Fain v. Inman

53 Tenn. 5, 6 Heisk. 5, 1871 Tenn. LEXIS 309
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 13, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 53 Tenn. 5 (Fain v. Inman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fain v. Inman, 53 Tenn. 5, 6 Heisk. 5, 1871 Tenn. LEXIS 309 (Tenn. 1871).

Opinion

SNEED, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The controversy is between the vendor of land who has sold and conveyed without an express reservation of the lien, and who seeks by this bill to as[7]*7sert his lien for purchase money unpaid, and the purchaser at a trust sale, under the trust deed of the Vendee, made and foreclosed before the filing of the bill. The complainant bargained and sold the land by title' bond on the 7th of February, 1854, and on the 9th of January, 1856, conveyed the land by deed, reciting the payment of $1,200, the full price and considera-toin, when, as matter of fact, the sum of $177.05 was still due and unpaid as part of the purchase money. This indebtedness was evidenced by a note under seal, due at one day, and dated the 7th of February, 1854.

The complainant brings his bill to charge the land with the payment of this sum, and his vendee and the purchaser, under the vendee’s trust sale, are made parties defendant. It appears from the bill that the complainant’s deed of conveyance to the vendee was duly registered on the 23d of January, 1856, and that said vendee being indebted in the sum of $1,223.50 to the defendant, Inman, did on the 12th of December, 1861, convey the land . in trust to secure said debt; that the trustee sold the land on the 2d of November, 1868, and that the defendant, Inman, became the purchaser at the sum of $500, and after-wards advanced his bid to the sum of $1,757.61, the amount of his debt at the time of the sale. The bill was filed on the 16th of December next thereafter. It charges that the complainant’s vendee was then in possession of the land; that he had always recognized the complainant’s lien for the balance of the purchase money unpaid, and that at the time of the execution of said deed of trust the said defendant, [8]*8Inman, had full information and knowledge that all of ■ the purchase money had not been paid, but that since said trust sale and purchase the said defendant, In-man, claimed said land as unencumbered by complainant’s lien. There was a demurrer to the bill which was allowed by the Chancellor, and the bill was dismissed. The complainant brings the cause into this court by writ of error.

The question mainly pressed in argument here is, whether the vendor of land who has without reservation conveyed the legal title, has a specific lien for unpaid purchase money, by virtue of the naked relation of vendor and vendee, without more, or a mere equity or right to create a specific lien by taking the lawful and appropriate steps to enforce it. The solution of this question, not a new one in this court, must determine the equities of these parties. It is a well recognized doctrine of our law that the vendor of land who only conveys by title bond reserves a specific lien, the creation of a court of equity, upon the land for the unpaid purchase money; for in this case the legal title is in him, and only the equitable title in the vendee, who may perfect it into a legal one by the payment of the price. The vendor’s interest in the land is in such case but an unwritten mortgage, an equitable trust that attaches to the land, which, though originally the creation of a court of equity, has come now to be a statutory right. Vide Code of Tennessee, ss. 3563, 3564. It is a well established doctrine of a court of equity also, that the vendor who has conveyed the title may come into a [9]*9court of equity and have a decree for the sale of the land to discharge the price, or any part thereof which may yet be due to him. And this is so as against the vendee or his heirs, or volunteers, or purchasers under him, who took the land with full notice of the price unpaid.

The complainant in this case had parted with the legal title, and the public had been advised of its transfer to the vendee by the registration of the deed. The vendee had built a credit, upon it, and had contracted a debt perhaps upon the faith of it to an amount exceeding the original price of the land. The creditor, it is admitted by the demurrer, was informed of the fact that a balance of the purchase money had been many years due and was unpaid. To secure and indemnify himself, he accepts the security of a conveyance of the land in trust for his benefit, thereby acquiring for himself a specific lien, and actually becomes the purchaser of the land at the full amount of his debt, and holds and claims under his purchase before the original vendor has taken the first necessary step to assert his equity in the land. Without reference to the doctrines of the law which must determine this controversy, and looking alone to the status of these parties and the history of these transactions, it would not be an ungracious or difficult task in a court of equity to adjust the rights of these parties. And a case could not be easily conceived which so well illustrates the value and wisdom of the principles which govern this case.

It may be observed that the doctrine that the [10]*10vendor of land who has parted with the title may charge the land with unpaid purchase money, even as against creditors, is not of universal acceptance in this country. A secret trust, which is at once the mantle and the indication of fraud, is not, and should not be, a favorite in the law. If there be some special magic in a mere obligation to pay money for land where the vendor has divested himself of the title — which creates an equity in behalf of the vendor against the land itself — there can surely no sound reason be given why this equity should overreach all others, though founded in equal justice, and originating, perhaps, in the very faith and credit which property in the land has imparted to the vendee.

It would seem, on the other hand, to be the sounder principle that in a race of diligence that equity is to be preferred which first asserts itself.

We can not too highly commend some observations upon this subject by Chief Justice Marshall. To the world, says the Chief Justice, the vendee appears to hold the estate divested of every trust whatever; the credit is given to him in the confidence that the property is his own in equity as well as at law. A vendor relying upon this lien ought to reduce it to a mortgage so as to give notice of it to the world. If he does not, he is, in some degree, accessory to the fraud committed on the public by an act which exhibits the vendee as the complete owner of an estate on which he claims a secret lien. It would seem inconsistent with the principles of equity, and with the general spirit of our laws, that such a lien should [11]*11be set up in a court of chancery to the exclusion of bona fide creditors. The lien of a vendor, if in the nature of a trust, is a secret trust; and although to be preferred to any other subsequent equal equity unconnected- with a legal advantage, or equitable advantage, which gives a superior claim to the legal estate, will be postponed to a subsequent equal equity with such advantage: Bayley v. Greenleaf, 7 Wheat., 46. Of this case Judge Catron said, in Gann v. Chester, 5 Yerg., 205: “This decision meets the most decided and unanimous approbation of this court.”

This character of lien is rejected entirely by the courts of North Carolina, and even during the early period while it was recognized there, it was held subordinate to the rights of judgment creditors and purchasers at their sale: 1 Dev. & Batt., 32.

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Related

Brown v. Bigley
3 Tenn. Ch. R. 618 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1878)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
53 Tenn. 5, 6 Heisk. 5, 1871 Tenn. LEXIS 309, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fain-v-inman-tenn-1871.