Court Opinion

ID: 6630565
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 20:37:13.339617+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:02:26.839184
License: Public Domain

STURGIS, J.
—This is a suit for injunction whereby the plaintiffs as beneficiaries in a deed of trust on 360 acres of land in Butler county, Missouri, seek to restrain the defendants, having a like interest in a prior mortgage with power of sale on the same land and 120 acres in addition in the same tract; from foreclosing said prior mortgage, as said defendants were proceeding to do when this suit was filed. The court granted a temporary injunction but on final hearing dissolved the same and dismissed plaintiff’s bill.
The plaintiffs claim that defendants should not be allowed to sell the land in question under the prior mortgage for the reason that the debt secured thereby has been long since paid and the mortgage released; and further that said debt and mortgage are barred by the Statute of Limitations. The mortgage in question which defendants were proceeding to foreclose was given by Aaron Mast, then owner of this land and the common source of title, to James L. Becker, to secure to blm a note for $1000, due one year after date. The mortgage bears date March 25, 1889, and was *352recorded shortly thereafter in Book 27, page 147. This suit was commenced October 4, 1911, and the foreclosure of the mortgage had been commenced a few days earlier, so that at this time the note was more than twenty-one years past due. The record of this mortgage when offered in evidence contained on the margin these entries. “This deed of trust released by a quitclaim deed of release recorded in Book 49, at page 290.” Also the following: “The within mortgage is released by quitclaim deed recorded in Book 49, at page 627, this 3rd day of April, 1902. Ed. L. Abington, Recorder, by Rose B. Kennedy, D. R.” The deed of trust on which plaintiffs as beneficiaries therein claim the right to enjoin a sale under said prior mortgage was executed by the said Aaron Mast to secure a note for $1700, both note and mortgage bearing date of February 21, 1900, and recorded about the same date. The first quitclaim deed referred to in the marginal entry on the record of the mortgage in question as being recorded in Book 49, page 290, and which plaintiffs claim is a full release of the same, is dated March 14, 1899, and conveys only forty acres of land, which forty acres is covered by the said prior mortgage to Becker but not by the deed of trust to plaintiffs. The other quitclaim deed referred to in said marginal entry as recorded in Book 49, page 627, is dated March 26, 1900 (a later date than plaintiffs’ deed of trust), and it also conveys only forty acres and this forty acres is also covered by said prior mortgage but not by plaintiffs’ deed of trust. Each of these quitclaim deeds contain substantially this recital: “This deed of quitclaim being made in release of and satisfaction for a certain deed of trust dated the fifteenth day of March, 1889, recorded in the deed records of Butler county aforesaid, in Book 27, at page 147.”
It will be noted that the marginal entry on the record of the mortgage in question referring to these deeds of quitclaim or release is dated April 3, 1902, so *353that it thus appears that these marginal entries were not on the margin of the record of this mortgage until some time after such quitclaim deeds of release were filed and some two years after the plaintiffs had taken and recorded their deed of trust. In view of these facts there can be no basis for the claim made by plaintiffs that the entire mortgage and all the land covered therein had been released by either or both these quitclaim deeds or that plaintiffs relied on the marginal entry alone or in connection with the quitclaim deeds referred to as showing any such. release. That the recorder failed to do his duty in respect to making a proper marginal notation on the record as to these quitclaim release deeds is evident in view of sections 2844 and 2847, Revised Statutes 1909, providing for a cancellation of the note in case of full release and the presentation of the same to the recorder in ease of a partial release and a notation of these facts upon the record. The effect of this incomplete marginal entry on the mortgage in question would probably be to destroy even the prima facie evidence of a release accorded to a release conforming to the statutory requirements. [Brown v. Koffler, 133 Mo. App. 494, 113 S. W. 711; Lee v. Clark, 89 Mo. 553.] These authorities also show that the recorder by the mere making of an unauthorized or incorrect notation of release on the record of a mortgage or deed of trust cannot prejudice the rights •of the owner of the note secured thereby.
That Becker, the mortgagor of the land, did not intend a full release of this mortgage by the first quitclaim deed noted on the margin is shown, not only from the fact that this quitclaim by its terms released only forty acres, but also by the fact that a second quitclaim was later made to release another forty-acre tract •of the same land. That any person dealing with this land was bound to follow up the information suggested by the marginal entry and look at the contents of the *354quitclaim deed there referred to is too well established to need a citation of authorities. [Agan v. Shannon, 103 Mo. 661, 15 S. W. 757; Waldermeyer v. Loebig, 222 Mo. 540, 552, 121 S. W. 75.] It is also significant in this respect that the mortgagor’s deed of trust to plaintiffs did not cover the two forty-acre tracts so released.
The next question presented is whether or not the note and consequently the mortgage securing it was barred by the Statute of Limitations at the time defendants were proceeding to foreclose it. The original note secured by this mortgage was put in evidence at the trial and also by consent of the parties exhibited to this court for inspection at the argument. The note on its face was prima facie barred by the ten year Statute of Limitations and the burden was on the defendants to overcome this by showing facts which will take the note out of the statute. [Wood on Limitation, sec. 98, p. 225.] The note as produced with the credits on the back thereof is as follows: “Poplar Bluff, Mo., Feb. 9, 1889. Twelve months after date I promise to pay to the order of James L. Becker, one thousand dollars, with interest at six per cent from date, payable at Lansdale, Pennsylvania. (Signed) Aaron Mast.” The following indorsements appear on the back of this note: “Aug. 1889, Reed. $30 Int. for 6 mos; Feb. 1, 1890, Reed. $30 Int for 6 mos; Aug. 13, 1890, Reed. $30 Int for 6 mos; Feb. ’91, Reed. $30 Int. for 6 mos; Aug. ’91', Reed. $30 Int. for 6 mos; Feb. 12, ’92, Reed. $30 Int. for 6 mos; Aug. ’92, Reed. $30 Int. for 6 mos; Feb. 27, ’93, Reed. $30 Int. for 6 mos; Aug. 24, ’93, Reed. $30 Int. for 6 mos; Mar. 15, ’94, Reed. $30 Int. for 6 mos; May 29, ’95, Reed. $90 Int. to Aug. 9, ’95; May 15, ’99, Reed. $45; Jan. 1900, Reed. $75; Nov. 14, 1901, Reed. $172.38; Mar. 26, 1902, Reed. $200.”
We think it is now the settled law in this State that there is no presumption that an indorsement of payment on a promissory note was made at the time it *355bears date. In order to take a note out of the Statute of Limitations it is necessary to adduce other evidence than the mere production of the note with a credit thereon bearing a date which would apparently have that effect. The contrary was ruled in Carter v. Carter, 44 Mo. 195, and in Smith v. Ferry, 69 Mo. 142, where the court said: “The general rule is that an indorsement of payment on a promissory note is presumed to have been made at the time the indorsement bears date.” These cases, however, have not been followed (Smith v. Brinkley, 151 Mo. App. 494, 132 S. W. 301), and the law is that it is necessary in order to remove the bar of the statute to show, either by proof that the credit was actually made by the owner of the note or by his direction at a time when the note was not barred or by more direct evidence, that the payment was actually made by the maker at such time. If it be shown that the credit was indorsed on the note by the holder at a time when it was not barred, and consequently was against his interest to have made it, this furnishes prima facie evidence that payment was made at that time and in the absence of a showing to the contrary the note will not be barred. But there must be in such cases proof, that the credit was in fact made at such time. [Goddard v. Williamson, 72 Mo. 131, 133; Briscoe v. Huff, 75 Mo. App. 288, 290; Haver v. Schwyhart, 39 Mo. App. 303; Crow v. Crow, 124 Mo. App. 120, 100 S. W. 1123; Regan v. Williams, 185 Mo. 620, 631, 84 S. W. 959.] The cases of Smith v. Zimmerman, 51 Mo. App. 519, and McElvain v. Garrett, 84 Mo. App. 300, are in full accord with these views and the cases above cited. In the ease last cited the court approved this declaration of law: “If the jury believe from the evidence, that the intestate, less than ten years after the date of said note, and less than ten years before the commencement of this action, caused to be indorsed thereon a credit, then the presumption is that an actual payment was made at that *356time.” This instruction met with approval of the Court of Appeals. In the case of Smith v. Zimmerman, supra, at the instance of the plaintiff, the court gave the following instruction: “The court declares the law of this case to be, that'even though the note on its face is barred by the Statute of Limitations, yet the evidence shows that a credit indorsement was made on said note by the payee at a time less than ten years after the execution of said note and less than ten years before the bringing of this suit; the credit indorsement having been made at a time when it was against the interest of the payee to make it, the presumption is that actual payment was made at that time, and this is sufficient evidence to take the note out of the operation of the Statute of Limitations.” Commenting upon this declaration of law, the Court of Appeals said it was unexceptionally correct.
It is also the law that a part payment of a debt, even though made after the bar of the statute'has attached, has the effect of removing the bar of the statute and reviving the debt. [Shannon v. Austin, 67 Mo. 485; Bender v. Markle, 37 Mo. App. 234; Johnson v. Johnson, 81 Mo. 331, 335.] This last case properly adds that “Of course a written acknowledgment would have the same effect.!,’ The above rule of law has, however,- this important limitation: that it does not affect the 'rights of third parties attaching after the bar is complete and before the act of revivor. If the mortgagor, as here, parts with his title, or a valid lien .attaches to the land, and the note becomes • barred, neither part payment nor an acknowledgment in writing thereafter will revive the mortgage or lien against the land. As said in Johnson v. Johnson, supra, “When the bar of the statute is complete, any act of the mortgagor which revives the debt, also revives the lien of the mortgage, unless the parties agree otherwise. [N. Y. Life Ins. and Trust Co. v. Covert, 29 Barb. 435; Schmucker v. Sibert, 18 Kansas, 104.] *357Such acts are always binding between the mortgagor and mortgagee. [2 Jones on Mortgages, (3 Ed.) 1202.] A well-defined limitation of this rule excepts from its effect the rights of purchasers and mortgagees, acquiring title after the bar is complete, and before the acts of revivor.” To the same effect is Zoll v. Carnahan, 83 Mo. 35, 44, which cites and approves Lord v. Morris, 18 Cal. 482, and Schmucker v. Sibert, 18 Kan. 104. That such is the law generally see Clark v. Grant, 109 Pac. (Okla.) 234, 28 L. R. A. (N. S.) 519, and Kaiser v. Idleman, 108 Pac. (Oregon) 193, 28 L. R. A. (N. S.) 169, and the editorial note where most of the cases are collected. The Oklahoma case, above cited, holds that although a note and morgtage are barred by the statute, yet the mortgagor may by payment or acknowledgment in writing revive the hen on the mortgage as against a third person whose lien attached subsequent to the act of revivor. The Oregon case, above cited, holds that although the mortgagor has parted with his interest in the land or a valid lien has attached thereto, he may arrest the running of the statute by a payment made before the debt is completely barred. The cases all seem to hold, however, that where the right of a third party attaches between these dates, the mortgagor is powerless to take the note out of the bar of the statute as against the right of such third party. [See also Wood on Limitation, sections 229, 230; 25 Cyc. 1387.]
It is also familiar law that an acknowledgment of the debt in writing is sufficient to take the debt out of the statute and to do this there need not be an expression of willingness to pay it or any promise so todo. It is sufficient that the debtor acknowledges that he owes it and that it remains unpaid—a subsisting obligation. [Elliott v. Leake, 5 Mo. 208; Chidsey v. Powell, 91 Mo. 622, 4 S. W. 446.] And where the acknowledgment is of indebtedness to the payee without specifying any particular debt or amount, the question *358becomes one of fact whether the debt acknowledged is the one sued for with the burden of proof on the one asserting that it is not. [Mastin v. Branham, 86 Mo. 643, 648; Carr’s Adm’s v. Hurlbut, 41 Mo. 264, 268.] Under these conditions and limitations the revival of a note already barred or the extension of the limitation period of a note by payment thereon or a written acknowledgment of the indebtedness revives the mortgage securing the same. [Johnson v. Johnson, 81 Mo. 336.]
As before noted, the plaintiffs’ lien on the land in question attached on March 25, 1900. At that time the note secured by defendants’ prior mortgage was more than ten years past due and, in the absence of any payments thereon or acknowledgment of the debt in writing, such note was then fully barred by limita-; tion and could not thereafter be revived to the prejudice of plaintiffs’ rights by either payment or written acknowledgment of the debt. Was there sufficient evidence in this case to warrant the trial court in finding, as it evidently did, that the note in question was saved from the bar of the statute by payment thereon and by written acknowledgment of the existing debt prior to the note being fully barred? We think there was. Leaving out of consideration the payments indorsed thereon, apparently for current interest, up to and including 1895, we find the next payment indorsed' thereon is “May 15, 1899, $45.” At that time the note was not barred. Granting that there is no proof of when or by whom this credit was actually entered on the note, yet, with reference to this payment, the evidence shows that the mortgagor, Aaron Mast, wrote the following letters:
“Poplar Bluff, Mo., March 11, 1899.
“Rev. J. L. Becker, Landsdale, Pa.
“Dear Bro. in Law,
“We are in receipt of your letter, of recent date. Glad that you enjoy good health.....You men*359tioned that you only hold my note for your money without further security, you hold a deed of trust, at any rate I made you one and it stands recorded in the recorder’s office here in Booh 27, at page 147, in your favor. I surely did send it to you at the time. I have a chance to sell a lot of the land on which your security stands, and I have partly bargained with the man subject to your approval. It is this, I sell him for $125, for 60 acres and he to'pay me $45 in cash (which he has already deposited in the bank awaiting your approval) and the balance in two notes of' $40 each payable in one and two years, seemed by a first mortgage in your favor and bearing interest at the rate of eight per cent per annum. Now to do this you will give him a quitclaim deed and I give him a warranty deed, then take his first mortgage back and assign it over to you. I will take the liberty to send a quitclaim deed which complies with our law for you to acknowledge and when retmned I will send you the $45 and the mortgage duly recorded, so this man can have a good title and you are more amply secured, and a new improvement will be made. The name of the man is Joseph Horste, an early reply will greatly oblige.
“Yours truly,
“(Signed) A. Mast.”
“Poplar Bluff, Mo., May 5, 1899.
“Eev. J. L. Becker,
“Landsdale, Pa.,
“Dear Sir: Enclosed find exchange for $45 which you may credit on my note. The man who pmchased the land is a fairly good man, but he takes his own time to do anything, he just delivered the deed of trust to me to-day. As soon as it is recorded I will sign it over to you, and send it to you for keeping for collateral on my account, and if I should not be able to pay you before it is due it will be a credit on my note also. So *360while you released the land with that quitclaim deed, you will be secured back on the same land again. I am trying to sell all the land you- claim and by that means pay you. My law suits which I was compelled to bring against former administrators bond will come up in court the third week in this month.' I am trying to save myself in the matter. All well and hope you are the same.
“(Signed) A. Mast.”
There is no question as to the genuineness of these letters, and that they were written by the mortgagor and received by the mortgagee at or about the time they bear date. At that time the note was not barred nor had any rights of plaintiffs attached to the land. We think these letters beyond question are sufficient evidence to show that the credit of forty-five dollars was paid at or about the date of the credit, and also such letters contain a clear and unmistakable acknowledgment of a then existing and unpaid indebtedness and identified the indebtedness as being the note secured by the mortgage (deed of trust it is there called) “recorded in the recorder’s office here in Book 27, page 147, in your favor;” and this is the mortgage now in question. This without more would toll the statute and extend the limitation period for ten years after that date.
It is true that plaintiffs contend that in the letter of March 11th, (supra) the word “note” is in the plural, “notes,” and on this proposition we have inspected the original letter and, while it possibly could be read either way, we think from an inspection and the context and the fact that it refers to the mortgage in Book 27, page 147, where only one note to the mortgagor is secured, it should be read as “note.” This becomes more evident when read in connection with the letter of March 5th, (supra), on the same subject, where the singular “note” is used.
*361There is almost equally cogent evidence in a similar letter of the mortgagor to the mortgagee as to the payment of the seventy-five dollar credit of January, 1900; It is evident from the correspondence that a small tract of land covered by defendants’ mortgage was sold by the mortgagor to one Horste, as mentioned in these letters, for part cash and part notes, secured on the land sold, and that these notes were pledged as collateral on the note and mortgage in question. The first quitclaim deed noted on the margin as a release deed is also a quitclaim deed to Horste and was evidently made for this purpose. A letter from the mortgagor to the mortgagee, dated Jan. 19, 1900, says: “Enclosed find exchange for seventy dollars, and deeds and notes of Joseph Horste and I. 1ST. Bearden, which I have all signed so they are negotiable. On April the 1st, one is due which if sent to me or the bank for collection. However if the bank collect they make charges. I will collect it and charge you nothing. Mr. Horste seems to get along very well. Think he will be able to meet his note when due. The $70 draft I have taken out of the bank nearly a month ago, and intended to send it as soon as the deed is recorded, and it took the recorder until now to reach it. He is also court clerk and says that he could not do the work any sooner. However when a deed is filed it is as good as recorded, only the papers are limited to the office until recorded and compared. I so far did not make another sale. I had several applicants but could not effect a trade. I have put the price up from now in order to make them know that land is going up. In fact all the land around has made an increase in price as well as lumber or anything else. Many thanks for the five dollars donated to our church, we did not need any of it for the clock, as it was made up otherwise, but it will come in fine towards the electric lights.” This $70 forwarded by draft and the $5 donated to the *362local church make the credit of $75 indorsed on the note.
These payments, however, were made more than ten years prior to the commencement of the foreclosure proceedings sought to be enjoined. They toll the statute and extend the limitation period but not so-as' to include the date of such foreclosures. It is necessary, therefore, to prove a like payment or acknowledgment of the indebtedness within such ten year period. The note by reason of the payments and acknowledgments of indebtedness just discussed had not become totally barred at the time the plaintiffs’1 lien attached to the land, and it was therefore competent for' the mortgagor to further extend the statutory period by making payments or acknowledging the-indebtedness in writing. The next credit of $172.38, of November 14, 1901, if sufficiently proved accomplishes this result. In reference to this payment the mortgagor wrote this letter:
“Poplar Bluff, Mo., Oct. 14, 1901.
“Jas. L. Becker, Landsdale, Pa.
“Dear Bro. in Law,
“Please forward to the Butler County Bank, of Poplar Bluff, Mo., the mortgage deed or deed of trust which is given by I. N. Bearden and wife, to secure one hundred and fifty dollars, dated Dec. 23, 1899, which is in three notes of fifty dollars each, of which I have one deposited in bank now. Mr. Bearden has deposited one hundred and seventy-two and 88-100, to pay for your three notes and interest to this day. Which upon the receipt of the deed of trust will be cancelled from the record and the money forwarded to you by the bank. The bank is instructed to present this deed of trust and have it released for which the fees are figured in with the interest. All well and hope you are the same.
“Tours truly,
“(Signed) A. Mast.”
*363The amount of credit is just fifty, cents less than the amount deposited in the bank to be forwarded by it to the mortgagee and that difference is evidently the fees figured in for the release there mentioned.
With reference to the last credit of $200 of March 26, 1902, the following letter, dated at Poplar Bluff, Missouri, Feb.'9, 1902, to Jas. L. Becker, Landsdale, Pa., was in evidence. “Dear Bro. in Law.:. Please send Horste notes and deed of trust as he claims to have engaged from some other party the money with which to liquidate these- old papers. You can send them either to me or to the Butler County Bank. As soon as collected I will forward to you the proceeds to apply on my note. He seems to be in a hurry. Therefore ask you to send them at once.” These letters are not all copied in full, the facts omitted relating to family and local affairs not material to this controversy but potent in showing that the same were written at or near the times they purport to be dated. The mortgagor’s wife, Sarah Mast, sister of the mortgagee, testified as to this last payment being made by her husband and her evidence, if credited, makes it clear that her husband did in fact send this money to the mortgagee, her' brother, to be applied on this note at or about the time mentioned, and that he acknowledged receipt of the same.
In this state of facts the trial court could hardly do otherwise than hold as it did that the note was saved from the bar of the statute by payments and acknowledgments in writing of the indebtedness, notwithstanding two local experts on handwriting testified that in their opinion from the appearance of the note and credits thereon, that all such credits were made at one time, by the same person, with the same pen and ink and at a comparatively recent date. It is, however, the payments themselves and not the entries of credit on the note evidencing such payments that stops the running of the statute. Doubtless the trial court was *364in a better position than we are to weigh all the evidence and we are satisfied with his conclusions.
Our attention is called to the fact that this note and mortgage were given prior to the enactment in 1891 of section 1892, Revised Statute 1909, and are not affected thereby. [Martin v. Teasdale, 212 Mo. 611, 111 S. W. 511; Morrison v. Roehl, 215 Mo. 545, 114 S. W. 981; Hower v. Erwin, 221 Mo. 93, 119 S. W. 951.] Unaffected by that statute, the note and mortgage securing the same are so far distinct obligations that the note may be barred by limitations and the mortgage continue in full force and effect so as to support a foreclosure sale. [Morrison v. Roehl, supra; Lewis v. Schwenn, 93 Mo. 26, 32, 2 S. W. 391; Booker v. Armstrong, 93 Mo. 49, 58, 4 S. W. 727; Chouteau v. Burlando, 20 Mo. 483.] In all these cases it is held that the mortgage is not barred for at least twenty years and, therefore, any one of the payments or acknowledgments of indebtedness above discussed, if held valid for that purpose, would have the effect of prolonging the life of the mortgage to the time of this foreclosure. In our view of the ease it will not be necessary to-decide whether the mortgage in question would run indefinitely and beyond twenty years and so be not barred regardless of any payments or acknowledgments of the indebtedness, because of this being wild and unoccupied land, and in the absence of a showing of adverse possession between the mortgagor and mortgagee, as seems to be held in the three eases last cited. The judgment will therefore be affirmed.
All concur.