Lavender v. Abbott

30 Ark. 172
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 30 Ark. 172 (Lavender v. Abbott) 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
Lavender v. Abbott, 30 Ark. 172 (Ark. 1875).

Opinion

Walker, J.:

This suit was brought by Abbott as administrator of the estate of John Wells, to enforce an equitable lien upon certain lands, and to subject them to the payment of a note given for part of the purchase money.

There was also a cross bill filed by Charles P. Cochran and others, in which they set up a judgment against the estate of Alfred B. C. DuBose, which they claim to be a lien upon the lands claimed to be subject to the equitable lien of complainant in the original bill, and that their debt was contracted upon- the faith that DuBose was the owner of the land, and that it was unincumbered.

The facts, as appear from the pleadings, are that in the year 1857, Samuel Wells, the owner of 480 acres of land, situate in Arkansas county, sold the same to Alfred B. C. DuBose for the sum of $14,700, one-third of which was in hand paid, and for the payment of the residue of the purchase money, DuBose, with Dunn as security, executed to Wells ten notes for $4,900 each, due in 1858 and 1859, in consideration of which Wells executed to DuBose a deed for the land, and DuBose thereupon entered upon and took possession of the land. Soon after this, Wells died having made a will, leaving a widow and children, and divided these notes, or the money when collected, with other property- to his children. Under an agreement between the executor of Wells’ estate and DuBose, the money due upon the notes was to be paid by DuBose upon the order of the executor. Upon a settlement of the distributive shares due the heirs, there was found to be due John Wells, a minor son of the testator, the sum of $2,324.50, and an order was drawn by the executor in favor of the guardian of this minor son for that amount. On the 13th October, 1860, the guardian presented the order to DuBose, who took it up, and executed his note for that amount, it being a part of the purchase money due for the land.

John Wells died, and Abbott was appointed administrator of his estate, and has brought this suit upon this state of facts set forth with apt averments, in which he claims a vendor’s lien upon the land sold by Wells to DuBose, in part consideration of which the note in suit was given, in liquidation of that much of the original notes executed. DuBose having also died, his administrator and heirs are made parties defendants to the suit.

Defendant Lavender answered and set up in defense, that Wells took personal security for the payment of the notes, and that there is no equitable lien existing on the land. The other defendants answered by attorney.

The plaintiff answered the cross bill; admitted that a judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff in the cross bill against DuBose, but says that more than three years elapsed between the time of the rendition of the judgment and the death of DuBose; that the judgment lien had expired, and had never been revived. He positively denies the allegation that the debt upon which the judgment was rendered was contracted upon the faith of the lands being owned by DuBose. That the debt was contracted seven years before DuBose purchased the land of Wells.

The case was submitted to the court upon the bill and cross bill, and the answers, agreed state of facts and depositions.

The court rendered a decree in favor of the complainant in the original bill for $5,332.81 the amount of the debt and interest, declared a vendor’s lien upon the lands, and ordered that they be sold to satisfy the same. Defendant Lavender appealed.

All of the necessary steps to bring the parties before the court appear to have been taken, and to bring the case to a hearing, as well upon the original, as upon the cross bill.

The plaintiffs in the cross bill have not appealed, and it may well be supposed that upon the coming in of the answer of complaint in the original bill and the proof taken to sustain it, they abandoned their suit, because it is evident that under the state of facts, they had no right to intex’pose their bill for relief.

There is no one claiming as purchaser of the land, nor is there any one except the complainant in the cross bill, who claims to hold a debt contracted by DuBose upon the credit that he acquired as owner of the land, which we have seen was wholly unsustained by the evidence, so that the issue here presented is-between the heir of the vendor, against the administrator and heirs of the vendee. And in order to simplify this issue, we may say, at the outset, that the heir must be considered as the-representative of the father, with all the rights which under the state of the case would attach to him if living.

This question came before the Supreme Coui't of Ohio in the case of Tierman v. Beam, 2 Ohio, 386, in which it was held that if the vendor retained the equitable lien at the time of his death, it descended to his heirs, or passed to his devisee in the condition it was at the time of his death.

Bispham, in his principles of equity, 356, says “the equity exists in favor of the legatee whose legacy has been taken in payment of the purchase of an estate in the hands of the heir."

Story, 1217, says “the vendor has a lien on the purchase money not only against the vendee and his heirs, and other privies in estate, but also against all subsequent purchasers having notice that the purchase money remains unpaid.”

That the vendor has an equitable lien upon the land conveyed by him, for the payment of the purchase money, may be conceded as a settled question in this State, and the courts of all the other States except Maine, Pennsylvania, Kansas, North and South Carolina. The counsel for the appellant is not understood as questioning this right, but insists that in this case the lien was discharged by the vendor, when he took personal security for the payment of the purchase money. The mere fact that the vendee executed a note for the payment of the purchase money with security, is not of itself sufficient to displace the vendor’s lien, but is a circumstance with others, to determine what the intention of the parties was at the time the note was executed. The parties to the contract have an undoubted right to contract for additional security without giving up or abandoning that which the law confers. The question as to whether the parties intended to rely upon an independent security is one of fact to be determined like all others from acts and declarations. Bispham, 355, says the lien of the vendor for unpaid purchase money is considered waived if a distinct and independent security for the purchase money is taken, as an illustration of which he instances the taking of a mortgage or other property to secure the payment of the purchase money, or other independent security, a pledge or the like. But, that the taking of such independent security, although an evidence of a waiver, is not conclusive evidence, and, that a mere personal security will not of itself operate as a waiver of the lien. When, however, a bill or note is taken as a payment of the consideration money, in other words, when the security was in the thing bargained for, the lien is gone. Story, at page 1224, says: “Generally speaking the lien of the vendor exists, and the burden of tlie proof is on the purchaser to establish that in the particular case it has been intentionally displaced, or waived by the consent of the parties.

“And if, under all the circumstances, it remains in doubt, then the lien attaches * * *.

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Bluebook (online)
30 Ark. 172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lavender-v-abbott-ark-1875.