Beebe Stave Co. v. Austin

122 S.W. 482, 92 Ark. 248, 1909 Ark. LEXIS 296
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 8, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 122 S.W. 482 (Beebe Stave Co. v. Austin) 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
Beebe Stave Co. v. Austin, 122 S.W. 482, 92 Ark. 248, 1909 Ark. LEXIS 296 (Ark. 1909).

Opinion

Frauenthal, J.

The appellees, Mrs. John Austin and the First National Bank of Perry, the plaintiffs below, instituted this suit against the defendants below, J. D. Richards and the Beebe Stave Company, to enforce a vendor’s lien upon certain land, and to charge the Beebe Stave Company with the value of the timber cut therefrom. It is alleged in the complaint that Mrs. Austin sold the lands to Richards, and conveyed same to him by a deed which recited that the consideration had been paid in full, but that the recital was untrue, and that Richards had not in fact paid such purchase money or any part thereof, but had given notes therefor which were unpaid; and for a recovery of the notes the suit was brought; that Richards sold the timber on said land to the Beebe Stave Company, who purchased with full knowledge that said purchase money of the land had not been paid. The prayer was for judgment against Richards for the amount of the notes, and that same be declared a vendor’s lien upon the land, and for sale thereof in event of non-payment of the judgment; and also for judgment against the Beebe Stave Company for the value of said timber.

The Beebe Stave Company made answer that it purchased the timber from Richards in good faith and for a valuable consideration and without any notice that any of the purchase money for the land was unpaid.

It appears from the evidence that the plaintiff, Mrs. Austin, who was a nonresident of the State, had employed one G. W. Rhea to sell the land for her, and agreed to sell same for $500, and to pay him $20 for his services. He thereupon sold the land to defendant J. T. Richards and sent to her a deed for execution which recited that the consideration was $480, and also recited that the purchase money was paid in full. She duly .executed the deed on January 28, 1907, and returned the same to her agent, Rhea, who delivered it to Richards. The Beebe Stave Compan}r was engaged in buying timber with its office at Tittle Rock, Ark.; and at this time was engaged in logging near the land in controversy. One of the men who was logging for the company had gone over the land in controversy and had estimated the amount of timber on the land. This party had desired to borrow from the Beebe Stave Company money with which to purchase this timber, but the officers of the company told him that the company would purchase the timber if it was for sale. N

On February 27, 1907, Richards went to the office of the Beebe Stave Company at Tittle Rock and offered to sell the timber on the land for the sum of $200. He had with 'him his deed from Mrs.' Austin, which was examined by the secretary of the Beebe Stave Company; and, relying upon his statement that he owned the land and the recital of the deed that the purchase money was paid, it bought the timber from Richards, who executed to it a timber deed therefor. In payment for the timber, the Beebe Stave Company executed to Richards two negotiable notes, each for $100, and due, respectively, 90 and 120 days after date, and Richards accepted these notes in payment fqr the timber. At this time the deed from Mrs. Austin to Richards had not been recorded. On the following day, February 28, 1907, Richards for value sold and transferred the two notes to the German National Bank of Tittle Rock, Ark., who then became the true owner thereof.

It appears from the testimony that R’hea, the agent of Mrs. Austin, actually sold the land to Richards for $625, taking from him two notes, each of which was dated January 28, 1907, and due twelve months thereafter, and recited that it was given as payment for said land. 'One of these notes was for $500, and made payable to Mrs. John Austin, and the other was for $125, and was made payable to G. W. Rhea. This latter note Rhea sold and transferred to the First National Bank of Perry, one of the plaintiffs. It is upon these two notes, aggregating $625, that this suit is instituted.

It appears that the Beebe Stave Company began cutting the timber on the land soon after their purchase, and in May, 1907, they had cut a great part thereof when they were notified that Richards had not paid the purchase money. The amount of timber cut by them from the land was estimated to be of the value of $400.

The chancery court rendered a judgment against Richards by default for $625, the amount of the notes, and decreed a sale of the land for its payment. The land was sold by a master under this decree pending the further litigation against the Beebe Stave Company, and brought $259.40, exclusive of the cost of the suit to that date. Thereupon the court found that the plaintiffs had a lien on the timber sold to the' Beebe Stave Company for the purchase money of the land, and rendered a judgment against that company in favor of plaintiff for the sum of $220.60, the difference between the amount named in the deed as the purchase price of the land, towit: $480, and the above net amount, after payment of cost, for which the land was sold by the master. From the decree thus rendered against it the Beebe Stave Company prosecutes this appeal.

The only question involved upon this appeal is the right of the plaintiffs to recover from the Beebe Stave Company the proceeds of the timber which they cut and removed from the land or any part of said proceeds. The plaintiffs contend that they had a vendor’s lien for the purchase money upon the land involved in the suit, and therefore upon the standing trees thereon as a part of the land. That the Beebe Stave Company purchased the timber with notice that the purchase money had not been paid, and therefore with notice of their lien therefor, and thereafter removed the trees from the land and wrongfully converted them to its own use. It is a principle of equity that when one has a lien upon property which is taken, and said property is wrongfully converted by another, with notice of such lien, the owner may have his lien fixed upon the proceeds of the property, where the lien on the property has thus been destroyed by the wrongdoer. 3 Pomeroy, Eq. Jur. (3d Ed.) § 1233; Reavis v. Barnes, 36 Ark. 575; Judge v. Curtis, 72 Ark. 132. And it is upon this equitable doctrine that the plainiffs base their right to equitable relief in this case against the Beebe Stave Company. But from the evidence in this case we are of the opinion that it clearly appears that the Beebe Stave Company at the time it purchased and paid for this timber was a bona ■fide purchaser thereof for a fair and adequate consideration and without any notice, either actual or constructive, that the purchase money was not paid or that plaintiffs had any lien on the timber therefor. The Beebe Stave Company was engaged in purchasing timber at this time, and was then logging near the land in controversy. It had been buying timber on lands in that- locality from parties indiscriminately, and it was not unreasonable for it to have told one of its logging men, who desired to purchase the timber on the land, that the company would rather purchase it. From this party the company learned the amount and character of the timber upon the land,-so that, when Richards offered to sell the timber, it was sufficiently .advised as to the value of the timber to make a price therefor.

Richards came to the office of the company in the ordinary way of doing -business and made the offer to sell the timber in the usual course of business. He presented his deed for inspection and claimed to own the land.

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Bluebook (online)
122 S.W. 482, 92 Ark. 248, 1909 Ark. LEXIS 296, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beebe-stave-co-v-austin-ark-1909.