Clifton v. Anderson

Biggs, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The plaintiff Daniel W. Clifton was the husband, and his co-plaintiffs are the children and only heirs-at-law, of Sarah Clifton, deceased, and as such they instituted this action in equity to cancel and annul the following judgment or decree of the circuit court of the city of St. Louis, rendered on the twenty-first day of December, 1886, to-wit:

“ John Anderson v. “Daniel W. Clifton, Administrator of Sarah Clifton, deceased.

Number 72377.

“Come now at this day the said parties by their respective attorneys and submit this cause to the court upon the petition and agreed statement of facts therein contained, and the court, having 'heard the same and being fully advised of and concerning the premises, doth now find the estate of said Sarah Clifton to' be indebted to the plaintiff John Anderson in the sum of five hundred and thirty-two and fifty-hundredths dollars, for money loaned the said Sarah Clifton during her lifetime, and that the same is a special lien upon the property in the petition described as following, to-wit: Lot number 31 of block number 4 of South Stoddard addition, according to an amended plat *620thereof on record in the office of the recorder of deeds for said city of St. Louis, Missouri, said lot having a front on the south line of Laclede avenue in said city of twenty-five feet by a depth of one hundred and thirty feet to Garrison Court street, it being the same property conveyed by one Samuel M. Smith and wife to said Sarah Clifton, deceased, by deed of warranty dated November 1,1883. Wherefore it is adjudged and decreed by the court that plaintiff recover said sum of the estate of said Sarah Clifton in hands of Daniel W. Clifton, administrator, the same to be levied of the property charged with the lien thereof, and herein before described, and his costs and charges herein expended, and that the clerk of this court do certify this judgment to the probate court.”

The agreed statement of facts mentioned in the decree w.as signed by John Anderson and Daniel W. Clifton, administrator of Sarah Clifton, deceased, and it was to this effect: That Sarah Clifton was the wife of Daniel W. Clifton, and that the former acquired the real estate mentioned in the decree during her coverture, and that she held it as her separate property; that the property was incumbered by her for a part of the purchase money, and that, for the purpose of fully paying this incumbrance, she borrowed of her brother, John Anderson, the sum of five hundred dollars, and that, at the time the money was loaned, she agreed to give him a deed of trust on the real estate to secure the same, but that she- was prevented from so doing on account of her death a short time thereafter.

The plaintiffs averred that they were in possession of the land in controversy; that the deed, by which the property was conveyed to Sarah Clifton, vested in her an ordinary estate only ; that, upon her death, Daniel W. Clifton became entitled to the possession thereof as tenant by the curtesy, and his children, the other plaintiffs, were the owners of the fee, subject to his life-estate; that the plaintiffs were, at the date of the *621institution of the suit in the actual occupancy of the property; that D. W. Clifton, in.signing the agreed statement of facts, did not know the nature of his wife’s title, and relied entirely on the representation of the attorney of John Anderson in reference thereto; that the defendant was about to have the property sold under .the decree, and that such a sale would cast a cloud on the title of the plaintiffs.

Upon this statement of facts the plaintiffs claimed that, as to them, the decree of the circuit court subjecting the aforesaid real estate to the payment of the alleged debt from Mrs. Clifton to the defendant wqs inoperative, and they prayed that it be set aside and held for naught, and that the defendant be restrained from enforcing or attempting to enforce the same.

The answer of the defendant was in effect a general denial. The cause was submitted to the court, and a final judgment was entered against the plaintiffs. From this judgment the plaintiffs have prosecuted this appeal.

The nature of Mrs. Clifton’s title, the circumstances’ under which Daniel W. Clifton signed the agreed statement of facts, the legal effect of the admissions therein by him, and the validity of the decree based thereon, seem to have constituted the chief matters of dispute on the trial.

On the first day of November, 1883, Mrs. Clifton purchased the property from one Samuel M. Smith, and it is conceded that the deed from Smith upon its face vested in Mrs. Clifton an ordinary estate, and contained no words, which, either expressly or by fair implication, could be so construed as to render the estate conveyed the sole and separate estate of the wife. But notwithstanding this the defendant claims that the property conveyed must in equity be regarded as the separate property of Mrs. Clifton, because it was paid for with money received by her as a gift at and subsequent to the purchase, and that the money so received by her was, under the laws of this state, her sole and *622separate property ; therefore, the defendant insists that Mrs. Clifton, by reason of the fact that she borrowed the money from him for the benefit of her separate property, created a charge on it in his favor for the amount so loaned, and that, for this reason, the judgment, sought to be set aside in this proceeding, ought to be upheld. The defendant also endeavors ■ to. sustain the decree for the sale of the land upon the further ground that the money borrowed from him was used by Mrs. Clifton in discharging a valid and subsisting mortgage on the property, and that a court of equity would subrogate him to the rights of the holder of this mortgage.

Under the view which we have taken of this, case it will not be necessary or proper for us, for want of the necessary parties to the first decree, to determine the character of Mrs. Clifton’s estate in the land in controversy. For the purposes of this appeal, all that the' defendant claims may be conceded, yet, under the decisions of this court and the supreme court (Boatmen's Savings Bank v. McMenamy, 35 Mo. App. 198, and Davis v. Smith, 75 Mo. 219), the decree charging the land with the payment of the defendant’s debt must be held to be invalid, because Mrs. Clifton died intestate, and her children were not made parties. In both cases it was flatly decided that, when a married woman dies seized of separate realty which is sought to be charged with her obligations, her personal representative is not a proper party; that the cause of action is not a personal one against the wife, and does not suiwive against her personal representative, but that it is against the land alone and. that her heirs are the only necessary or proper parties. It, therefore, follows that -Daniel W. Clifton, as administrator of his wife, or as an individual, was not a necessary or proper party, and that the decree, rendered against him in his representative capacity, could, in no way, prejudice his .individual *623interest as a tenant by the curtesy, or that of his children, as the owners of the title. That he possessed an estate by the curtesy in the real estate cannot be questioned (Tremmel v. Kleiboldt, 75 Mo. 255), and this interest could not be made subordinate to the alleged equitable claim of the plaintiff by the admissions made by him in the agreed statement of facts. Nothing short of an express agreement to waive his right of curtesy in favor of the defendant’s claim could accomplish such a result. Therefore, it cannot be successfully maintained that he or his children are concluded by the terms of the decree, or in any manner estopped by admissions made by him as the personal representative of his wife.

Whether the first decree can be upheld on the theory, that it was in effect a subrogation of the defendant to the rights of the mortgagee to the extent of the money furnished by him (defendant) towards the discharge of the mortgage debt, cannot be considered by us in support of the present decree for two reasons : First. The circuit court, in rendering the first decree, did not proceed upon any such theory. Second. The children of Mrs. Clifton would be necessary parties in such a proceeding.

Having reached the conclusion that the decree sought to be annulled by the plaintiffs is invalid, the only remaining question for our determination is the right of a court of equity to interfere. The defendant insists that the remedy at law is adequate, and that for this reason the plaintiffs have improperly invoked the aid of a court of chancery. The right or power of a court of chancery to prevent a sale, which, in its effect, would cast a cloud upon the title to real estate, is no longer an open question in this state. Gardner v. Terry, 99 Mo. 523; Parks v. Bank, 31 Mo. App. 12; McPike v. Pew, 51 Mo. 63; Martin v. Jones, 72 Mo. 24; Vogler v. Montgomery, 54 Mo. 577; Harrington v. Utterback, 57 Mo. 519; State v. Tiedemann, 69 Mo. 306. *624Although the sale sought to be enforced would convey no title, and the parties seeking the injunction might be able to defend themselves against the result of the sale by legal proceedings, yet the true policy of the'law is to prevent the void act, and thereby avoid a multiplicity of suits springing out of it. That the plaintiffs in this action would be able to defend their possessory right to the property against a purchaser at a sale under the defendant’s decree may be true, yet the invalidity of such a sale could only be made to appear by matters outside of the record, and, until this fact should be established,' the plaintiffs’ title would be discredited and material damage might result on account of it. To prevent this injustice and annoyance, a court of chancery will, and ought to, interpose and arrest the wrong in its incipiency.

We are of the opinion that the first decree of the circuit court, making the . defendant’s debt a charge upon the property mentioned therein, was unwarranted, and, therefore, the judgment in the'present action must be reversed. As, however, under the facts of the case, the defendant appears to have a meritorious claim which he can assert and may possibly establish by cross-bill for subrogation, or the establishment of an equitable lien in this action, provided he shows that the property was the separate estate of. Sarah Clifton, we will not dismiss the bill, but remand the cause for further proceedings.

Reversed and remanded.

All the judges concur.