Cohen v. Woollard

2 Tenn. Ch. R. 686
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 15, 1876
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Tenn. Ch. R. 686 (Cohen v. Woollard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cohen v. Woollard, 2 Tenn. Ch. R. 686 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1876).

Opinion

The Chancellor :

— On the 4th of November, 1870, the complainants Cohen and wife sold to the defendants “part of lot No. 24 in the college plan of lots, fronting thirty feet on Cherry street, and running back towards College street 180 feet, and being the same lot conveyed to me by Levi Moses, by deed of record in the proper office, in book No. 28, page 14.” Besides the covenant of general warranty of title, the deed contains covenants of seizin and possession, of the right to convey, and against encumbrances. The deed also recites a consideration of $2,500, of which $500 were paid in cash, and the residue secured by three notes [687]*687of the date of the conveyance, at ten, twenty, and thirty months from date, for $666.66 2-3 each, and expressly retains a lien on the land for their payment. The defendants went into possession of the land at once, and have remained in possession since.

On the 18th of September, 1872, the original bill was filed to enforce the lien thus retained for the satisfaction of the last two notes, the first of them having been paid. On the 18th of April, 1873, the defendants answered, and on the same day filed a cross-bill asking a rescission of the sale on the ground of fraudulent representations of the complainants that their title to the land was good, when in fact they had no title. The statement is that the title is in the heirs of one Hardin P. Bostick, and that seventeen inches of one side of the lot has been in the adverse possession, since the year 1867, of one Beadle.

The evidence taken in the cause shows that the defendants were mistaken in supposing that any part of the lot sold was in possession of Beadle, and that branch of the defence is abandoned in argument. The evidence is equally satisfactory that no fraudulent representations were ever made as to the "title; that the title papers were submitted to the defendants, probably before the ’sale, and were certainly delivered to them immediately on the completion of the trade. 'The learned counsel of the defendants is driven to rest his client’s case on an alleged want of title, growing out of the fact that no deed is proved to have been executed by one of "the parties through whom the title is traced, and that possession alone has not perfected the title, although continuous for over twenty years certainly, and probably over thirty years, because the land is not sufficiently described in the assurances of title under which it has been held, and has not been actually enclosed.

The authorities are uniform that a defect of title to land sold is no defence to a bill to enforce the vendor’s lien, orto foreclose a mortgage on the land given by the vendee to secure the purchase money. Hurley v. Coleman, 3 Head, [688]*688265; Curd v. Davis, 5 Heisk. 574; Miller v. Avery, 2 Barb. Ch. 582; Edwards v. Bodine, 26 Wend. 109; Hulfish v. O’Brien, 5 C. E. Green, 230. The reason is that the vendor is only seeking to reach what he has sold, and it is-a matter of no consequence to the defendant whether, to-that extent, the title is good or not. The court may, however, where there is a defect of title, decline to give a personal decree against the vendee for any part of the purchase money remaining after exhaustion of the realty. Withers v. Morrell, 3 Edw. Ch. 562; Hurley v. Coleman, 3 Head, 266. To that extent, the prevention of a personal judgment, the defence of want of title is admissible in proper-cases, and, if necessary to render it available, a cross-bill may be filed as intimated in the last-named case. But a. rescission of the whole contract for a defect of title is not a. defence to the enforcement of the lien, and is a matter for an original and not a cross-bill.

Where the purchaser of land under a deed with covenants-of title is in possession of the land bought, undisturbed by suit, the authorities are equally uniform that a defect of title is no ground for enjoining the collection of the purchase money at law, and no defence to a suit in this court, for the enforcement of the vendor’s lien, or the foreclosure-of a mortgage on the land given by the vendee to secure the purchase money. Senter v. Hill, 5 Sneed, 505; Napier v. Elam, 6 Yerg. 117; Abbott v. Allen, 2 Johns. Ch. 519; Miller v. Avery, 2 Barb. Ch. 594; Banks v. Walker, 2 Sandf. Ch. 349; Glenn v. Whipple, 1 Beas. Ch. 50. “It. would lead,” says Chancellor Kent, in Abbott v. Allen, “ to-the greatest inconvenience, and perhaps abuse, if a purchaser in the actual enjoyment of land, and when no third person asserts, or takes any measure to assert, a hostile claim, can be permitted, on suggestion of a defect or failure of title, and on the principle of quia timet, to stop the payment of the purchase money. Can this court proceed to try the validity of the outstanding claim in the absence of the party in whom it is supposed to reside, or must he be; [689]*689brought into court against his will, to assert or renounce a title which he never asserted, and perhaps never thought of ? I apprehend there is no such practice or doctrine in this court.” “It has frequently been decided,” says Chancellor Walworth, in Miller v. Avery, “ that the mere fact of a failure of title in the vendor affords no sufficient ground for coming into this court for relief, where the purchaser has not been disturbed in his possession, and no suit has been brought against him by the rightful owner.” Citing Bumpass v. Platner, 1 Johns. Ch. 218; Woodruff v. Bunce, 9 Paige, 443; Withers v. Morrell, 3 Edw. Ch. 560; Edwards v. Bodine, 26 Wend. 109. To allow such a bill, unless in a very exceptional case, upon an outstanding title, neither set up by suit nor otherwise claimed, would be to introduce a new principle, and to offer a premium to barratry and champerty. Ryland v. Brown, 2 Head, 275. Nor is the rule any hardship upon the purchaser, where, as in this case, there is a covenant of seizin; for the validity of the title may be tested at law by a suit upon the covenant.

It is very clear, therefore, that the defect of title complained of, if it actually exist, is no defence to the collection of the purchase money, either at law or in this court. The complainants are entitled to the relief prayed in their bill, and the cross-bill, as a defence, must be dismissed with costs.

But the so-called cross-bill is, in reality, an original bill, so far as it seeks a rescission of the contract, or relief by reason of a breach of any of the covenants to the bond on which suit may be brought before eviction, such as the covenant of seizin. The defendants might have demurred to it because it was an original bill under the cloak of a cross-bill; or, if they chose to treat it as an original bill, might have answered the charge of fraud, and demurred to the residue on the ground that the remedy was at law. The defendants were, however, aware of the fact, and say, in their answer, that they prefer to meet the question in this court, and have the rights of all parties adjudicated here. In this view, the question of fraud being removed by the proof, the rights of [690]*690the complainants in the cross-hill turn upon the point whether there has been a breach of the covenant of seizin; and this depends upon the validity of the complainants’ title at the date of their deed.

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Related

Edwards v. Bodine
26 Wend. 109 (New York Supreme Court, 1841)
Woodruff v. Bunce
9 Paige Ch. 443 (New York Court of Chancery, 1842)
Withers v. Morrell
3 Edw. Ch. 560 (New York Court of Chancery, 1842)
Miller v. Avery
2 Barb. Ch. 582 (New York Court of Chancery, 1848)
Bumpus v. Platner
1 Johns. Ch. 213 (New York Court of Chancery, 1814)
Abbott v. Allen
2 Johns. Ch. 519 (New York Court of Chancery, 1817)
Mullins v. Aiken
49 Tenn. 535 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1871)
Turbeville v. Gibson
52 Tenn. 565 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1871)

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Bluebook (online)
2 Tenn. Ch. R. 686, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cohen-v-woollard-tennctapp-1876.