Miller v. Albright

60 Ohio St. (N.S.) 48
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 14, 1899
StatusPublished

This text of 60 Ohio St. (N.S.) 48 (Miller v. Albright) 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
Miller v. Albright, 60 Ohio St. (N.S.) 48 (Ohio 1899).

Opinion

Williams, J.

The question in the case is whether, upon the following state of facts, the vendor’s lien asserted by the defendant in error is entitled' to priority over the liens of certain judgments recovered against the vendee by the plaintiffs in error.

On the second day of July, 1883, the defendant in error, Solomon Albright, then the owner of a tract of 1 and m Paulding county, sold and conveyed it to William Albright for the price of six hundred dollars, for which the purchaser gave his three notes, payable in four, five and six years, respectively, from that date. The deed was placed on record and the purchaser went into possession. The notes having become due and being unpaid, Solomon Albright, on the sixth day of November, 1895, brought the action below to recover judgment on the notes and enforce his lien on the land. From 1890 to 1893, William Albright became indebted to L. Miller and J. B. Baxter jointly, and to F. W. Hyman, and Emmett Barnes severally, in various small amounts, upon which judgments were recovered in 1894, and 1895, and executions issued on them were levied on the land. The judgments of Miller and Baxter were recovered in the court of common pleas, and those of the other two creditors before justices of the peace, and transcripts-were filed with the clerk on which the executions were issued. These judgment creditors were made parties to the action brought by Solomon Albright, in which they set up their respective liens and asked that they be given preference over the lien of the plaintiff. The indebtedness upon which the judgments were rendered accrued while the debtor appeared of record to be the owner of [50]*50the land, and the creditors were without knowledge that the purchase price of the land was unpaid; and, in an action brought by them a judgment was obtained setting aside as fraudulent a conveyance made of the land by' their-debtor; but Solomon Albright was not a party to that suit, nor does it appear that he had any knowledge of it, nor that any further proceedings were had after the deed ■was set aside.

The existence and validity of the plaintiff’s lien are undisputed; but its priority is contested on the grounds, (1) that by the levy of their executions the judgment creditors obtained an advantage at law; and (2) that they have the better equity because credit was given the vendee by them on the faith of his apparent ownership of the land, and, by reason of the delay of the vendor in the enforcement of his lien.

The supposed classification of the liens of vendors suggested in argument, into those existing before, and those arising when the conveyance is made, and denominating the latter a grantor’s lien as distinguished from the former, is critical, but unimportant, and can serve no useful purpose in solving the question before us. Until conveyance made the vendor retains his whole estate in the land, which cannot properly be called a lien. True; he may tender. a conveyance and look to the land as a security for the purchase money, and enforce payment by subjecting the land, or any property of the vendee, to sale for that purpose. But, as said by a learned author, it is a complete misuse of legal terms to call the interest of the vendor a lien when it is the full legal estate. The lien proper of the vendor arises only upon conveyance, and in that sense the term is generally employed [51]*51and. well understood. It was observed by Read, J., in Brush v. Kinsley, 14 Ohio, 21, 23, that: “Before the legal title passes from the vendor on a contract for the sale of land, there is no such thing as a lien. The vendor’s remedy, in such case, is upon the contract, either to enforce specific performance, or in an action at law. The vendee cannot compel a relinquishment of the legal title until he has clothed himself with the equity by the payment of the purchase money. ” The superiority of the vendor’s lien in that, its proper sense, over the liens of judgments recovered against the vendee, though recovered on indebtedness contracted without notice, whatever the rule may be elsewhere, has been maintained in this state from an early period in its history; certainly as early as Patterson v. Johnston, 7 Ohio, 225. The absolute justice of the lien against the vendee and those who take under him with notice, is indisputable. Common honesty requires that one who buys land of another should pay for it, or, if he does not, that the land should be held for whatever he fails to pay. In equity the vendee holds the legal title in trust for the vendor, and has no beneficial interest in the land except to the extent of any excess that may remain after full payment of the purchase money. And, it is a well established rule that the lien of a judgment attaches only to such beneficial interest in land as the judgment debtor has at the time of its rendition; and, when the rule is not otherwise affected by statutory regulation, as in cases of mortgages and other instruments which become effectual against third persons only on proper registration, the judgment lien is subject to all equities concerning the land which could be successfully asserted against the debtor. This [52]*52rule is declared in Tousley v. Tousley, 5 Ohio St., 87, where it is said that so far as the statute goes in giving a judgment creditor preference over mortgages not perfected by delivery to the recorder, “his rights are absolute, but for everything else he is remitted to general principles, and on general principles it is very clear that he acquires a lien only upon the interest of his debtor, and is bound to yield to every claim that could be successfully asserted against him.” Hence, the lien of the vendor must be as effectual against the judgment creditor who simply succeeds to the interest of the vendee in the property, as it is against the vendee himself. The vendor and the party holding the judgment being equally meritorious creditors, the former has the better equity, because so much of the land as is necessary to pay the amount due him on the purchase price is in equity his property, which ought not to be taken for the payment of another’s debt. The levy of an execution issued on the judgment adds nothing to the dignity of the lien, or the equity of the creditor. It is merely a step in the enforcement of the judgment or for the preservation of the lien, and has no other effect than to limit the lien to the property levied on when that is sufficient to satisfy the judgment. The levy, like the judgment, reaches nothing more than the interest which the debtor has in the property. In Boos v. Ewing, 17 Ohio, 500, where a vendor’s lien was given preference over judgment liens, not only had executions been levied, but the land had been sold by the sheriff and the proceeds were in the hands of the court awaiting confirmation of the sale. The court said, “the land it is true has been levied upon and sold on the execution, yet the sale is not confirmed nor [53]*53the money paid into the hands of the judgment creditor. Ib is yet in the custody of the court, where it is held for the use of the one having the better claim. The vendee, creditors, and purchaser are in court. None of them have any desire that the sale should be set aside. They, together with the complainant, wish it confirmed.

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Bluebook (online)
60 Ohio St. (N.S.) 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-albright-ohio-1899.