Beard v. Bank of Osceola

190 S.W. 849, 126 Ark. 420, 1916 Ark. LEXIS 287
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 18, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 190 S.W. 849 (Beard v. Bank of Osceola) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beard v. Bank of Osceola, 190 S.W. 849, 126 Ark. 420, 1916 Ark. LEXIS 287 (Ark. 1916).

Opinion

McCulloch, C. J.

This is an action instituted by the plaintiff, Bank of Osceola, in the chancery court of Mississippi county, Chickasawba District, to foreclose certain liens on three 40-acre tracts of land in that county described as the west half of the northwest quarter, and the southeast quarter of the northwest quarter, of section 25, township 16 north, range 11 East.

There is no dispute about the material fact's of the cáse, which are as follows: On September,2, 1909, J. W. Barron and O. R. Lilly sold and, by' warranty deed, conveyed to Ben Bunch one of said 40-aere tracts, the southeast quarter of the northwest quarter of section 25, for the sum and price of $1,300.00, evidenced by a negotiable promissory note of that date executed by said Bunch to Barron and Lilly, bearing Í0 per cent, interest per annum, due and payable ten years after date; Barron assigned his interest in the note before maturity to Lilly, and Lilly assigned the note before maturity to plaintiff; on December 1, 1909, J. P Meador executed to Barron and Lilly two deeds of trust on the west half of the northwest quarter of section 25, one to secure a negotiable promissory note in.the sum of a thousand dollars, and the other to secure a negotiable promissory note in the sum of two thousand dollars, both of which notes were assigned before maturity to plaintiff by Barron and Lilly; on March 4, 1910, Meador sold and by warranty deed conveyed to Bunch the southwest quarter of the northwest quarter of section 25, for the price of one thousand dollars, as evidenced by a negotiable promissory note executed by Bunch to Meador, due and payable ten years after date, with interest at the rate of 10 per cent, per annum, and this note was by Meador assigned before maturity to Lilly, and by Lilly assigned before maturity to plaintiff. The assignments of the various notes set forth above to the plaintiff were for the purpose of securing the payment of certain indebtedness of Barron and Lilly to the plaintiff, which has not been paid.

On the 7th of May, 1910, Meador conveyed the northwest quarter of the northwest quarter of section 25 to M. A. Rudder and J. A. Hopkins, who subsequently conveyed to one Fisher, and on November 14, 1910, Bunch conveyed to Fisher the south half of the northwest quarter of section 25, which said conveyances put the legal title in Fisher subject to the lien for the purchase money and mortgage notes referred to above. On April 12, 1912, Barron and Lilly executed to Fisher a quitclaim deed conveying all their interest in the aforedescribed tracts, said deed reciting a consideration of $1.00, and also reciting that the deed was made for the purpose of releasing the deeds of trust and vendors’ liens arising under the deeds already described. On April 15, 1912, Fisher conveyed all of said lands to W. A. Beard, one of the defendants herein, who subsequently mortgaged the.land to John G. Powell, who is also made defendant. All of the deeds hereinbefore referred to were promptly placed of record id. Mississippi county. It is not definitely shown whether said notes were assigned to the plaintiff before or after the execution of the release deed by Barron and Lilly to Fisher on April 12, 1912, and for the purposes of this decision we assume that they were assigned after the execution of that deed, but before the maturity of the notes and for an antecedent indebtedness.

The chancellor decreed in favor of the plaintiff for a foreclosure of the liens, and defendants Beard and Powell have prosecuted an appeal to this court.

Counsel for appellants have brought to, our attention in the brief various authorities from other courts bearing on the points at issue, but we are of the opinion that every point raised in the case has been heretofore decided by this court against the contention of appellants’ counsel. The principal contention is that as between the two innocent parties — that is, the appellants, as innocent purchasers of the property subsequent to the execution of the release deed from Barron and Lilly to Fisher, and the plaintiff bank as the holder of the lien notes — the former is entitled to the first consideration, and that the lien of the notes in the hands of the bank should not be held to be superior to the rights of appellants as subsequent purchasers of the land. This contention has been expressly decided against appellants in the recent case of Driver v. Lacer, 124 Ark. 150, 186 S. W. 824, and cases cited therein. The facts of the ease just cited are very similar in all essential respects to the facts of the case at bar. The notes in that case were, as in the present case, assigned after the execution of the deed by the original grantor, which would otherwise have operated as a release, and we held that the release was ineffectual against the rights of an innocent holder of the negotiable promissory note. We said that the subsequent deed of the original purchaser was not in the line of the title of the purchaser of the notes, and he was not, therefore, bound to take constructive notice of that deed on the record, and that the subsequent purchaser of the land, in order to protect himself, must have demanded a surrender of the notes. “In no other way,” we said, “could he protect himself against a bona fide holder of the notes before their maturity.”

It is true that there is this difference between the two cases: In Driver v. Lacer the deed recited an express reservation of the vendor’s lien, whilst in the present ease the deeds, or at least one of them, merely recites the execution of the notes but do not in express terms reserve a hen. That, however, is an unimportant distinction between the two cases. Our statute, Kirby’s Digest, section 510, provides that the lien possessed by the vendor of real estate, “when the same is expressed upon or appears from the face of the deed or conveyance shall inure to the benefit of the assignee of the note or obligation given for the purchase money of such real estate.” It is not essential, therefore, that the lien be expressly reserved, as it is only necessary that the lien shall “appear from the face of the deed.” Stephens v. Anthony, 37 Ark. 571. The lien is not a creature of contract, but is a creature of equity and arises by operation of law out of the contract for the payment of the purchase price, and the effect of the statute is merely to preserve that lien to the purchaser of the note when the same is “expressed upon or appears from the face of the deed or conveyance.” The notes and the lien are inseparable, and the lien passes by the assignment of the notes. Pullen v. Ward, 60 Ark. 90; Driver v. Lacer, supra.

It is insisted that this case is different from Driver v. Lacer in another respect, namely, that the negotiability of the notes does not appear from the face of the deed so as to constitute notice to subsequent purchasers of the land. The qnswer to this contention is that the statute itself, which we have already quoted, makes the lien inure to the benefit of an assignee of the note, and the subsequent purchaser of the land must take notice of the recital of the deed, 'for that is in the line of his title. The recital that the purchase money is unpaid is sufficient to put all parties upon notice, and they must protect themselves by evidence of the fact that the purchase money has been paid and that negotiable promissory notes are not outstanding in the hands of innocent purchasers. Any other construction would defeat the manifest purpose of the law-makers in enacting this statute.

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Bluebook (online)
190 S.W. 849, 126 Ark. 420, 1916 Ark. LEXIS 287, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beard-v-bank-of-osceola-ark-1916.