The facts disclosed by the record in the case are, that Kirk borrowed of Harrison & Platt $500, and deposited with them certain collateral securities, among others a note for $700 of Kennedy’s, which was.secured by a deed of trust on certain real property, but which deed was not delivered to Harrison & Platt at the time the collateral was left with them. After-wards and before the maturity of the Kennedy note, Kirk forged a duplicate copy of it, which he sold and indorsed to Ackerman as the genuine note for its face value, turning-over the deed of trust to him'at the same time. Kennedy, who was Kirk’s grantee, sold the-real property to plaintiff's, subject to the Kirk deed of trust. After the plaintiffs’ purchase, Kirk informed them that Ackerman was the holder of the Kennedy note, and so they made payments of interest to him amounting to about $84. Harrison & Platt collected on the collaterals in their hands about $300, which they claimed was subject to be diminished by certain *176expenses, such as attorney’s fees, commissions, etc. Harrison & Platt caused a sale of the property to be made under the Kennedy deed of trust, and plaintiffs, on learning this fact, brought their suit in equity to have, first, the sale set aside ; second, to require Harrison & Platt and Ackerman to interplead, and assert their claims, respectively, to the note secured by the deed of trust, and, third, that they be permitted to pay into court the amount due on the Kennedy note for the benefit of the defendant who should be adjudged entitled to it. Harrison & Platt in their answer consented that the sale of the property under the deed of trust be set aside, and alléged themselves to. be the owners of the genuine Kennedy note. Ackerman in his answer claimed to be the owner of the genuine Kennedy note, and alleged that Harrison & Platt held the forged one. The prayer of his answer was, that if the court found that the note he held was the false one, and that held by Harrison & Platt, the .true one, then it would allow him to redeem from Harrison & Platt upon payment to them of whatever sum should be found to be doe on the note of Kirk to them. The court found and decreed, amongst other things, first, that plaintiffs had paid Ackerman $84 under mutual mistake by which they were entitled to recover back the same ; second, that Harrison & Platt were the owners of the Kennedy note and deed of trust, and that Ackerman had no right, title or interest therein; third, that plaintiffs have sixty days to pay Harrison & Platt the amount of the Kennedy note and interest, etcfourth, that Ackerman pay the costs of the suit.
Ackerman, after ah unsuccessful motion to set aside the findings and decree of the court., prosecuted his appeal here.
I. The defendant Ackerman claims that by operation of assignment he became the owner of Kirk’s equity of redemption in the Kennedy note, which was held as collateral security by Harrison & Platt under a *177previous agreement made by them with Kirk. This claim is controverted by Harrison & Platt. It becomes,' therefore, material to consider the issue thus sharply presented. A pledgor may sell his equity of redemption subject to the lien of the pledgee. Randolph on Com. Paper, sec. 803; Dupre v. Fall, 10 Cal. 430 ; Nelson v. Edwards, 40 Barb. 279. The rule in respect to assignments seems to be that, if the transaction shows an intention on the one side to make a present and irrevocable transfer of the subject-matter thereof, and from which an assent to receive it in ay be inferred on the other side, this will operate in equity as an assignment, if supported by sufficient consideration. This construction, it is said, would generally execute the real intention of the parties, and is adopted for that reason, and, if there is anything from which a different intention ought to be inferred, the transaction will not be allowed to have the effect of a transfer. Kimball v. Donald, 20 Mo. 578 ; Ford v. Arnholt, 37 Mo. 50; Frank v. Bogy, 44 Mo. 13. Now, applying the principle of this rule to the transaction between Kirk and Ackerman, can we say there was an assignment by the former of his equity of redemption in the Kennedy note to the latter ? Was it in their contemplation that this transaction, in respect to the forged note, should vest the equity of redemption in the genuine note in Ackerman % The question here is largely one of intention. Such intention must be mutual and concurrent; for otherwise there would not be that meeting of minds which is essential to the making of the assignment. Dietz v. Faush, 53 How. Pr. 217; 1 Parsons on Cont. 6; 4 Kent, Com. 449 ; Sturgis v. Croenshield, 4 Wheaton, 122.
Undoubtedly the inference deducible from the undisputed facts is, that Ackerman intended to purchase the genuine note. Every fact and circumstance of the case clearly negatives the inference that his intention was to acquire by his purchase onjy the bare *178equity of redemption in tlie genuine note which Harrison & Platt held as collateral security. It is safe to-say that if he had known that the note which he supposed he was buying was spurious, and that the genuine one had already been pledged to Harrison & Platt, that he would have declined to make the purchase. He did not intend by the transaction to acquire so uncertain and precarious an interest even in the genuine note. His manifest intention was to acquire the absolute title to the true note. To contend that he intended to purchase the equity of redemption in the note, it seems to us, is unreasonable and wholly improbable. And, as to Kirk, this was still further from his intention. It, in effect, is conceded that he, with the intention to cheat and defraud Ackerman, designedly, by a false writing and pretense, obtained from him his money. This intention occupied the mind of Kirk to the exclusion of an intention to-transfer to Ackerman his equity of redemption in the genuine note. It is plain that neither party, at the-time of the transaction, intended that it should relate to or affect the bare equity of redemption in the note described in the deed of trust. The intention of the-parties was entirely different and dissimilar. The-equity of redemption in the note was not a point upon-which their intentions converged. No court would be-justified in inferring from the transactions a unity of intention to sell and purchase the equity of redemption in the note. This intention was wholly foreign to the minds of each of the contracting parties. The inference of the intention of the parties can furnish no base for another inference. An inference from one or more inferences is not allowed. It is true that after Ackerman discovered the note he held was a forgery, and that the-genuine one was held by Harrison & Platt, that he then, for the first time, interpreted the transaction between Kirk and himself to vest only the equity of redemption in the genuine note in himself. But no such an interpretation appears ever to have been placed on the-*179"transaction by Kirk. His whole subsequent conduct was entirely consistent with the fraudulent and deceitful intention he manifested in the first instance. We can discover nothing in the transaction between Kirk and Ackerman from which we can infer that it was their intention to merely assign the equity of redemption in the Kennedy note. There being no assignment to Ackerman of the equity of redemption in the note, he can have no locus standi in judicio in a court of equity. He certainly has a right of action against Kirk for the ■criminal fraud perpetrated upon him, but we do not think that he can obtain relief in a court of equity upon the theory contended for by him.
II. No error is perceived in the action of the court in adjudging that the plaintiffs recover of the defendant Ackerman the amount of the interest which they paid under the mistaken notion that he was the holder of the true note. The court having taken jurisdiction of the •subject-matter of the controversy between them, it was proper for it to make a complete disposition of the case, .adjusting all the equities arising therein. Butler v. Lawson, 72 Mo. 242. The abstract of the record does not inform us as to the date of the filing of the replication of the plaintiff, which must be taken as the date of the demand of the plaintiffs for the repayment of the sums of interest paid on the forged note to Ackerman. We mnst presume, in the absence of such showing, that the amount of the allowance thereon was correct.
Nor do we discover any grounds for revising the action of the court in respect to adjudging the costs. There are many questions discussed in the briefs of ■counsel, which, in the view of the case we have taken, it becomes unnecessary to notice. The decree- must be affirmed.
All concur.