Murrell v. Watson

1 Tenn. Ch. R. 342
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 15, 1873
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Tenn. Ch. R. 342 (Murrell v. Watson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Murrell v. Watson, 1 Tenn. Ch. R. 342 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1873).

Opinion

The Chancellor :

The complainants were sureties for the defendants William L. Nance and Kimbro upon notes given for the purchase-money of 5,010 acres of land, and, as such sureties, were compelled to pay part of said purchase-money. _ Nance afterwards bought Kdmbro’s interest in the land, and conveyed the whole land to trustees to secure complainants and one Andrew Gregory, as Ms sureties in said purchase, and also to secure an individual debt due to complainant Murrell. One object of the bill was to set aside certain sales of the lands of complainants made under executions issued upon judgments recovered on some of the purchase-notes as aforesaid, but the judgments having been since paid by the complainants and their principal, that part of the bill is abandoned. Another object of the bill is to subject the 5,010 acres to the satisfaction of the purchase-money under the contract of sale as aforesaid, and to the indemnity [343]*343of complainants as sureties, and, for this purpose, to foreclose the deed of trust made by Nance as aforesaid. The bill asserts that the land is more than sufficient to pay off the purchase-money still remaining unpaid, and prays that said land be sold, “ and the proceeds applied to the satisfaction of all the foregoing debts which are a lien upon it according to their priority.” The “foregoing debts,” as shown by the bill, are only the debt due to the vendors of Nance and Kdmbro, and the debt mentioned in Nance’s deed of trust.

On the 16th day of June, 1870, a decree was rendered in this cause upon the bill and answer of W. L. Nance, and pro confesso as to all the other defendants, and exhibits, in which it is recited as appearing to the court that Nance and Kimbro bought the said 5,010 acres, on the 31st of March, 1860, of the Oak Vale Barrel Company and their co-defendants, the members of said company, naming them, and took a deed therefor which was duly registered; that the consideration of said purchase consisted of a lot on Maple street in South Nashville, conveyed to W. Barrow, one of said vendors, in trust for all of said vendors, and three notes at one, two and three years from date, drawn by Nance and Kimbro and endorsed by complainant Paul and defendant Andrew Gregory for $10,000 each, “ and to secure the payment of which, and any notes substituted for them, a lien was retained upon the land conveyed;” that on the 1st of March, 1865, Kimbro conveyed his interest in said land, etc., to Nance (with certain reservations not material to the controversy), in consideration of Nance assuming and paying the debts of Nance and Kimbro growing out of the purchase. That Nance took up the three notes for $10,000 each by conveying to his vendors a lot in Nashville and a lot in Edgefield at $8,400, and giving three notes of Nance and Kimbro for $7,200 each, one of which notes was endorsed by complainant Murrell, and the other two by Paul and Gregory; that judgment was recovered against the complainant Murrell on the note endorsed by him, which judgment was paid partly by him and [344]*344partly by Nance, but in what proportions does not appear; that upon one of the notes endorsed by Paul and Gregory judgment had also been recovered and been in part paid by Paul, and the other note had been paid in full. The decree then provides thus : “ And it being stated in the bill that perhaps the title to the lot in Edgefield conveyed by the said William L. Nance to the Oak Vale Barrel Company, or to the defendants composing said company, has failed, and that said company or individuals have never received any benefit therefrom.” It is therefore ordered that the clerk and master “ report the exact state of the facts, and how much and to whom is owing any money which is due from said William L. Nance, or Nance andKimbro, for said land, or from any other person, and which is a lien on said land, and the nature and priority of the liens. * * * Until the coming in of said report, other matters are reserved. It being understood and agreed that the pro confesso ox*der heretofore taken shall not estop Watson and others from setting up any prior lien upon the land as original vendors, and the clerk and master will report how much either said Murrell or said' Nance may have paid upon said land.” The decree further provided, by agreement of parties, for the sale of the tract of 5,010 acres of land, and the same has been sold and the sale confirmed. The decree, it will be noticed, implies that the three notes for $10,000 each were taken up by Nance after his purchase of Kimbro’s interest in the land. In fact, however, as the proof shows, the change was made in a few days after the original purchase by Nance and Kimbro, the newnotesfor $7,200, each bearing date the 21st of April, 1860, and the deeds to the lots in Nashville and Edgefield being dated the 2nd April, 1860. In other respects, the recitals of the decree are in accordance with the allegations of the bill, and with the facts.

Under -this reference, the master has reported that there is due from William L. Nance to his vendors, $5,725.95, being the value put upon the Edgefield lot in the transaction of the 21st of April, 1860, with interest, that lot having [345]*345been lost to the vendors by reason of the fact that Nance had never paid for it, and the lot was subsequently sold under the lien retained by his vendors. The proof is clear that neither this Edgefield lot, nor any part of the proceeds of its sale, ever came to the hands of the vendors of the 5,010 acres of land, and that Nance admits his liability to them for so much of the purchase-money as the lot was intended to pay.

The complainant Murrell excepts to the report so far as it finds that this debt is a lien upon the 5,010 acres, because :

1st. The Edgefield lot was taken from Nance as cash in part payment for the land, “ and could not be or have been understood to be a lien on said 5,010 acres.”

2nd. Because if a lien, it would not prevail against complainants until every effort had been made and failed to make the money out of Nance.

3d. Because complainants, by their payments for Nance, stand in the shoes of the vendors, and their lien was equal, or superior to that of the vendors.

Upon the first ground of exception, the decree, it will be remembered, expressly refers to the suggestions of the bill that the title to the Edgefield lot had failed, and the company had received no benefit therefrom, and the master is directed to report the exact state of facts, and how much is owing by Nance or Nance and Earnbro. The language of the bill on this point is as follows : ‘£ They — complainants— how state that they have understood that in some way the title of William L. Nance to the lot in Edgefield was lost; that perhaps he failed to pay for it, and after he had sold it to the Oak Yale Barrel Company, or to the individuals composing said corporation, the said owner filed a bill, and caused said property to be sold, and the proceeds applied to the payment of the debts so owing from William L. Nance. Now, if complainants have been correctly informed as to this, then they suppose that the value of said lot, or rather the price at which William L. Nance sold said lot in Edgefield, would be a lien upon said tract of 5,010 acres.”

[346]*346This bill is taken for confessed against the Oak Yale Barrel Company and its members, and the complainants cannot go beyond their own allegations. A decree not warranted by the allegations of the bill is clearly erroneous. Story Eq. PL, § 405, and cases cited.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Tenn. Ch. R. 342, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murrell-v-watson-tennctapp-1873.