National Valley Bank v. Harman

75 Va. 604
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 15, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 75 Va. 604 (National Valley Bank v. Harman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Valley Bank v. Harman, 75 Va. 604 (Va. 1881).

Opinion

Staples, J.

The question presented for our determination in this case lies within a very narrow compass. . It is one of the first impression in this State, there being no express adjudication of the point by this court.

It appears that Michael G. Harman, on the 22d of Febxuary, 1876, sold and conveyed to his son, Asher W. Har[605]*605man, a house and lot near Staunton for the sum of two thousand dollars, to be paid five years after date with interest from date, to secure which a lien was reserved on the face of the deed. Although the deed makes no mention of the fact, Asher W. Harman executed his negotiable note for the purchase money, which was also payable five years after date, with the interest payable semi-annually.

Shortly after this, Michael G. Harman endorsed and transferred the note to the National Valley Bank of Staunton in discharge of an antecedent indebtedness. There is no doubt but that the bank acquired the note in good faith, relying upon the security of the vendor’s lien.

On the 22d of March, 1876, and after the transfer of the note to the bank, Michael G. Harman entered into a contract for the sale of the same house and lot to Mrs. Kate O’Toole at the price of $2,000, and he covenanted at the same time to make, or cause to be made to her, a deed with general warranty. The purchase money was paid by Mrs. O’Toole, and thereupon a conveyance of the property was made to her by Asher W. Harman. At the time of this purchase Mrs. O’Toole was wholly ignorant of the existence of the negotiable note or of any claim on the part of the bank to the purchase money. There is no doubt that she is a bona fide purchaser of the property for valuable consideration.

The question is, Who has the better right, Mrs. O’Toole or the bank? The claim of the latter is that the endorsement and transfer of the negotiable note operated as a transfer and assignment of the vendor’s lien; that this assignment being prior in date to the conveyance to Mrs. O’Toole, she holds the property subject to the lien in the hands of the bank. To enforce that lien is the object of the bill in this case.

The learned counsel for the appellant has very properly said, that in case of a mortgage upon real estate, an assign[606]*606xaent of the debt is an assignment of the mortgage, without any formal assignment, transfer, or even mention of the mortgage itself.

The mortgage is a mere security for the debt, and cannot ■exist without it. And where the mortgage is given to ■secure a negotiable note, it has been held in a number of cases that the bona fide holder of the note takes the mort■gage as he takes the note, unaffected by any equities between the mortgagor and mortgagee subsequent to the transfer of the note.

This doctrine has been denied by many respectable authorities, which hold that the personal obligation of the ■debtor is one thing, and the lien or security of the mortgage another and a different thing; that whilst the negotiable note, upon principles of commercial law, may not be subject to equities in the hands of a bona fide holder— the mortgage lien is a mere chose in action, which can only be enforced in equity, and the assignee takes it as he would any other chose in action, and is bound by all the rules applicable to that class of securities.

Without expressing any opinion upon this controverted point, it may be sufficient to say that the assignee of the vendor’s lien does not Stand in every respect upon the same ..ground with the assignee of the mortgage debt. The latter, after forfeiture, may sue at law, recover the premises and hold possession until his debt is satisfied out of the rents and profits, and I take.it a court of equity would hot, at the instance of the mortgagor, deprive him of this legal advantage. In the instance, however, of the sale and conveyance ■of property, the purchaser, in the case supposed, stands as the legal and equitable owner of the property, subject only to the lien for the purchase money. That lien is only recognized in the equity courts, and the rights of the vendor or his assignee can only be enforced in these courts; and it is by no means certain that the purchaser would be deprived [607]*607■of Ms equitable defence against the assignee, even when the latter is the holder of the purchaser’s negotiable note for the unpaid purchase money. Here the question is not between the assignee of the note on the one hand, and a mortgagor or purchaser who may have cut off: his defence by the form of his security on the other, but between the assignee or holder of the note and a third person who has purchased the property and obtained a conveyance of the legal title in entire ignorance of the note and the assignment. If the -deed from M. G. Harman to Asher "W. Harman had mentioned the existence of a negotiable note, it might have become the duty of Mrs. O’Toole, before purchasing, to call for its production; the failure of the parties to produce it might justly have led to a strong suspicion that the note had passed out of the possession of Michael G. Harman into the hands of a third party. Mrs. O’Toole having constructive notice of the lien, would have the like notice of the negotiable note, and she would not be allowed to close her eyes to the facts thus communicated. But it will be observed that the deed makes no reference to any note, or to any personal obligation of the debtor whatever. The most, prudent and cautious inquirer would not have supposed that any such instrument existed. Certainly it cannot be .said that persons were bound at their peril to suspect or presume it. Indeed, a negotiable note payable five years after date, is altogether so unusual that no one, even the most diligent, would have ever imagined that such a security formed a part of this transaction. I repeat, therefore, that upon the record Asher W. Harman appeared as the owner of the land, subject only to the lien for the purchase money, and upon the record M. G. Harman appeared as the owner of the lien itself, without a circumstance of suspicion to put third persons upon inquiry. A deed from the former, with a relinquishment of the lien by the latter, would convey a perfect title according to every reasonable presumption and intendment.

[608]*608It has been said, however, that Mrs. O’Toole ought to have made inquiry. There was no person to whom she could have applied for information touching the lien, unless it was Michael G. Harman. But why apply to him, when the transaction itself in which he was engaged was the strongest possible affirmation that he was entitled to the purchase money. The rule is, that a purchaser will not be charged with notice by being put on inquiry, unless he has some more authentic means of information than can be found in an application to one who is interested in concealing the truth.

In 2 Leading Cases in Equity, page 49-50, it is said: It cannot be required of a purchaser to inquire of the vendor, or of any one who joins him in making title, whether he is committing a fraud or breach of trust by disposing of that which belongs to a third person, or has been already sold.

One who is engaged in a fraudulent design seldom hesitates at a falsehood. The law exacts nothing vain or useless. To make inquiry a duty, the circumstances must be such as will lead to knowledge. 2 Lead. Cases in Eq. Part 1, page 50.

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Bluebook (online)
75 Va. 604, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-valley-bank-v-harman-va-1881.