GOODE, J.This action is ejectment for twelve and one-half acres of land in St. Louis county; but the proceeding involved in the appeal arose after^final judgment in the main action and related to the distribution of the money accruing from a sale under a decree foreclosing a deed of trust on the land. The defendants in the ejectment suit were Nannie, Sallie and Albert Reveley and the plaintiff was George B. Polliham, on the appeal the respondent. John H. Bobb, the appellant, came into the proceedings by a motion filed after judgment, in which he asked to participate in the distribution of the proceeds of the sale of the land. Nannie and Sallie Reveley are the sisters of Albert L. Reveley, who, in 1897, held the title to the land under a conveyance from Martha E. Bobb. Though the title was in him, it seems that he acquired it for his two sisters, whom he *714put into- possession as early .as October, 1898. While the land stood in his name, he incumbered it by three deeds of trust to secure notes given by himself. The senior of those incumbrances was dated February 27, 1897, and conveyed the premises to Joseph Franklin as trustee to secure the payment to Susan Franklin, of a principal note for the sum of $2,000, payable three years after date, and six semiannual interest notes for sixty dollars each; all the notes bearing eight per cent interest from maturity. The second deed of trust was dated March 1,1897, made to Wilbur F. Parker as trustee and secured the payment of a principal note of $2,600, due three years after date to Martha E. Bobb, and six semiannual interest notes, each for the sum of seventy-eight dollars. On this indebtedness, $125 was paid October 4, 1900. The third incumbrance was dated March 16,1897, made to Thomas J. Rowe as trustee to- secure the payment to John H. Bobb of a principal note for $1,250 due two years after date, and four interest notes- for thirty-seven dollars and fifty cents each. The senior incumbrance contained a clause authorizing the trustee, Joseph Franklin, in case of default by the grantor, to sell the property at public vendue in the usual method. Said clause reads, that in case of default, “said party of the second part (whether acting in person or by attorney in fact, thereunto authorized by law) or in case of his death, his successor in this trust, may proceed to- sell the property hereinbefore conveyed,” etc. Default having-been made in the payment of the notes secured by the first deed, the land, of course, became subject to foreclosure sale. William C. Waldeck, a real estate agent, in the city of St. Louis, knew of the default and took certain steps, which will be related, to acquire the land under a deed of trust sale. In doing so, he appears to have acted as the agent of Martha E. Bobb> the holder of the notes secured by the second deed of trust. The evidence tends to show that at the time of the default, in the Sum*715mer of 1900, the land was worth about $7,000, whereas the first incumbrance and the accumulated interest, amounted to between $2,000 and $2,500. G. Win. Senn, who is an attorney at law in the city of St. Louis, was the attorney for Waldeck and also for Martha E. Bobb. Waldeck purchased from Susan Franklin, the beneficiary in the first deed of trust, the notes thereby secured and at the same time procured from Joseph Franklin, the trustee in that instrument, a power of attorney authorizing Senn to advertise and sell the property under the deed of trust in place of said Franklin. Pursuant to this power of attorney, Senn advertised the property for sale and sold it on June 2, 1900, at public outcry at the place designated in the deed. The purchaser was the respondent, George B. Polliham, who bid the property in for $2,500, or less than one-half its actual value. Polliham was not acting for himself in the transaction but for Waldeck, in whose office he was employed a.s a clerk, and Waldeck, the evidence goes to show, was acting for Martha E. Bobb. Senn executed a trustee’s deed conveying the premises to Polliham, cancelled the notes secured by the first deed of trust, paid the expenses of the sale and had left a surplus of $136.81, which ought to have been applied, on the debts secured by the second incumbrance. Polliham paid no money on the purchase to Senn, except enough to cover the expense of the sale and the said surplus. The balance of the purchase price of $2,500 was discharged by satisfying and cancelling the notes secured by the incumbrance under which the sale occurred. On December 14, 1900, Polliham instituted this action of ejectment to recover from the three Reveleys the possession of the premises. His demand was resisted by the defendants, who set up in their answer the facts we have stated and alleged that the sale by Senn was illegal and contrary to the true intention of the deed of trust, which empowered no one but Joseph Franklin to act as trustee .in selling the premises. Wherefore, they prayed that the conveyance from Senn to *716Polliham be set aside and for naught held. At the trial of the ejectment action the circuit court found the facts in accordance with the foregoing narrative, set aside the sale Senn had made and the trustee’s deed he had executed to Polliham as attorney in fact for Franklin, and ordered a resale of the premises by the sheriff of St. Louis county for the purpose of enforcing the deed of trust; ordered further that the sheriff report the sale to the court for approval and distribution of the proceeds. This decree was entered March 25, 1901. Polliham appealed to the Supreme Court, where the decree was in all things affirmed on May 25, 1904. [Polliham v. Reveley et al., 181 Mo. 622, 81 S. W. 182.] The appeal was accompanied by a supersedeas bond which prevented a sale by the sheriff until the case was disposed of by the Supreme Court; hence, no sale occurred until October 14, 1904. The property brought the sum of $4,000 in cash. A report of the sale was filed by the sheriff and duly approved by the court. The appellant, Bobb, filed his motion to participate in the distribution of the pro<ceeds on October 14th. To make the grounds of this motion clear, it is necessary to narrate what occurred between Waldeck and Bobb after the sale of the premises by Senn, as attorney in fact, for Joseph Franklin. Bobb conceived the notion that said sale was illegal and would be set aside by the court. With this opinion in mind he contrived a scheme to become the owner of the notes secured by the first two deeds of trust, being already the owner of the notes secured by the third one. The theory on which he acted was that if he acquired all the notes secured by the two senior liens and the sale of the premises by Senn was annulled, he would be entitled, as the owner of the notes secured by the first deed of trust, to the proceeds of any subsequent sale under it. Senn had sold the premises on June 2, 1900, to Polliham, but the latter did nothing towards asserting title until the following December. During the interval, to-wit, on or about August 2, 1900, John H. Bobb sent William Eeve*717ley, brother of Albert Reveley, to Waldeck to buy the notes secured by the second deed of trust. These notes were held by Martha E. Bobb, but Waldeck controlled them as her agent. The principal one was for $2,600 on which, as already stated, there should have been credited $136.81, the surplus remaining of the proceeds of the land after paying the notes secured, by the first lien. At the time of this transaction the notes appeared to be unsecured by any lien on the land and good only as the obligations of Albert L. Reveley. ' When William Reveley approached Waldeck about the purchase of the Martha E. Bobb notes, he represented that he owed his brother Albert some money, and said that if he could buy the notes cheap he would do so1 in order to offset them against his debt. Waldeck asked $100 for the notes but William Reveley demurred, saying the price was more than he would pay, because he only owed his brother $125. After a'consultation with his client, Waldeck sold William Reveley the notes for thirty-five dollars. About a month later, that is to say, on September 2, 1900, William Reveley entered Waldeck’s office and proposed to buy the notes on Albert Reveley Avhich were secured by the first deed of trust. He stated as his reason, that Albert had refused to accept the Martha E. Bobb notes secured by the second deed of trust as an offset for William Reveley’s debt, because he (Albert) was not certain that the notes secured by the first deed of trust had been cancelled. Waldeck told. William Reveley the notes were Avorthless; but the lattet called several times and pressed his demand for the purchase, and Waldeck finally sold them to him for seven dollars and fifty cents. The deeds of trust Avere never transferred to William Reveley, who represented that he simply wanted, to buy the notes. John H. Bobb testified himself that he was not known to Waldeck in these transactions. The arrangement betAveen Bobb and William Reveley was that the latter should be alloAved a credit of .$125 on the Martha E. Bobb note of $2,600 and this should cancel the *718liability owed by William to Albert Reveley. The notes were indorsed without recourse by the original payees, Susan Franklin and Martha E. Bobb, and with that indorsement, were turned over by William Reveley to John H. Bobb. The result of the foregoing transactions was that Bobb acquired the notes secured by the first deed of trust for seven dollars and fifty cents and those secured by the second deed of trust for thirty-five dollars; forty-two' dollars and one-half in all. The amount of the two sets of notes is more than $4,600 and hence, more than the price for which the land was sold by the sheriff, to-wit, $4,000: In his motion for a share of the proceeds of the sale, Bobb set up his ownership of the notes and asked that the proceeds be first applied to paying the court costs and the expenses of the sale, and next to paying him, (Bobb) the notes secured by the three deeds of trust according to their sequence. Polliham filed a motion that after paying the court costs and the expenses of the sheriff’s sale, the proceeds be paid to him to cover the expenses of the original trustee’s sale by Senn and incidental outlays in connection therewith, insurance premiums advanced under a clause in the first deed of trust, general taxes on the premises for the years 1897-8-9, which he had paid, together with interest thereon, and next in satisfaction of the principal and interest notes secured by the first deed of trust, together with interest on each of said notes at the rate of eight per cent per annum from their respective maturities until payment was made, and for the repayment to him of $136.81, which he had paid to Martha E. Bobb on the principal note secured by the second deed of trust. The decree of the court in effect overruled Bobb’s motion and ordered the proceeds to be paid in accordance with Polliham’s motion except as to said sum of $136.81. As we understand, the court found that this money had never been paid by Senn or Polliham to' Martha E. Bobb; therefore, should go to Garrard Strode as administrator of her estate, she *719having died since the original decree. Bobb appealed from the order of distribution. This contest is exclusively between him as the owner of the notes secured on the land by the three incumbrances, and Polliham. The latter represents Waldeck and the testimony goes to show that Waldeck represents Martha E. Bobb; hut Polliham is the only party to the record who is contending with Bobb. The theory on which the latter proceeds is that he is entitled to the proceeds of the sheriff’s sale after satisfying the costs of this action, because he is the holder of the notes secured by all the incumbrances. The argument is that Polliham paid the price he bid the land off for at the Senn sale, not in cash, but by the cancellation of the notes secured by the first deed of trust and really advanced but little money to Senn; barely enough to pay the costs of the sale and leave a small surplus to be applied towards discharging the second lien. That, hence, Polliham is out nothing which he should be repaid, and if he is paid the amount of the debts secured by the first incumbrance, he will get that mjich money for nothing and Bobb the present holder of the notes, nothing on them. The uncontradicted testimony in the case proves that Bobb never acquired the first or second deed of trust as security for the notes he bought. It is true that a mortgage securing a promissory note ordinarily accompanies the note into the hands of a transferee, but this is not so when the intention of the parties is otherwise. [Lee v. Turner, 15 Mo. App. 205, 89 Mo. 289.] The notes Reveley bought were not only past due and dishonored, but had been marked “paid” out of the proceeds of the sale and cancelled. Now the positive testimony of Waldeck proves that William Reveley, in negotiating for the notes, stated that he was acquiring them simply as the obligations of Albert Reveley, wholly unsecured on the land, and the facts demonstrate that there was a distinct understanding that he was not getting the benefit of the deeds of trust. The prices given for the two sets of notes refute the contention that they *720were looked on as valuable. This transaction was a ruse, the real object of which was not to enable William Reveley to- discharge a debt he owed his brother, but to further a scheme of John H. Bobb which looked to absorbing untimately the proceeds of the land. The case of Lee v. Turner, supra, is decisive of this one, and is stronger in support of the principles we have stated because the conduct of all the parties was devoid of artifice. Turner bought a deed of trust which was voidable because advertised only twenty days, instead of thirty as the deed of trust required. Shortly after the sale, Turner assigned the notes secured by the incumbrance to B. M. Million in order that the latter, if possible, might collect from the estate of the maker, the balance on them which the proceeds of the sale did not pay. Turner was to have one-half of the sum thus recovered and Million the other half. Sometime afterward, the invalidity of the sale was discovered and the property again advertised and sold. Meanwhile Million had borrowed three 'thousand dollars from William Roemheld on the notes, Roemheld’s attorney advising him that the first sale was invalid and that the notes were still secured on the land. The contest was over the proceeds of the second sale, which Turner claimed as the original beneficiary in the deed of trust, Million as assignee of the notes and Roemheld as pledgee holding them as collateral to- Million’s debt. This court held that Turner’s claim was good against both Million and Roemheld; against Million because he took an assignment of the notes knowing all the facts and on the understanding that the deed of trust did not go- with them, but had been exhausted; against Roemheld because he accepted the notes from Million as collateral, after their maturity and with knowledge of facts to put him on inquiry. The Supreme Go-urt reversed the court’s ruling regarding Roemheld’s right and held he acted in good faith, relying on the security of the deed of trust. As between Turner and Million, the Supreme Court said there could be no difficulty, for Million *721took no interest in the deed of trust, hut bought the notes to proceed against the maker’s estate. In this case, there was a distinct' understanding between Waldeck and William Reveley that the latter bought only the notes to hold as an offset against Albert Reveley and that the land was no longer security for them.
Another answer to the contention of the appellants is that the interest and rights of Polliliam were settled by the decree in the ejectment case which ivas affirmed by the Supreme Court. Bobb was not a party to that action and as he has intervened in it after judgment, whatever interest he has in the fund, must be enforced in accordance with the judgment. If he has rights superior to those decreed in the judgment, he will have to seek them in a separate suit instituted in his own behalf. Now' in the decree rendered on June 2, 1900, the circuit court adjudged that Polliham was in equity the holder and owner of the first deed of trust as an unsatisfied incumbrance on the real estate, and that the amount he was entitled to collect ivas the amount of the notes secured by the deed of trust and remaining unpaid at the time of the decree, Avith accrued interest thereon, the costs of the sale and any surplus proceeds which might have been paid out of the purchase money received from Polliham, to the holders of the notes secured by subsequent deeds of trust. It further appears that the court adjudged that the proceeds of the sheriff’s sale, after satisfying the costs of the suit and of the sale, should be distributed first to Polliham, next to the holders of the subsequent deeds of trust, and lastly, to Nannie Reveley, the owner of the equity of redemption. Those matters have been adjudicated. Now Bobb’s motion is nothing-less than an effort to have the circuit court disregard its decree rendered in a suit to Avhich he was not a party, after it has been affirmed by the Supreme Court, and instead of distributing the fund in accordance Avith the de-cree, pay practically all of it to him, who Avas not found to be entitled to any of it except as the OAvner of notes se*722cured by the last incumbrance. In other words, the court adjudged Polliham was entitled to a lien on the land or its proceeds, equal to the debt secured by the first incumbrance, and Bobb asked that the amount of that debt be paid to him, leaving Polliham and those whom he represents empty handed. Certainly such an order would be erroneous in the present proceeding. Nor do we think Bobb, in view of the terms on which he bought the notes, would occupy any better position in an independent proceeding. What he acquired was a claim against Albert Beveley if the notes secured by the first and second deeds in trust were not satisfied in full by the proceeds of the land.
A more difficult problem is the right of Polliham to be paid interest on the amount for which he was decreed a lien, from the time of the decree. The court ordered the land resold by the sheriff for the benefit of all parties and if this sale had been made forthwith, interest would have been stopped on the amount of Polliham’s incumbrance, to the advantage of the subsequent incumbrancers and of Albert Beveley, the debtor. Polliham prevented the sale by giving a supersedeas bond and thereby delayed the matter through several years. This question has not been treated thoroughly in the briefs of counsel. It is urged in favor of the respondent that the point was not raised in the motion for rehearing; but it was raised in the fifth paragraph of that motion. It is further said that Bobb had no right to raise the question by his motion in the court below. We would consider this position well taken if Polliham had been adjudged in the decree for the resale, to be entitled to interest pending the appeal; but he was not. He was adjudged to be entitled to the amount of the first notes remaining unpaid at the time and interest thereon. That meant the interest to the date of the distribution, which was expected to follow shortly. Of course, there was no decision that he would be entitled to interest for the years which might elapse while an appeal was pending, for it *723was not known that there would he an appeal; and much might he said in support of the proposition that he is not entitled to such interest. But we think there is an obstacle in the way of a decision of this point. The parties who are interested in it are Albert Beveley and Martha E. Bobb’s estate. Albert Beveley is interested because, if Polliham ought not to recover interest pending the appeal to the Supreme Court, the portion of the proceeds of the land which otherwise would have to be applied to discharge that item, can be applied on the debt secured by the second, or Martha. E. Bobb, deed of trust and thereby reduce the amount for which Beveley remains liable. Martha E. Bobb’s estate is interested because, under the original decree, whatever surplus remained after discharging the first lien, was to be applied on the second one and this surplus will be increased if Polliham is denied his full demand for interest. John H. Bobb was the third incumbrancer but is not interested as such, because in any contingency the amount to be applied on the second lien will fall short of satisfying it. If Bobb has any right to be heard in the matter, it is as the present holder of the Martha E. Bobb notes; and whether he has the right depends on the position taken in the lower court by Strode as administrator of her estate towards Bobb’s acquisition of the lien of the second deed of trust, and the court’s decision of the issue if it was raised. The testimony goes to show that Bobb no more acquired that lien than he did the first one for which Polliham is contending with him. Bid Martha E. Bobb’s administrator contest his claim to the second lien and was that matter adjudicated? The' administrator intervened for a.participation in the proceeds of sale, but his motion has not been preserved in the record before us. Yet in the order of distribution, we find the circuit judge so far sustained the administrator’s intervention as to order the surplus remaining after satisfying the first lien to be paid to him. Now if the court had ruled that the second lien was held by Bobb, the surplus would *724have been ordered paid to him. It follows that the point was determined in favor of Martha E. Bobb’s estate. Hence, John H. Bobb has no right, either as second or third incumbrancer, which was impaired by allowing interest to Polliham for the time the case rested in the Supreme Court. As Albert Keveley and the administrator submitted to the order of distribution, instead of appealing, the question of interest has not been presented to the court by the only parties aggrieved if there was an erroneous ruling on it below. The judgment must be affirmed. [Othenin v. Brown, 66 Mo. App. 318.]
Blmid, P. Jand Nortoni> J., concur.' •