Cowan v. Mueller

VALLIANT, J.

This is an action of ejectment. Plaintiff claims under a deed of trust executed by A. D. Wilson, the common source of title, to secure a note for $5,000, dated February 12, 1894, payable in five years. Wilson died in 1896 and administration was duly had on his estate. The note secured by the deed of trust was never exhibited to the administratrix, nor proven up against the estate, although the notice to creditors required by tbe statute (sec. 86, R. S. 1889; same, R. S. 1899) was duly given, and the two years’ limitation prescribed by section 185, for exhibiting demands against the estate, had expired. May 26, 1900, when the note was a little more than a year past due, the deed of trust was foreclosed and the plaintiff became the purchaser at the sale and received the trustee’s deed, which was duly recorded. That is the plaintiff’s title.

December 12, 1899, the administrator of Wilson’s estate, by order of the probate court, sold the land to the defendants, made them a deed thereto, and they went into possession under that deed, July 1, 1900. That is the defendant’s title.

It was agreed that the monthly rental value of the property was six dollars.

This suit was begun August 2, 1900. The judgment was for the plaintiff for possession of the premises, $47 damages, and $6 monthly rental from date of .judgment, February 25, 1901. Defendants appeal.

There is no dispute as to the facts; the only question in the case is one of law. Appellants contend that because the debt secured by the deed of trust was not ■exhibited to the administratrix within the two years prescribed by'the statute, nor proven up against the estate, *196it was barred by the statute of limitations within the meaning of section 4276, Revised Statutes 1899, and the right to foreclose the deed of trust was therefore barred also, and in consequence the sale by the trustee was invalid and of no effect.

Until the passag’e of the Act of 1891, presently quoted, it was the law of this State that the right to foreclose a mortgage or deed of trust was not barred merely because the debt itself was barred by the statute of limitations. [Cape Girardeau Co. v. Harbison, 58 Mo. 90; Lewis v. Schwenn, 93 Mo. 26; Booker v. Armstrong, Id. 49; Combs v. Goldsworthy, 109 Mo. 151; Eyermann v. Piron, 151 Mo. 107.] The law on that subject was changed by an act of the General Assembly entitled,. “An Act to limit the time within which suits may be brought to foreclose mortgages and deeds of trust,” approved February 18,1891, the first section of which is as follows: “No suit, action or proceeding under power of sale to foreclose any mortgage or deed of trust, executed hereafter to secure any obligation to pay money or property, shall be had or maintained after such obligation has been bar-red by the statute of limitations of this State.”- [Laws 1891, p. 184.] That is now section 4276, Revised Statutes 1899. As the note secured by the deed of trust in question was not much more than one year past due when the deed of trust was foreclosed, it of course was not barred by the general statute limiting the periods within which personal actions might be brought. But the mortgagor, who was the maker of the note, died before the note was due, and the creditor never exhibited the demand to the administratrix, nor proved it up as a claim against the estate in the probate court, and the contention of appellants is. that the debt became barred by the terms of section 185 of the law of administration which (following section 184, which requires that all demands before being allowed against the estate of a decedent shall be exhibited to the administrator) is in these words: “All *197demands not thus exhibited in two years shall be forever barred, saving to infants,” etc.

The question for decision is, is the debt barred within the meaning of the Act of 1891 (sec. 4276, R. S. 1899) above quoted, when it becomes barred within the meaning of section 185 of the law of administration? This is the first case in which this question has appeared in this court, and so far as our examination has gone, we have not found any discussion of it in the books. The learned counsel on both sides have given us in their briefs the benefit of their researches, but none of the authorities cited quite reach the point.

One of the important purposes of our law of administration is to wind up and distribute the estate as soon as possible, consistent with a due observance of the rights of creditors and distributees. For that reason the period of two years was fixed as the limit in which persons not under disability having claims susceptible of being established were' required to present their claims under penalty of being thereafter excluded from all participation in the assets of the estate. So absolute is the bar of such an one from participation in the assets of the estate that even when all the creditors who have presented and established their claims in the pro - bate court have been paid in full, and a surplus remains in the hands of the administrator for distribution to the next of kin, not only will the probate court not entertain his claim, but no other court can give him such relief. It was so held in Beeckman v. Richardson, 150 Mo. 430. To one who neglects to present his claim as therein required that statute is a complete bar to his satisfaction out of the assets of the estate. But is that a bar to the debt by the statute of limitations within the meaning of that term in section 4276?

When the statute of limitations bars a debt in the usual meaning of that term — in the technical meaning in which it is usually used — the effect is to preclude the creditor • from recovering a personal judgment *198against the debtor. When we say that a debt is barred by the statute of limitations we do not mean that it has been satisfied or otherwise extinguished, but we mean that the man that owes the debt can avoid a personal ■judgment by pleading the bar of the statute.

Before the statute of limitations has run its course, the holder of a mortgage note has two remedies: he may have a judgment against the debtor, and a decree-for the sale of the property, the one being a proceeding in personam, the other partaking of the character of a proceeding in rem, but as we have seen, even when the right to proceed against the person had expired, the law before the Act of 1891 recognized the obligation as alive sufficiently to enable the holder to have it enforced against the thing. The Act of 1891 was intended to change that condition, and it in effect declared that when the creditor could no longer pursue the debtor in person, the mortgagee could no longer pursue the property. But when the debtor dies, that is the end of all proceedings in personami for the'satisfaction of the debt. The proceedings in the probate- court to administer the estate are proceedings in rem. Even where an administrator is sued on a debt of the intestate in the circuit court, the judgment is not against him in person, but against the estate. At common law the execution called for satisfaction de bonis testatoris. Under our system there is no execution, but the judgment is certified to the probate court to be satisfied out of the assets of the estate pro rata (if there is not sufficient to pay all) with other creditors who have proven their claims in that court. Therefore, when the mortgage debtor dies, the mortgagee’s remedy of persona,! judgment is gone, but for it is substituted another remedy which is a proceeding in rem. The mortgagee, then, still has two remedies : one in the probate court against the whole estate, the other in the circuit court against the mortgaged property.

*199But -when one proceeding in rem is barred, does it bar the other ? The Act of 1891 says that when the debt is barred the mortgage is barred. That means when the mortgagee can no longer pursue the debtor, he can no longer pursue the thing mortgaged; that is, when the debt is barred under the general statute of limitations, the mortgage is barred also.

The question is asked in the brief of the learned counsel for appellant that, if the special statute of limitation in the administration law does not bar a debt within the meaning of the Act of 1891, when is the debt of the intestate barred so as to bar the right to foreclose?

The Act of 1891 makes no express provision for such case. It.refers only to the general statute of limitations and it means that when the action on the debt under that general statute is barred, the right to foreclose the mortgage is barred, and that is all that it means.

But the argument is that the general statute of limitations has no application to the establishing of a claim or debt against the estate of an intestate, and therefore if the Act of 1891 refers only to that statute it has no reference to a mortgage debt after the death of the debtor. Whilst the Act of 1891 contains no express pro ■ vision for such case, it covers it by analogy. When the debt would be barred by the general statute if the debtor were alive, the mortgage would be barred.

The judgment of the circuit court is in conformity to this interpretation of the statute, and is correct.

There is a mistake, however, to the amount of $6.40 in the assessment of plaintiff’s damages. There is nothing in the record tó show that defendants had notice of the plaintiff’s title before the suit was begun; they are therefore chargeable with rents and profits in the way of damages from the date of filing the suit, which was August 2, 1900, to the date of the judgment, February 25, 1901, at $6 a month according to the *200agreed statement, which, would amount to $40.60.

The judgment of the circuit court is therefore reversed and judgment entered here for the plaintiff for possession of the property sued for, $40.60 damages, and six dollars monthly rental.

All concur.