Broadwell & Dyer v. Yantis

10 Mo. 398
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJanuary 15, 1847
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 10 Mo. 398 (Broadwell & Dyer v. Yantis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Broadwell & Dyer v. Yantis, 10 Mo. 398 (Mo. 1847).

Opinion

Napton, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This was a bill in chancery brought by Broadwell & Dyer in the Circuit Court of Callaway County against John L. Yantis. The facts alleged in the bill as the ground of the complaint are as follows : —

Tate & Nolly (a mercantile firm in Fulton,) being in possession of two lots in that town, numbered 177 and 178, which they had purchased of one Leiper, for $1050, and upon which purchase there was a balance due said Leiper of about $600, exchanged them with John L. Yantis for four lots then in his occupancy numbered 179, 180, 181 and 182, giving said Yantis, as the estimated difference in the value of the two blocks, $150. These last named lots had been bought by Yantis of one Hockaday for $1100, and at the time of the exchange a considerable portion of the purchase money was still due from Yantis to Hockaday. Both Yantis-and Hockaday were aware of.the incumbrances upon the lots at the time of the exchange. This exchange was made on the 22nd August, 1840, and Nolly being put in possession of the four lots, (originally belonging to Hockaday,) received from Yantis his title bond acknowledg[400]*400ing the receipt of $1200', and agreeing to convey at the expiration of twelve months from the date of the bond.

On the 15th September, 1842, this title bond of Yantis for the four lots agreed to be conveyed to Nolly, was assigned by Tate & Nolly to the complainants Dyer & Broadwell, to secure them as endorsers of a note in bank given by the firm of Tate, Nolly & Cook; thereupon the said Dyer & Broadwell, as the bill asserts, took possession of these lots and immediately leased them to Nolly for ayear. This was in October,1842.

Yantis in the meantime having received immediate possession of the two lots which he received from Nolly, being the same which had originally belonged to Leiper, and upon which Leiper still had a lien for a part of the purchase money, sold them to Asa Farrar for $1000. After this transfer to Farrar, Nolly’s notes to Leiper which had been assigned to one Henderson, was put in suit by Henderson; judgment being obtained against Nolly, the execution was levied upon the two lots sold to Farrar, and then in Farrar’s possession, and the lots were sold in January,' 1843, Yantis becoming the purchaser for about $500. Yantis obtained a deed from the Sheriff.

Previously to this, in December, 1842, Yantis having paid up the balance of the purchase money due to Hockaday, obtained a deed for the four lots which in the exchange between him and Nolly were to have been conveyed to Nolly. In October, 1843, he commenced an action of ejectment againt Nolly, who was in possession as tenant under the complainants Dyer & Broadwell, and in 1845, obtained a judgment.

Upon this state of facts the bill prays, first, that the complainants may be substituted to Nolly’s rights’against Yantis ; second, for a recission of the contract between Yantis and Nolly, and a conveyance of' the two lots bought in at the sale under Henderson’s execution, and a return of the $150, with interest received of Nolly ; or, third, if Yantis retains the $150, that complainants upon paying to Yantis the remainder of the $500 paid by him on Henderson’s execution, shall have a conveyance of the two lots; or, fourth, if the Court shall consider Yantis’s transfer to Farrar as precluding a re-conveyance of these two lots, then that Yantis pay complainants the $1000 received of Farrar as the purchase money for said lots, and the $150 obtained from Nolly on the exchange ; or, fifth, that the Court decree a sale of Yantis’s lots which he bought of Hockaday to reimburse the complainants as securities as aforesaid for Tate & Nolly ; and lastly, for general relief.

The answer of Yantis admits all the principal facts, as stated in the bill, and states as an additional fact, that the complainants knew of the sale under Henderson’s judgment, but refused to purchase at said [401]*401sale. This statement is corroborated by the proofs taken in the cause.

A general replication was filed, and on the final hearing the bill was dismissed with costs; a motion for a re-hearing was made and overruled, and the complainants filed a bill of exceptions. The case is brought to this Court by appeal.

Amidst the various modes of relief suggested by the prayer of the complainants, there are several which seem to be based upon the position that they do not oceupy the same ground which Nolly, their assignor would do, and that the lien of Leiper for the purchase money due by Nolly does not affect their rights as assignees of Yantis’s title bond without any knowledge of such unextinguished lien. This position has been assumed in the bill and contended for at the bar, and may as well be noticed here as preliminary to any further examination of the subject; for it is manifest that if this ground be maintainable, the complainants are entitled to a conveyance of the block of ground for which they hold the title bond of Yantis, without being affected by any of those equitable .considerations which would operate upon Nolly.

That our statute regulating the assignment of bonds and notes for the payment of money-or property has no application to such bonds as the one transferred to the complainants may be readily conceded. This act was designed to restore the common law in regulating bonds and notes of a certain description, and to prevent their confusion with commercial paper which had become entangled by technical rules not understood by the great mass of the community. By the common law the assignee of a chose in action stood in the same condition as the person from whom he purchased: he acquired no additional rights or privileges by the assignment. To subserve the interest of commerce, the law merchant modified this rule ; the question of notice arose, and a variety of others, upon which the rights of the holders of negotiable paper' depended, and the endorsee became subject to different rules from those which regulated the assignee at common law. A bond or covenant to convey land, we presume, is unaffected by the statute, and the assignees of such a bond can occupy no other or better ground than the person from whom they purchased. They are merely the equitable owners of the bond, and it they institute a suit at law for a breach of the covenant they must sue in the name of the assignor, and when they come into a Court of Chan* eery they can only ask to be substituted to the rights of the assignor.

The question of notice does not arise in this case. A lien exists in favor of the vendor of land for the purchase money whether a title be [402]*402made or not; but when the title has been made, the lien may not reach a bona fide purchaser without notice. A title bond, however, is of itself sufficient to put a purchaser upon enquiry, and he is presumed to be cognizant of the reasons which induce the vendor to withhold the title. It is not material, therefore, whether the complainants, when they purchased the title bond of Yantis, knew of the incumbrance of Leiper upon the lots which constituted the consideration of that bond; they must take the obligation of Yantis subject to all the equities existing against Nolly, from whom they purchased.

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Bluebook (online)
10 Mo. 398, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/broadwell-dyer-v-yantis-mo-1847.