Hume v. Hopkins

Macfarlane, J.

This is an action of ejectment tu recover the possession of lot number 238 in the city of Columbia, in Boone county. The petition is in the form usual in such suits.

The answer, after a general denial, contains some special averments the legal effect of which we construe to be that plaintiff claims title under a trustee’s deed, made under power contained in a deed of trust executed by one Peter Haden to secure a note made to one Fyfer. That defendant and her mother now deceased bought the land and paid for it, and the title thereto, without her knowledge, was made to the said Haden who was the husband of her mother.

The answer as special defenses charges that the debt secured by the deed of trust was a gambling debt, and the deed of trust was therefore void. It further charges that said debt was fully paid, and the deed of trust satisfied before the sale thereunder was made by the trustee. The reply denied the new matter of the answer. It was agreed that Thomas Whittle was the common source of title.

Plaintiff introduced in evidence a deed from the said Whittle to “Peter Haden and Emily Haden his wife.” This deed is dated December 30, 1876, recites a consideration of $600, conveys the lot in question and was recorded July 28, 1877.

Plaintiff then offered in evidence the record of a deed of trust made by Peter Haden to William A. Groodding, as trustee', to secure a note made by the said Haden to one J. T. Fyfer for $48.55, payable one year after date, with interest at ten per cent per annum. This deed was dated June 18, 1884, and was acknowledged and recorded on the same day. It authorized *71the trustee to sell the property in default of payment of the note and convey the same to the purchaser. Defendant objected to reading this record until the absence of the original was accounted for. After plaintiff had been examined as a witness, for the purpose of showing the existence of facts which would mate the record admissible, the court overruled the objection and defendant excepted.

Plaintiff then offered in evidence a deed by the trustee conveying to him the lot in question. Defendant’s counsel objected to the introduction of this deed for the reason that it recited that it was made under a power contained in a deed of trust to secure a note made by Haden to L. Hume, and for the further-reason that it does not recite that nine months had elapsed before the sale by the trustee after the death of Peter Haden. The objection was overruled and defendant excepted. The deed is signed by Gloodding as trustee, is dated June 16,1887, and purports to execute powers contained in a deed of trust made to him by Peter Haden, dated June 18, 1884, recorded in book 25, at page 276, to secure L. Hume the payment of the. note therein described. The deed also recites that the sale was-made on the second day of June, 1884.

Plaintiff then offered' in evidence another • deed of trustee G-oodding dated November 7, 1894. This deed recites that it is made to correct a former deed in which the noté was incorrectly described. This deed has the same recitals as the former, except that J. T. Eyfer is named as the payee of the note, and the date of the sale is fixed as of June 2, 1894, instead of 1884, as in the prior deed. Objection was made to the admissibility of this deed for the reason that it is dated and recorded after the institution of the suit.'

It appeared from the evidence that Emily Haden died before her husband Peter Haden, and both had *72died before the sale by the trustee. No affirmative relief was asked under the answer of defendants, as appears from the abstract, and the case was tried as one at law by the court without a jury. No declarations of law were asked or given, and the trial resulted in a verdict and judgment for plaintiff, and defendant appealed.

I. The objection made by defendants to reading in evidence the record of the deed of trust is not well taken. The oath of plaintiff tended to prove the loss of the original. The proof was not absolutely concltf-sive, for plaintiff stated that he had the original deed somewhere among his papers, but he stated further that he had looked through them and had been unable to find it.

The object of this preliminary inquiry is merely to establish a reasonable presumption of the loss of the the instrument. The proof of loss of the original is made sufficient when declared under the oath or ex parte affidavit of the party wishing to use the record as evidence. R. S. 1889, sec. 2428. The judge who tried the case was satisfied with the proof, and its sufficiency was addressed to his discretion. Kleimann v. Geiselmann, 114 Mo. 437. We find no error in permitting the record of the deed to be read in evidence.

II. The deed from Thomas Whittle conveyed the land to Peter Haden and his wife, as tenants by the entirety. R. S. 1889, sec. 8844. On the death of one of the tenants the title became absolute in the survivor. Russell v. Russell, 122 Mo. 236; Bains v. Bullock, 129 Mo. 119.

It is unnecessary to determine the effect of the deed of trust made by Peter Haden during the life of his wife. The deed contained the statutory covenants of “grant, bargain and sell,” and any subsequent title acquired by the grantor, while the deed was in force, *73passed immediately to the trustee as effectually as though the title had been in the grantor at the time of the conveyance. R. S. 1889, sec. 8835; Cockrill v. Bane, 94 Mo. 444; Boyd, v. Haseltine, 110 Mo. 207.

It sufficiently appears from the evidence that the death of the wife preceded that of her husband. On the death of the wife the title vested in Peter Haden and immediately passed to the trustee under the deed of trust provided it was then in force.

III. The objections to the trustee’s deed to plaintiff on account of mistake made in ' referring to the source of the power of sale, and in the date of the sale, are not sufficient to defeat the conveyance of the legal title. The conveyance is complete without these preliminary statements and recitals. We take it as being now settled in this State that the trustee, in a deed of trust given as security, takes the legal title, and his conveyance of the property, though in breach of his trust, extinguishes, his power, and when brought in question in a court of law, vests the title in his grantee. Schanewerk v. Hoberecht, 117 Mo. 22.

The deed of trust and the subsequent death of the wife of the grantor, vested in the trustee the title which his conveyance passed to plaintiff, notwithstanding irregularities in the sale or misstatements in the recitals of the execution of the powers conferred by the deed of trust.

. IY. Plaintiff then has the legal title upon which he must recover unless defeated by the equitable defenses pleaded.

The first of these is that there was a mistake in the deed from Whittle to Haden and wife. Defendant is the daughter of Mrs. Haden and stepdaughter of Peter Haden. She charges in her answer that the property was bought and paid for by herself and mother, to whom the deed should have been made, but by *74mistake, and without her knowledge, it was erroneously made to Peter Haden and wife. There was some evidence tending to support these allegations, but there was no evidence that either Goodding, the trustee, or the beneficiary in the deed of trust, had notice of these equities when the deed of trust was made, or subsequently until the day of the trustee’s sale. Peter Haden and wife were living on the property at the time, and there was nothing in the character of the deed that would give notice of a mistake, or would put a person of reasonable prudence on the inquiry. By the decisions in this State, under the laws relating to the rights of husband and wife in force when the deed of trust was made, the husband had the right to mortgage the property, subject of course to defeat by the survivorship of the wife. Hall v. Stephens, 65 Mo. 678. The trustee and beneficiary had a right to rely on the recorded title, and took the title free of any equities of which they had no notice.

V. The plea that the debt was paid before the sale and conveyance by the trustee, if established, would defeat plaintiff’s right of possession. While the trustee’s deed passed the legal title to plaintiff, yet if the secured debt had been previously paid the sale would be a breach of the trust, and the equitable title would remain in the heirs of Peter Haden.

Plaintiff testified that the debt was paid by her mother to Mr. Evans in one of the banks. Mr. Evans testified that he knew nothing of such payment. Defendant proved on the trial that she gave notice at the trustee’s sale that she owned the property, but nothing was said about the payment of this mortgage debt. Her claim then made was doubtless the one she made on the trial, that she and her mother bought and paid for the land, and she inherited from her mother.

*75The deed of the trustee is prima facie evidence of default in the' payment of the secured debt, and we do not think the evidence of payment sufficient to overcome it. R. S. 1889, sec. 7103; Morrison v. Herrington, 120 Mo. 674.

If the debt had been paid the outstanding equities would be in the heirs of Peter Haden, as he survived his wife, unless there was in truth the alleged mistake in the deed from Whittle. In that case the heirs would be necessary parties in a suit to establish the equitable rights claimed by defendant.

VI. Objection is made to the competency of plaintiff to testify as a witness on the ground that Peter Haden is dead.

The witness testified in chief only to the death of Peter Haden and his wife, and that the latter died first. These facts were abundantly established by other witnesses and there was no evidence to the contrary. The admission of the evidence of plaintiff, though he may have been incompetent to testify, could not have been prejudicial to defendant, and the error, if it were an error, was harmless, and would not be ground upon which to reverse the judgment. On cross-examination defendant’s counsel examined the witness on various matters not inquired about in the examination in chief. On re-examination by plaintiff the witness testified to the rental value of the land.

When defendant examined the witness on matters about which he had not been questioned by plaintiff’s counsel in chief, she made him her witness as to the new matter testified to, and waived his incompetency. On re-examination by plaintiff, in respect to the rental value of the land, no objection was made, and no other witness was called in support of that issue, though from the nature of the fact to be proved we *76can assume that it was within the knowledge of many persons. Under the circumstances, if the witness was incompetent to testify to the rental value of the land, defendant must be held to have waived it. Hickman v. Green, 123 Mo. 165; Carney v. Carney, 95 Mo. 358; Ess v. Griffith, 139 Mo. 322.

VII. The evidence did not show adverse possession in defendant for time sufficient to bar the action. The deed to the lot was made to Peter Haden and wife and under it they took possession. They remained in possession until their respective deaths. The fact that defendant, the daughter of Mrs. Haden, lived in the family during their lives, constituted no adverse possession. Her occupancy of the premises after the death of Peter Haden was only one or two years next before this suit was commenced. There was no bar of the statute.

A number of other questions are discussed by counsel, all of which have been examined with care. Finding no error materially affecting the merits of the action, the judgment is affirmed.

Barclay, P.. J., Brace and Robinson, JJ., concur.