Hardwick v. Jones

Citation65 Mo. 54
PartiesHARDWICK v. JONES ET AL., PLAINTIFFS IN ERROR.
Decision Date30 April 1877
CourtUnited States State Supreme Court of Missouri

Error to Jackson Circuit Court.--HON. SAMUEL L. SAWYER, Judge.

Jenkins & Twitchell, for plaintiffs in error.

1. The plaintiff was not entitled to judgment, for the reason that there was an outstanding deed of trust, and at the time of trial the debt was due. Myer v. Campbell, 12 Mo. 603; McCormick v. Fitzmorris, 39 Mo. 24; Johnson v. Houston, 47 Mo., 227; Harrington v. Fartner, 58 Mo. 478.

2. The sheriff's deed to the Farmers' Bank of Missouri and J. W. Reid should have been declared void by the Court. The sheriff who made the levy was a director in the bank, and his successor who subsequently made the sale, was a stockholder in the bank at the time of the sale, and the bank was a purchaser; thus, the sheriff making the sale was directly interested in the purchase, and subsequently received dividends from the bank. This is in direct violation of the statute (Wag. Stat. page 611 sec. 49). and repugnant to principles long established, and recognized and enforced by the Federal Courts, by the Courts of nearly all of the States and of England. Wormley v. Wormley, 8 Wheat. 421; Wooton v. Hinkle, 20 Mo. 290; Neal v. Stone, 20 Mo. 294; Turner v. Adams, 46 Mo. 95; Durfee v. Moran, 57 Mo. 376; Kruse v. Steffens 47 Ill. 114; Fox v. Makreth, 2 Brown's ch. 400; Davoue v. Fanning, 2 Johns ch. 252; Gardner v. Ogden, 22 N.Y. 327. Especially has this court placed the seal of its condemnation upon such practices. Thornton v. Irwin, 43 Mo. 153. It is not necessary to prove actual fraud, but the fact that the officer, who is the agent of both plaintiff and defendant, is interested in the purchase, is held sufficient to vitiate the sale.

3. The sheriff being a stockholder in the bank, was incompetent to execute process in a case in which the bank was a party, and the execution should have been directed to the coroner of the county. Wag. Stat. 284, sec. 3; Inhabitants v. Cole, 8 Mass. 96; Inhabitants v. Ints. of New Gloster, 14 Mass. 216; Thayer v. Ray, 17 Pick. 166. The sheriff's interest was sufficient to have disqualified him as a witness in the case, under the former rules of evidence ( Robbins v. Butler, 24 Ill. 387), and for the same reason disqualified him from serving process.F. M. Black and J. E. Merryman, for defendants in error.

1. While a defendant in ejectment, in possession of property under a forfeited deed of trust or mortgage, may protect his possession against the mortgagor, still it is manifest that this principle has no application in this case. The defendants claim, in opposition to the deed of trust, not under it. The mortgagee in possession alone, could avail himself of such a defense. To this deed of trust the defendants are strangers, and to them it is no defense. Woods v. Hilderbrand, 46 Mo. 284.

2. The rule that a purchase by a trustee of the trust property is voidable at the instance of the cestui que trust can have no application. Neither of the sheriffs held any such relation toward Shrader, much less toward the defendants. They acted solely as officers, and were not purchasers. Moreover, the relation of trustee and cestui que trust does not exist between a corporation and its stockholders. Angel & Ames on Corp., sec. 313; 1 Edw. Ch. R. 87; 1 Miss. Ch. 174; 1 R. I. 1.

3. The sheriffs who made the levy and sale were not incapacitated to act because they were stockholders in the bank. Merchants' Bank v. Cook, 4 Pick. 405; Adams v. Wiscasset Bank, 1 Greenl. 361; Angel & Ames on Corp. sec. 639. The cases referred to by the plaintiff in error, in the 8th and 14th Mass. and 17 Pick., were suits against the “inhabitants of a town.” The sheriff was one of the inhabitants, and in case of judgment it could be levied on the property of any inhabitant; and for this reason the sheriff was held to be a party to the suit, under the statutes of that State; but we have seen that there such rule does not apply to a stockholder of a moneyed corporation. 4 Pick. 405. The objections, if they were of any force, should be taken by way of abatement of the writ or motion to set aside the sale, and now, after a sale, they come too late.

HENRY, J.

This was an action of ejectment, originally in the Circuit Court of Clay County, for the recovery of a tract of fifty acres of land. It was taken to Jackson Circuit Court on change of venue, and there tried at the October Term, 1873. It is admitted that on the 24th day of April, 1865, Stephen Shrader owned and was in possession of the land; that on the first of May, 1861, two judgments were rendered by the Clay Circuit Court against said Shrader, and on the second day of May, 1862, nine others were by said court rendered against him; that prior to the rendition of these judgments, on the 26th of April, 1860, the State to the use of Clay County recovered a judgment against said Shrader and others for $8,919.60; that at the time of the sale hereinafter mentioned, the Farmers' Bank of Missouri owned and controlled all of said judgments; that said bank and John W. Reid as its attorney caused executions to issue on the judgments above mentioned, and had them levied on the land in controversy; that it was duly advertised for sale by the sheriff, Gittings, and sold at the proper time and place, under the executions issued on the judgments of 1861 and 1862. At this sale on the 27th day of April, 1865, said Farmers' Bank and John W. Reid became the purchasers, at the price of $100, and obtained the Sheriff's deed for the land. Afterwards Thomas McCarty, Darwin J. Adkins, Joseph T. Field and Reid purchased the interest of the bank, and plaintiff claims by purchase from them. At the date of said sale by the sheriff said Shrader was insolvent, and in March, 1868, was duly adjudged a bankrupt, and Samuel A. Vose was appointed his assignee, and as such, by order of the United States District Court for the Western District of Missouri, sold said land at public sale on the 7th day of September, 1869, and defendants purchased it at the price of $2,990. They were informed when they purchased that Reid, McCarty, Adkins and Field had purchased said land at the prior sale. Reid, however, bid for the land at the sale by the assignee, and defendants alleged that they were deceived and misled by his bidding into the belief that they were buying a good title. The answer charges that said Gittings, Reid, McCarty, Field and Adkins combined and confederated together to cheat and defraud the other creditors of Shrader and said Shrader; that the sale under the junior judgment was made in furtherance of such fraudulent purpose, and that at the sheriff's sale they declared that whoever purchased the land would purchase it encumbered with the lien of the judgment rendered in 1860, and thereby deterred bidders. The replication denied the allegations in the answer except as above stated. At the time of the sale by him as sheriff, Gittings was a stockholder in the said bank, as was also the sheriff, his predecessor, who levied the execution on the land. Plaintiff, to secure the purchase money, $9,000, which he agreed to pay for the land, executed a deed of trust, conveying the same to A. J. Calhoun, and the condition was broken when this suit was instituted by the failure of said plaintiff to pay said money at the time named in said deed of trust. The land was at the time of sheriff's sale worth $10,000. The Court tried the case without the intervention of a jury and its finding and judgment were for plaintiff, and defendants have brought the cause here by writ of error.

1. SHERIFF INTERESTED: process, execution of: coroner.

I. It is contended by plaintiffs in error that the levy by the sheriff, F. R. Long, he being a stockholder in the bank, as also the sale by Gittings as Sheriff, he being likewise a stockholder in the bank, rendered the sale on the executions void, and in support of this position we have been...

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19 cases
  • Wilson v. St. Louis & S. F. Ry. Co.
    • United States
    • Missouri Supreme Court
    • December 22, 1891
    ...33 Kan. 197, 5 Pac. Rep. 759. Shareholders are not parties to suits brought against corporations of which they are stockholders. Hardwick v. Jones, 65 Mo. 54. (2) Did the plaintiff acquire title to the stock in controversy? Purchasers of certificates for shares acquire, not merely an equita......
  • Benton Land Company v. Zeitler
    • United States
    • Missouri Supreme Court
    • June 2, 1904
    ... ... forfeited mortgage to prevent a recovery by the mortgagor or ... the person holding the equity of redemption." ...           Hardwick ... v. Jones, 65 Mo. 54, was an action in ejectment by the ... grantee of the purchasers of the property at an execution ... sale thereof by the ... ...
  • Loud v. St. Louis Union Trust Co.
    • United States
    • Missouri Supreme Court
    • April 12, 1926
    ...profitable and advantageous to the estate, subject him to all the pains and penalties attached to a willful breach of trust." In Hardwick v. Jones, 65 Mo. 54, a sheriff sold taken under execution to a bank in which he was a stockholder. Held, the sale was not voidable. In Wann v. Scullin, 2......
  • Wann v. Scullin
    • United States
    • Missouri Supreme Court
    • March 17, 1908
    ...referred to is not an arbitrary one, certainly it has not been applied in all its rigidity by this court in all cases. Thus, in Hardwick v. Jones, 65 Mo. 54, validity of an execution sale was attacked on the ground that Sheriff Long, who made the levy, and Sheriff Gittings, who made the sal......
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