Follett v. Reese

20 Ohio St. 546
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1851
StatusPublished

This text of 20 Ohio St. 546 (Follett v. Reese) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Follett v. Reese, 20 Ohio St. 546 (Ohio 1851).

Opinion

Ranney, J.

This cause was reserved for the purpose of settling the single question, whether the complainant is entitled to enforce a lien which he claims to the avails of the trust property in his hands, as against the defendants, George B. and Jacob Eeese, for the payment of the balance of the purchase money still due him. The facts of the case, so far as they bear upon this question, are theseIn the year 1833, Wildman & Mills, claiming to be the true owners in fee of a tract of 559 32-100 acres of land adjoining San-dusky City, sold it to Follett, Camp & Neill, for $13,983, payable in five equal annual installments, and bound themselves, in writing, to make a deed when payment was made. Soon after, the purchasers took Isaac A. Mills in for one-fourth in the purchase, and the four then stood equal owners of the interest so acquired. On August 12, 1835, Follett sold his equitable interest, with certain reservations, to' William J. Eeese, for the consideration of $35,000, which, with the exception of $393.34, was secured to be paid by five promissory notes drawn by Eeese, with Neill as his surety. A written contract, specifying the terms of this sale, was at the time executed; and at the same time Follett assigned to Eeese the written contract he held from Wildman & Mills, and, with his wife, also executed to him a quitclaim deed of all his right, title, and interest in the property. Prior to June 20,1839, a joint sale of a part [467]*467of the property was made to the Mad River and Lake Erie Railroad Company, and sales to other purchasers, and an amicable partition of the residue had been made amongst the several proprietors. Over $12,000 of the purchase money still remaining due to "Wildman & Mills, an arrangement was made with the Urbana Banking Company, by which the money was procured and the debt paid off, under an agreement that Wildman & Mills should convey the legal title to Eollett, in *trust—first, to convey to the railroad company the land sold to it; second, to convey to the other purchasers the lots sold to them, respectively, on payment of the balance of any purchase money remaining due; third, to raise money, by sale, mortgage, or otherwise, to pay the debt to the Urbana Banking Company; and fourth, after paying all expenses, to convey to Camp, Neill & Reese, in equal or such other proportions as they should agree upon, all the remaining interests and property thereby conveyed to said Follett. Follett accepted the trust, and received the deed from Wildman & Mills at the date last mentioned. On August 22, 1850, William J. Reese sold and conveyed, by absolute deed, for the consideration of $15,000 paid down, and which is proved to be more than their value, the specific lots set off to him in the amicable partition, to the defendants, George B. and Jacob Reese. Three of the notes, of $7,000 each, given by William J. Reese to Follett, remaining unpaid, judgments were afterward recovered against him and his surety Neill; and it is conceded that William J. Reese is entirely insolvent. Under this state of facts, it is claimed by Follett that he is entitled to retain the legal title to the property in his hands, not only for the satisfaction of the specific trusts named in the deed, but also for the satisfaction of the debt due to him upon which Neill is surety, and that the legal title can not be taken from him until this debt is paid and Neill discharged. On the other hand, it is claimed that he can assert no liens upon this property, except such as are specified in th© trust deed.

If the purchase of George B. and Jacob Reese was bona fide, and for an adequate compensation (and this is not denied), it is clear that no charge can now be made upon the property they pui-chased, that did not at the time exist as a lien upon it. The debt due Follett is for the purchase money of the equitable interest that he then held; and the first inquiry is does a vendor’s lien arise in [468]*468his favor? Conceding that such lien may arise upon the sale of an equitable interest in lands, it is now perfectly well settled, whatever doubts might once have been ^entertained, that the taking of personal security for the purchase money will operate as an extinguishment of any such lien. Mayheim v. Coombs et al., 14 Ohio, 428. Follett did take such security; and it necessarily follows that from August, 1835, until June, 1839, no lien for this purchase money existed upon the property, and the interest of William J. Reese in it could have been sold and transferred, free of any such charge. This position is not controverted by the complainant’s counsel; but it is insisted that when Follett was invested with the legal title, in 1839, a right to retain it until his debt was paid immediately accrued, and was subsisting at the time William J. Reese sold to George B. and Jacob Reese, and that they can stand in no better situation than their grantor. This claim is placed upon the general ground “ that one man ought not to have another’s land without paying for it,” and that “no court of equity could ever compel Follett to give up his legal title to William J. Reese until he had paid the purchase money in full.” It is very true that no man ought to have another’s property, of any kind, without paying for it, and that no person can be compelled to surrender his title to property without his consent, until it is paid for. But in this country, interests in real estate are subjects of commerce, as well as personal property; and where tho owner chooses to part with the title to his property before he receives his pay, it can scarcely be expected that tho law should, under ordinary circumstances, hamper its transmission, by following it up with liens which the owner had failed to stipulate for. It need not be feared that, in most cases, the interest of the owner will not be consulted, in determining whether the property shall go before the pay is received. In this instance, when Follett agreed to part with all his interest to one-fourth part of his real estate for the notes of Reese, secured for $35,000, the whole of which, two years before, had been bought for $13,983, and but a small part of it paid, we have no doubt that he, at least, acted very judiciously; and we see no hardship in holding that the debt was one at large, and constituted no lien upon the estate. He very correctly ^considered the notes better than his interest in the property, and consented to part with his interest and retain [469]*469no lien. He was competent to consent; and having done so, can not call upon a court to relieve him from it.

But the legal title to the property afterward came to his hands ; —but how? The answer is, as a trustee merely. Before this deed was made, it must be admitted that he had no interest in the land, or lien upon it. If the deed had been made to any other person, he would still have continued without any such lien or interest. All the right or interest, therefore, that he now has in or to the property, is derived under and by virtue of the trust deed. The title did not come into his hands as a matter of right on his' part, nor was it forced upon him. It was conveyed to him in pursuance of a clear and definite contract to which he was a party. By that contract he agreed to convey to William J. Reese the balance of the property that might remain, after certain specified trusts were satisfied. He now seeks to add to those specified trusts the payment of a debt to himself, not mentioned in the trust deed by which he obtained the title to the property, and which was never a lien upon it.

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Bluebook (online)
20 Ohio St. 546, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/follett-v-reese-ohio-1851.