Powers v. Kueckhoff

Decision Date31 October 1867
Citation41 Mo. 425
PartiesJAMES C. POWERS, Defendant in Error, v. CASPAR H. KUECKHOFF, Plaintiff in Error.
CourtMissouri Supreme Court

Error to Second District Court.

This was an action brought by defendant in error to recover a tract of land in Jefferson county containing about 134 acres, and damages for timber alleged to have been cut thereon by plaintiff in error. The defendant answered denying that he unlawfully withheld from plaintiff any part of said land, and denying that he was entitled to judgment for any timber cut thereon by defendant; and alleging that the defendant is the legal owner of the following part of the lands described in plaintiff's petition: sixty acres, being the west part of the north-east fractional quarter of section fifteen, and the south fractional half of the south-east fractional quarter of section ten, in township forty-one of range five east; that the defendant acquired title to the same from Richard J. Maupin by deed of the 2d day of March, 1857, and has had possession of the same ever since, and denied being in possession of the residue of said lands described in the petition. Defendant further states that plaintiff claims said 134 16-100 acres of land as a purchaser at a trustee's sale made on the 4th of April, 1864, under a deed of trust given by Richard J. Maupin on the 9th of October, 1856, to secure the payment of a note of about eighty dollars to Josiah Craft. The answer set up as a defence, that the sale was not made in accordance with the terms of the deed of trust. The answer further alleged that at the time defendant received his deed for said sixty acres it was expressly agreed by and between Josiah Craft and defendant that said Richard J. Maupin should pay said Craft thirty-five dollars on the note secured by deed of trust, and that thereupon said Josiah Craft should release the deed of trust upon the said sixty acres of said land bought by said Kueckhoff; and that the $35 was paid to said Craft at the time by said Maupin before he executed his deed to said Kueckhoff for said sixty acres, and that Craft thereupon agreed and promised said Maupin and Kueckhoff that he would credit the note with said $35 and release the deed of trust on the sixty acres bought by defendant.

The evidence of plaintiff tended to prove that Maupin held a patent for the land; that he, on the 9th day of October, 1856, gave a deed to E. T. Honey as trustee, on said land, to secure the payment of a note for $68 to Josiah Craft; that said Craft's administrator afterwards, to-wit, on the ____ of ____, sold the land by said trustee and that the plaintiff bought the same. He offered the notice of sale and trustee's deed in evidence, which were objected to by defendant on the ground that such sale was illegal and void; that no notice of the sale was given; that the notice attached to the deed was insufficient, as it did not definitely state the place of sale, in what county, nor that the land would be sold at public vendue and to the highest bidder. The court overruled the objection and permitted the notice and deed to be read, to which the defendant excepted. That defendant had cut some timber on the land; that the sixty acres bought by the defendant, and the residue seventy-four acres, were each worth at the time of the trustee's sale one hundred dollars, The note $68 given by Maupin to Craft, having a credit on it of $35, dated the 2d of March, 1856, and afterwards erased, was read in evidence. The administrator of Craft stated he did not know who erased it he found it so on becoming administrator.

The defendant then read a deed of said Maupin conveying said sixty acres to the defendant, executed in March, 1857, being part of the land in controversy.

Defendant offered evidence tending to prove the agreement between Craft, Maupin and defendant, and that plaintiff had knowledge of the agreement at the date of his purchase.

Abner Green, for plaintiff in error.

I. The Circuit Court committed error in admitting the notice of the trustee's sale and deed from the trustee to be read in evidence, as the notice attached to the deed showed on its face that the trustee had not pursued the power given. A trustee is an agent of both parties, and acts from delegated powers; it is therefore essential that he should strictly pursue the powers given--Stine v. Wilkson, 10 Mo. 75; Thornburg v. Jones, 30 Mo. 514; Conway v. Nolte, 11 Mo. 74.

The rule that the recitals in the deed are presumptive evidence that he has complied with the requisites of the law in the sale will not apply to trustees' sales; they are not officers of a court--McCormack v. Fitzmorris, 39 Mo. 24.

II. The Circuit Court erred in not sustaining defendant's motion for judgment on the new matter constituting a counter-claim as alleged in defendant's answer, there being no replication denying the same--R. C. 1865, §§ 12, 13 & 16, p. 659.

J. L. Thomas. for defendant in error.

I. This suit was commenced under the code of 1855. No replication to the new matter set up in the answer was necessary, the new matter not constituting a counter-claim--R. C. 1855, p. 1233, §§ 15, 16 & 17; 37 Mo. 443.

II. The recitals in the deed of the trustee to Powers are prima facie evidence that the terms of the deed of trust were complied with--39 Mo. 443; Id. 24.

III. The notice of the time, terms and place of sale were definite enough. The deed of trust did not require that notice should contain certain things, but merely provided that it should specify the terms, time and place of sale. The deed then went on to appoint the mode and manner of the sale. The case in 21 Mo. 313, is conclusive upon this point....

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    ...by unknown equities or outside parties. Allen v. Ray, 96 Mo. 593; Cross v. Watts, 206 Mo. 374; Hume v. Hopkins, 140 Mo. 63; Powers v. Krueckhoff, 41 Mo. 425; Stewart v. Omaha, 283 Mo. 365; McMurry v. McMurry, 258 Mo. 405; Grove v. Heirs, 36 Mo. 523; Condit v. Maxwell, 142 Mo. 266; Ladd v. A......
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