Hindman v. Piper

Decision Date31 July 1872
Citation50 Mo. 292
PartiesJOHN HINDMAN et al., Plaintiffs in Error, v. JAMES H. PIPER et al., Defendants in Error.
CourtMissouri Supreme Court

Error to Kansas City Court of Common Pleas.

J. K. Sheley, for plaintiffs in error.

Adams & Son, for plaintiffs in error.

The appointment was not the exercise of judicial power. There was nothing to adjudicate. It was not a retrospective act, and did not impair the obligations of any contract. It was simply the exercise of an administrative power or an ordinary legislative function, carrying out the purposes of all the parties to this deed of trust. (See Stewart v. Griffin, 33 Mo. 13; Gannet v. Leonard, 47 Mo. 205.) The principles of these cases are directly in point with the case at bar. (See also Cooley's Const. Lim. 97-106; Rice v. Parkman, 16 Mass. 326; Cochran v. Van Surlay, 20 Wend. 373; 15 Wend. 436; 24 How. 427; 12 Ala. 369; 16 Ohio, 251; 2 Pet. 660; 16 Pet. 25-60; 8 Blackf. 10; Thurston v. Thurston, 6 R. I. 296; Williamson v. Williamson, 3 S. & M. 715; 29 Miss. 146; 30 Miss. 246; 14 Serg. & R. 434; 2 Greenl. Ch. 20; 11 Gill & J. 87; 2 Penn. St. 277; Walker, 258; 7 Metc. 388; 14 N. Y. 423.)

Karnes & Ess and L. C. Slavens, for defendants in error.

BLISS, Judge, delivered the opinion of the court.

This was an action for the possession of real estate. It appeared that in 1860 one Scott Coffman, being the owner of the premises, made a deed of trust of the same to one David Hindman to secure a debt due one Adams, and afterward conveyed the same land absolutely to said Hindman, who died intestate in 1862, leaving the plaintiffs his heirs, the secured note having in the meantime passed into the hands of the defendants. In 1863 (Sess. Acts 1863, p. 161) the Legislature suspended the sessions of the Circuit Court in Jackson county, and in December of that year (Sess. Acts 1863-4, p. 585) an act was passed for the relief of James H. Piper and George C. Bingham, which recited the execution of the deed of trust and the transfer of the note secured by it, the death of the trustee, the fact that the general law authorizing Circuit Courts to fill vacancies which might take place, by death or otherwise, in the office of trustee was of no effect in the county of Jackson by reason of the special act first above referred to, and enacted that the sheriff of Jackson county be created a trustee in the place of said David Hindman, deceased, to execute and carry into effect the provisions of said deed of trust, in form, manner, and every respect, as if appointed by the Circuit Court in pursuance of existing law. Coffman still failing to satisfy the note upon demand of its owners, John H. Hayden, then the sheriff of Jackson county, proceeded to sell the land under the trust deed, which was bid in by the holders of the note, the present defendants, and he executed a deed in regular form.

Upon the trial the court, at plaintiff's instance, made a declaration of law that the last mentioned act of the general assembly was unconstitutional and void, because, 1st, it was retrospective; 2d, the act was judicial; and, 3d, it deprived the plaintiff of property without due process of law.

Defendants asked a counter-declaration, also others not necessary to be considered, which were refused, and judgment was given for the plaintiff.

1. The constitution forbids retrospective laws, and if this act is subject to that objection it was void. Retrospective acts are usually passed to legalize some past proceeding or act which would not be legal without them, as a defective conveyance or judicial proceeding. How the appointment of an officer to do what the party has already authorized some one to do, can be called retrospective I am unable to see.

2. Neither was the act judicial. The old constitution, as well as the present, separated the judicial from the legislative function, and the legislative judgment would be unconstitutional. (The State ex rel. Pittman v. Adams, 44 Mo. 570.) But the appointment, merely, of a trustee, the trust being already created, is not a judicial act. The trust was created by the party under whom the plaintiff claims. The appointment of the trustee does not operate as a judgment to bar any of the plaintiff's rights. If he would attack the trust, if he would claim to hold the estate divested of it, or if he would attack the sale by showing that the trustee was still alive, the appointment in no way hinders him. His rights are not attempted to be passed upon, and all he possessed before he still retained. The Circuit Court had authority when the trust deed was executed, in the contingency which happened, to direct the sheriff to act as trustee. This was merely an ex parte ministerial act, void if there was no trust in fact, or if it had been extinguished, or the contingency had not happened. The powers which the sheriff could exercise were derived from the deed, and not from any judgment of the court. The session of the court being suspended, the sovereign power of the State--the power which itself had authorized the court to direct the sheriff to act--itself gives the direction, leaving the rights of the parties as undisturbed as if it had been made by the court under the statute.

Nor is the plaintiff deprived of property without due process of law, unless all rules under trust deeds thus deprive their grantors. All...

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20 cases
  • Howell v. Sherwood
    • United States
    • Missouri Supreme Court
    • May 20, 1912
  • Biffle v. Pullam
    • United States
    • Missouri Supreme Court
    • November 26, 1894
    ... ... (3) The power in the ... sheriff to act was derived from the deed of trust, and, if it ... had been extinguished, he could not execute it. Hindman ... v. Piper, 50 Mo. 292. (4) Whoever buys under a power, ... buys at his peril, and takes nothing by his purchase, if the ... power does not ... ...
  • Kelly v. Staed
    • United States
    • Missouri Supreme Court
    • December 15, 1896
    ...Gilham, 75 Mo. 132. (5) The sheriff can act as trustee only upon the happening of the contingencies recited in the deed of trust. Hindman v. Piper, 50 Mo. 292. And whenever question arises as to who is the proper person to exercise the power, resort should be had to a court of equity for fo......
  • Papin v. Piednoir
    • United States
    • Missouri Supreme Court
    • July 1, 1907
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