aiding Carr in the fraudulent scheme mentioned in the petition, and when this is the case; when fraud is the charge, and the party charged therewith fails to come forward and testify and repel the charge of fraud, he generates, by this failure, an unfavorable presumption against his cause. [Baldwin v. Whitcomb, 71 Mo. 651; Henderson v. Henderson, 55 Mo. 533; Cass Co. v. Green, 66 Mo. 498; Bump, Fraud. Convey. 53, and cas. cit.]
In conclusion, it may be remarked that even if through the fraudulent machinations of Carr, plaintiff had been prevented from obtaining the redemption money in the time limited, the arm of a court of equity is not too short to extend relief; or if plaintiff made failure to raise the money in time through surprise, accident or mistake, such as courts of conscience will consider, still relief may be afforded; for equity affords relief on these four grounds, as they constitute the most ancient foundations of equitable jurisdiction. As to which see: Adams v. Haskell, 10 Wis. 123; Sheldon v. Wood, 14 How. Prac. 18; Brown v. Elliott, 17 N. J. Eq. 353; Pharr v. Reynolds, 3 Ala. 521; Clifton v. Livor, 24 Ga. 91; Brooks v. Whitson, 7 Sm. & M. 513; Crim v. Handley, 94 U. S. 652; Williamson v. Dale, 3 Johns. Ch. 290; Bixly v. Mead, 18 Wend. 611; Howell v. Hester, 4 N. J. Eq. 266; Seaman v. Riggins, 2 N. J. Eq. 214; Griffith v. Hadley, 10 Bosw. 587; Wetzler v. Schaumann, 24 N. J. Eq. 60; Collier v. Whipple, 13 Wend. 224; Holdsworth v. Shannon, 113 Mo. 508; Oliver v. Pray, 4 Ohio 175, 19 Am. Dec. 595.
, It seems difficult to understand,why the sale, under the deed of trust heretofore mentioned, should not have been treated in the same way; and why the lower court, while evidently condemning the sale for insufficiency of price and unusualness of hour, should yet subrogate the purchaser to all the rights of the original cestui que trustj and it is not improper to add that courts of equity usually give six-months in which to redeem, and that it is not customary to give so short a time as thirty days in which to redeem.
In accordance with the views heretofore expressed, the judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded with directions to enter a decree giving plaintiff three months in which to redeem, with simple interest at six per cent from date of entry of decree of 1895, and taking into account the value of rents and profits received and taxes paid; the former to diminish, the latter to augment, the redemption money; stating the precise sum due from plaintiff at time of decree to be entered, and that same shall bear six per cent interest till paid, if paid-within the time limited as aforesaid, and that plaintiff recover his costs.