112 Mo. 315 | Mo. | 1892
Plaintiff sues for a decree for title to a tract of land in Saline county. His petition has a second count in ejectment for the same property. Defendant, Mr. Vanstone, is the adversary claimant. The other defendant is the latter’s tenant in possession.
•It is not necessary to set forth the pleadings.
The substantiaP controversy is whether plaintiff’s title is legally or equitably better than that of Mr. Vanstone. The trial court on plaintiff’s own showing 'held that it was not, and rendered judgment for defendant accordingly. From that result plaintiff appealed in# the regular way.
Both titles are traced to Mr. Fenton as the common source.
Defendant’s title rests upon a trustee’s sale, in April, 1887, under deed of trust by Mr. Fenton in defendant’s favor, dated and recorded October 19, 1882, to secure a note for $1,026, at fifteen months.
Plaintiff also offered testimony that, in February, 1887, defendant and Mr. Fenton negotiated for a settlement of accounts, and about that time a deed of general warranty to defendant was executed and acknowledged by Mr. Fenton. Its recited consideration is $2,225, receipt of which is acknowledged.
Plaintiff appears to suppose that the effect of this deed is to disturb the priority of defendant’s original deed of trust, and, necessarily, of the trustee’s sale to defendant thereunder. There is no proof of any agreement between defendant and Mr. Fenton at any time, on that point, or of any agreement releasing or discharging the debt or lien of the first deed of trust, unless the warranty deed of Mr. Fenton to defendant, with the statutory covenants of title, should be regarded as implying some such agreement.
Defendant clearly had the right to buy Mr. Fenton’s equity of redemption, subject to existing mortgages,' without displacing the lien of the first mortgage held by him (defendant). That purchase, however, did not disturb the plaintiff’s position, at that time, as holder of the second deed of trust or mortgage. • Though the warranty deed of Mr. Fenton purported to be an absolute transfer, it did not impair the equitable fight of plaintiff, under the second incumbrance, to redeem as to the earlier one, before its foreclosure.
A mortgagee may, in good faith, and for adequate value, acquire the equity of redemption. "Where there
This is simply a ease where be who is prior in time is stronger in law.
Tbe trial court ruled that plaintiff’s title was not superior to that of defendant. In that ruling, and in affirming tbe judgment thereon