McMurdie v. Chugg

107 P.2d 163, 99 Utah 403, 132 A.L.R. 435, 1940 Utah LEXIS 71
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 18, 1940
DocketNo. 6278.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 107 P.2d 163 (McMurdie v. Chugg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McMurdie v. Chugg, 107 P.2d 163, 99 Utah 403, 132 A.L.R. 435, 1940 Utah LEXIS 71 (Utah 1940).

Opinion

WOLFE, Justice.

Appellant, plaintiff below, recovered judgment against defendants for $634.48, the face value and interest on certain notes representing the balance due on the purchase price for certain land and water stock, and also for $100 for attorney’s fees necessitated by the bringing of action. The lower court held, however, that plaintiff did not have a vendor’s lien on said property and was not entitled to sale on execution because the property constituted the homestead of defendants (respondents) and was protected from foreclosure by Article XXII, Sec. 1 of the Utah Constitution. From that part of the judgment denying the vendor’s lien and forbidding foreclosure of the property plaintiff appeals.

By written agreement in 1929 Annie S. Anderson agreed to sell to N. B. Chugg and Hazel S. Chugg for the sum of $3,500 the land and water rights in question. Thereafter, Annie S. Anderson executed and delivered to defendants a warranty deed conveying said property to them. Defendants paid part of the purchase price and gave Annie S. Anderson promissory notes for the balance. These notes are not in the record. The written agreement to sell made no reference to attorney’s fees.

On January 1, 1933, Annie S. Anderson and defendants agreed that the sum of $440 was still due on the purchase price, and defendants thereupon executed and delivered to Annie S. Anderson two unsecured promissory notes — one for $140 and the other for $300 — each providing for the payment of reasonable attorney’s fees in the event collection by an attorney became necessary.

*406 Annie S. Anderson died in November 1939 and in December 1939 plaintiff McMurdie was appointed administrator with the will annexed of her estate. In January 1940 plaintiff filed an amended and supplemental complaint seeking judgment for the face value plus interest on the notes and for attorney’s fees.

The lower court held for plaintiff as hereinabove recited.

Appellant contends that a vendor’s lien never ceased to exist in the seller and that the buyer, therefore, never acquired an unencumbered title to the land and cannot assert a homestead exemption to cut off the vendor’s lien and relies on Sec. 38-0-1, R.S.U.1933. Defendants, on the other hand, insist that under Sec. 1, Article XXII of the Utah Constitution they are given an absolute homestead exemption and that any statute providing that a lien may be asserted on land properly claimed as a homestead is unconstitutional and, moreover, that the seller accepted promissory notes for the unpaid balance of the purchase price, and thus waived her vendor’s lien if any existed.

The questions to be resolved are (1) whether Sec. 38-0-1, R.S.U.1933, is constitutional insofar as it allows execution on land for the purchase price over the claim of a homestead exemption and (2) whether a seller retains his vendor’s lien on land until he is fully paid even though he takes promissory notes in the amount of the unpaid purchase price.

Article XXII, Sec. 1 of our Utah Constitution provides:

“The Legislature shall provide by law, for the selection by each head of a family, an exemption of a homestead * * * from sale on execution.

The language is mandatory and leaves no choice to the Legislature.

Sec. 38-0-1, R.S.U.1933, provides:

“A homestead * * * shall he exempt from judgment lien and from execution or forced sale, except upon the following obligations: * * * debts created for the purchase price thereof.”'

*407 Respondent insists that the statute quoted is unconstitutional in that it conflicts with Sec. 1 of Article XXII and cites Volker-Scowcroft Lumber Co. v Vance, 32 Utah 74, 88 P. 896, 125 Am.St.Rep. 828. But that case is readily distinguishable. There plaintiff sought to assert a mechanic’s lien for certain work done on the homestead but this Court declared that the statute permitting him to assert his mechanic’s lien was unconstitutional because it conflicted with Article XXII, Sec. 1 of the Constitution. Plaintiff there sought to assert a lien against an existing homestead already vested in defendant. , That he could not do under the Constitution. But in the instant case appellant points out that respondents never acquired a homestead in the land in that full and clear title to said alleged homestead has never vested in them because they have never fully paid the purchase price and discharged the vendor’s lien. There is a great difference in protecting one’s homestead to which he has acquired clear title from sale on execution for later incurred obligations and in providing that a buyer is not entitled to a homestead exemption until he has fully paid the purchase price for said homestead. The Volker-Scowcroft case is not in point here.

In Harris v. Larsen, 24 Utah 139, 66 P. 782, we held that a seller of land who agreed to accept a certain number of hogs as part of the purchase price but did not receive the full number and obtained judgment for failure to deliver the hogs, to satisfy his judgment might levy execution on the land even though it be claimed by the buyer as a homestead because the debt grew out of the sale of the land. We see no reason now for changing our ruling that a purchaser may not claim a homestead exemption to defeat the vendor’s lien. To hold that he might do so would enable purchasers of land to deceive and defraud innocent sellers by relying on homestead rights as a defense to the payment of a just debt or obligation created for the purchase of said land. Harris v. Larsen, supra.

*408 In Evans v. Jensen, 51 Utah 1, 168 P. 762, L.R.A.1918B, 812, we held that a mechanic’s lien which attached to certain property when its owner was single and therefore not entitled to a homestead exemption could not be defeated later when the owner married and sought to claim the property as his homestead. Existing liens on property cannot be defeated by subsequently claiming said property as a homestead.

In Brown v. Cleverly, 96 Utah 120, 85 P.2d 769, we indirectly held Sec. 38-0-1, R. S. U. 1933, to be valid insofar as it provides that execution on “debts created for the purchase price” of land shall not be defeated by the homestead exemption therein provided, by holding appellant’s lien to be an ordinary judgment lien which was defeated by respondent’s homestead claim and not a judgment on a debt created for the purchase of land.

But we are confronted with a further question as to the amount of said vendor’s lien. At the time when the agreement to sell is entered into, a lien in the amount of the unpaid, purchase price attaches to the land. The lien for that amount, or part of that amount if payments are made by the buyer, continues and cannot be defeated by a later arising claim of a homestead exemption. Moreover, interest as agreed between the parties or, in the absence of agreement, legal interest on the unpaid purchase price is included in the amount of the lien which is prior to the claimed homestead exemption right.

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Bluebook (online)
107 P.2d 163, 99 Utah 403, 132 A.L.R. 435, 1940 Utah LEXIS 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcmurdie-v-chugg-utah-1940.