Scott v. Bailey

Decision Date31 March 1856
PartiesSCOTT et al., Plaintiffs in Error, v. BAILEY, ARMSTRONG AND OTHERS, Defendants in Error.
CourtMissouri Supreme Court

1. One William Bailey executed a deed of trust of certain real estate to secure the payment within twelve months of an indebtedness, recited therein to be due “to Patrick H. Scott and Sarah B. Scott, in the sum of about two thousand dollars, being the amount of principal and interest due upon a promissory note drawn by the said Bailey and endorsed by the said Patrick H. and Sarah B. Scott, and now past due and held by Mrs. Elizabeth Cabell, of Winchester, Virginia.” In point of fact, it was intended by the parties to the deed of trust to secure the said P. H. Scott and S. B. Scott against liability upon a bond executed in favor of the said Mrs. C. Cabell, by the said Scotts, jointly with, and as the sureties of the said Wm. Bailey. Held, that this mis-recital of the nature of the indebtedness was not such as to avoid the deed of trust.

2. Parol evidence is admissible to show that the relation of principal and surety exists between the co-obligors of a bond.

Error to St. Louis Land Court.

This was an action in the nature of a proceeding to foreclose a deed of trust or mortgage. The petition stated that William Bailey, one of the defendants, on the 20th October, 1843, by his deed of that date, duly recorded, conveyed to F. W. Risque, one of the defendants, a tract of land in St. Louis county, described in said deed and in said petition, in trust to secure, among other things, “the payment, in twelve months from date of the deed, of about $2000 to P. H. & S. B. Scott, [plaintiffs in this action,] being the amount of principal and interest due on a promissory note, made by Wm. Bailey, in favor of P. H. & S. B. Scott, and by them endorsed, and then held by Mrs. Elizabeth Cabell, of Virginia.” That the instrument, the payment of which the said Wm. Bailey intended by said deed of trust to secure, is in the words and figures following: “$1860. Lynchburg, Va., Nov'r. 8, 1840. Twelve months after the 4th of November next, we, or either of us, promise to pay to Mrs. Elizabeth Cabell, her heirs or assigns, the joint and full sum of $1860, to bear interest at the rate of six per cent. per annum from date, Nov'r 8, till paid, and for the payment of which sum we bind ourselves, our heirs, firmly by these presents; sealed with our seals and dated November 8, 1840. [Signed] Wm. Bailey, (seal). S. B. Scott, (seal). P. H. Scott, (seal).” That P. H. Scott and S. B. Scott signed this instrument as sureties of Wm. Bailey, and that the said Wm. B. mistakenly described it as being a note whereof plaintiffs were endorsers; the fact being that said instrument was, as set forth, a writing under seal, and that the plaintiffs were the sureties of Wm. Bailey therein, to pay Mrs. Elizabeth Cabell the sum of “about $2000,” the precise sum really due on 20th October, 1843, being $2080; and said Bailey referred to said instrument by memory only, and so misdescribed it in the foregoing unessential particulars.

The petition stated that Risque was a non-resident; that Mrs. Cabell had obtained judgment on the said written instrument against the plaintiffs and said Bailey, and that the plaintiffs had paid the same, and they asked for judgment for the sale of the land conveyed to Risque to repay the money by them paid on the judgment.

Armstrong was not a party to the suit originally. Upon his own motion, he was made defendant, and answered, denying that the deed of trust dated October 20, 1843, was in trust to secure the payment in twelve months after date, of about $2000 to P. H. & S. B. Scott, principal and interest, due upon a promissory note made by Wm. Bailey, in favor of plaintiffs, and by them endorsed to Mrs. E. Cabell, denying also that any money was secured by said deed to be paid to the plaintiffs; averring that whatever debt, if any, was due from Bailey and plaintiffs to Mrs. Cabell, has been paid and satisfied before the commencement of this suit, and therefore can be no longer a lien on the land described in the petition; denying that plaintiffs have any right to cause said land to be sold for the nonpayment by Bailey of said promissory note; denying knowledge of Bailey's intention to secure the bond mentioned in the petition, or whether such bond existed, and alleging that the deed of trust purported to secure a note, not a bond; and that if the money was due upon a bond and not a note, then the deed of trust was no security for it; that plaintiffs were not sureties for Bailey in said bond, but co-obligors, and that evidence to show that they are sureties is not admissible; that the payment of said bond or of the judgment thereon, by the plaintiffs, is an extinguishment of the lien, and no assignment, legal or equitable, of the security, resulted to them from such payment; that if such judgment was obtained as is stated, it fixed the character of plaintiffs as co-obligors, and estops them to say that they were sureties of Bailey; that a judgment was rendered against Bailey in 1845, under which Darby purchased all the interest of Bailey in this land and sold the same to Armstrong by a warranty deed, for full value, in July, 1845. Bailey answered, confessing the petition. An order of publication was taken against Risque, and a formal judgment by default was entered against him.

The cause was tried by the court sitting as a jury, and the court found the facts in controversy as follows: “That on the 8th November, 1840, Wm. Bailey, Patrick H. Scott and Sarah B. Scott made their joint and several bond, under their several seals, whereby they bound themselves to pay to Elizabeth Cabell and her heirs $1860 within one year from the 4th November, 1841; that on the 20th October, 1843, said Wm. Bailey conveyed to F. W. Risque the land described in plaintiff's petition, in trust to secure the payment in twelve months after date thereof of about $2000 to P. H. & S. B. Scott (the plaintiffs), being the amount of principal and interest due upon a promissory note, made by Wm. Bailey in favor of P. H. & S. B. Scott, and by them endorsed to and then held by Mrs. Elizabeth Cabell, of Virginia; that on the 5th March, 1845, a judgment was rendered in the St. Louis Circuit Court for $1205, in favor of John W. Nelson, plaintiff, against Wm. Bailey, defendant; that an execution issued thereon, and that the sheriff of St. Louis county did, by virtue of said execution, levy upon and sell all the right, title and interest of Bailey in the land to John F. Darby, who was the highest bidder therefor, for the sum of $895; that the sheriff made a regular deed therefor to said Darby on the 23d April, 1845; that, on the 16th July, 1845, John F. Darby, by regular deed of grant, bargain and sale, conveyed said land to D. H. Armstrong for the consideration of $1,200; that said sum was then a fair price for said land; that Armstrong had no actual notice of the deed of trust from Bailey to Risque above mentioned; that Mrs. Cabell recovered judgment against the plaintiffs in 1847, upon their aforesaid bond; that plaintiffs paid said judgment to Mrs. Cabell in 1847; that Wm. Bailey paid no part of said judgment; that plaintiffs were the sureties of Wm. Bailey in said bond in fact, but co-obligors on the face of the bond; that Wm. Bailey designed to secure the payment of that bond by the deed of trust to F. W. Risque, and that he misdescribed the instrument intended to be secured by mistake and carelessness.

“Upon the foregoing facts, the court declares the law to be that D. H. Armstrong, being an innocent purchaser for a fair price of the real estate in question, it is not competent for the plaintiffs in this action to subject the said real estate in the hands of Armstrong to the payment to the plaintiffs of the amount which they had paid to Mrs. Cabell as securities for Bailey on said bond for $1,860; that the instrument purporting to be secured by the deed of trust being entirely different from the instrument set up by the plaintiffs in their petition as the foundation of the indebtedness, it is not competent for the plaintiffs to establish, by parol evidence, that the description in the deed of trust was made by mistake, so as to authorize plaintiffs to charge the land with the payment of the said bond, the property being in the hands of an innocent purchaser.”

T. T. Gantt, for plaintiff in error.

I. Armstrong had constructive notice of the deed of trust, it being alleged in the petition, and not denied in the answer, that it was recorded in St. Louis; besides, it was proved on the trial that it was duly recorded in October, 1843. Having notice of the deed of trust, he had notice that P. H. and S. B. Scott were sureties for Wm. Bailey for the payment of about $2,000, principal and interest, to Mrs. E. Cabell, and that the object of the deed of trust was to secure them against their liability as his securities. The record showed that the land was encumbered in favor of the Scotts in the sum of about $2,000. It is in no wise material that the instrument, by which their liability to Mrs. Cabell was shown, was misdescribed in the deed of trust. The purchaser, Armstrong, having notice by the record of the liability of the Scotts to Mrs. Cabell, could not have been injured by a misrecital in the deed of trust of the nature of that liability.

II. There is no weight to be attached to the objection that it appeared by the deed of trust that nothing had been paid at the date of the deed by P. H. and S. B. Scott for Wm. Bailey, and that there was no debt due from him to them which could be secured. (See Duvall v. Raisin et al., 7 Mo. 449.)

III. The extinguishment of the debt due Mrs. Cabell did not defeat the security created in favor of the Scotts by the deed of trust.

IV. Parol evidence was admissible to show that P. H. and S. B. Scott, although co-obligors on the face of the bond, were, in point of fact, sureties of William Bailey. (...

To continue reading

Request your trial
17 cases
  • Reynolds v. Schade
    • United States
    • Missouri Court of Appeals
    • March 31, 1908
    ... ... 286), one appearing on the face of the ... note as maker, as in the case at bar, may show by parol, that ... he or she is in fact a surety. [Scott v. Bailey, 23 ... Mo. 140; Mechanics' Bank v. Wright, 53 Mo. 153; ... Coats v. Swindle, 55 Mo. 31; O'Howell v ... Kirk, 41 Mo.App. 523; 27 Am. & ... ...
  • Reynolds v. Schade
    • United States
    • Missouri Court of Appeals
    • March 31, 1908
    ...286), one appearing on the face of the note as maker, as in the case at bar, may show by parol that he or she is in fact a surety. Scott v. Bailey, 23 Mo. 140; Mechanics' Bank v. Wright, 53 Mo. 153; Coats v. Swindle, 55 Mo. 31; O'Howell v. Kirk, 41 Mo. App. 523; 27 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law (2d E......
  • Kendall v. Baltis
    • United States
    • Kansas Court of Appeals
    • May 23, 1887
    ...the respondent. I. The interpleader was a creditor of Baltis Brothers, for the purposes of this suit. Duvall v. Raisin, 7 Mo. 449; Scott v. Bailey, 23 Mo. 140; Albert v. Besel, 88 Mo. 150; Cook Johnson, 12 N.J.Eq. 51; Cramer v. Bedford, 17 N.J. 367; Chouteau v. Jones, 11 Ill. 300; Brandt on......
  • State ex rel. McMillan v. Guinn
    • United States
    • Missouri Supreme Court
    • July 1, 1925
    ... ... 38; Montana Ore. Pur. Co. v ... Maher, 81 P. 13; Allen v. McKay & Co., 72 P. 715 ...          Walter ... Bailey and Owen & Davis for respondent ...          (1) The ... assessment list made out and delivered by the defendant to ... the assessor, on ... or enlarging written contracts and instruments and record ... [Williams v. Bank, 72 Mo. 292; Scott v ... Bailey, 23 Mo. 140; State v. Hockaday, 98 Mo ...          The ... testimony of the non-existence of any estimate from old ... ...
  • Request a trial to view additional results

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT