Neal v. Speigle

33 Ark. 63
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 15, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 33 Ark. 63 (Neal v. Speigle) 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
Neal v. Speigle, 33 Ark. 63 (Ark. 1878).

Opinion

ENGLISH, Ci-r. J.:

The material allegations of the bill in this case are :

That on the 20th October, 1871, Joseph E. Jones sold and conveyed to W. 13. Shaver the southeast quarter of the southeast quarter of Section 32, Township 7 north, Range 29 west, for the consideration of $500, and Shaver conveyed to him Lot No. 1, Section 6, Township 6 north, Range 29 west, forty-seven acres, in payment of $200 of the purchase money, and for the remaining $300 gave him a note payable 25th December, 1872, bearing 10 per cent, interest. To secure the payment of the note', Shaver executed to Jones a mortgage back on the tract sold and conveyed by Jones to him, which contained a provision that if Shaver should fail or be unable to meet said note promptly at maturity, then and in that event the trade was to be cancelled, so far as that Shaver should reconvey to Jones the land, and Jones should deliver up to him the note; but for the use, occupation and profits of the land, Jones was to retain the tract conveyed by Shaver to him.

That in the month of January, 1873, after the maturity of the note, Jones was taken seriously ill at the house of L. J. Speigle, and during his illness Shaver went to see him, and expressing to him his inability to pay the note, proposed to him to rescind the trade according to the requirements of the mortgage, which was then and there agreed upon by the parties. But as Shaver did not have with him the deed to the land executed to him by Jones, it was definitely agreed between them that at some future day, not far distant, they would meet and rescind said sale according to the terms of the mortgage ; and it was further agreed between them that as the deed and mortgage had not been admitted to record, a destruction of them and the note would fully carry out the requirements of the mortgage for the recision of the sale ; and Jones expressed to Speigle his wish that this agreement with Shaver should be fully carried out, and the sale of the land rescinded according the terms ol the mortgage.

That Jones did not recover from his illness, but died about the 30th of January, 1873, and Speigle was appointed his administrator by the Probate Court of Sebastian County, Greenwood District, where the parties resided and the land was situated.

That on the 5th of February, 1873, a few days after the death of Jones, and after the grant of letters of administration upon his estate to Speigle, Shaver, with intent to cheat and defraud the creditors and heirs of Jones, filed and caused to be recorded in the Recorder’s office at Greenwood, the deed executed by Jones to him for said tract of land.

That a few days after tbe recording of the deed, Shaver came to the house of Speigle and stated the agreement between him and Jones to rescind the contract of sale by the destruction of the deed, mortgage and note, and as the circumstances and agreement were well known to Speigle, and believing it to be right, he consented to carry out said agreement, and upon his part consigned to the flames the mortgage and note, and Shaver on his part burned the deed, Speigle not knowing at the time time that the deed had been recorded.

That John Neal, the brother-in-law of Shaver, and who was his adviser in this fraudulent act, claimed to be the owner of the laud by purchase and conveyance from Shaver, and that he purchased with full notice of the above facts and circumstances, and was not an innocent purchaser.

The bill was filed by Speigle as administrator of Jones, against Shaver and Neal, in the Circuit Court of Sebastian County, Greenwood District, and after making, in substance, the above allegations, prayed a forclosure of the mortgage, if the court could not decree a rescission of the sale agreed upon, and cancellation of the fraudulent registration, deed, etc.

Shaver did not answer the bill, and a decree, by default, was entered against him.

Neal, in his answer, states that he purchased the land on the 11th of March, 1873, of Shaver, who ¡was then in possession of it, for $200, and that by deed of that date, Shaver conveyed the land to him.

He denies that he was the adviser of Shaver in the fraudulent matters alleged in the bill, and claims to be an innocent purchaser, etc.

The depositions read- upon the hearing are not copied in the transcript, but a bill of exceptions taken by Neal sets out what was proven by the parties. It appears from it that the plaintiff proved all and singular the allegations of the bill, except the allegation that Neal was the adviser of Shaver in the fraudulent matters alleged. Plaintiff also proved that Neal had notice before Shaver sold and conveyed to him the land, of all the alleged transactions between plaintiff and Shaver, including the execution of the note for purchase money and the mortgage to secure’ the same, etc. It was also proven that the land was well worth $300, and that Neal in fact paid Shaver but $100 for it, having purchased of him another tract at the same time, which was included in the deed from Shaver to Neal; and that Shaver was in possession of the land when he sold it to Neal.

The court rendered a decree against Shaver for the amount of the $300 note and interest, and condemned the land to be sold to satisfy the decree, and Neal appealed to this court.

I. Had Jones merely sold and conveyed the laud to Shaver and taken a note for the unpaid purchase money, he would have had ap equitable vendor’s lien upon the land for the payment of the note, and appellant having purchased the land of Shaver with notice that the purchase money was not paid, would have taken the land subject to the vendor’s equitable lien.

But Jones took a mortgage back from Shaver upon the land to secure the payment of the purchase money note, and thereby waived his equitable lien, and had to rely upon the mortgage. 1 Jones on Mortgages, sec. 207, etc.; Bispham Eq., sec. 355; Fish v. Howland, 1 Paige, chap. 30: Young v. Wood et al., 11 B. Mon., 128; Mattix v. Weand et al., 19 Ind., 151; Harris v. Harlan, 14 Ib., 434; Shelby v. Perrin, 18 Texas, 515; Hadley et al. v. Pickett, 25 Ind., 450; Little et al. v. Brown, 2 Leigh., 353; Mims v. Macon et al., 3 Kelly, 343.

II. At the time the deed and mortgage back were burned, Jones being dead, the legal title to the land was in his heirs at law, by virtue of the mortgage, and the equitable title was in Shaver, and the destruction of the deed did not divest Shaver of his title and vest it in the heirs of Jones. The legal existence of the deed and mortgage continued, though the papers on which they were written were burned. Strawn v. Norris et al., 21 Ark., 80.

III. After the title papers were burned, Shaver sold and, conveyed the land to appellant, Neal. If there was nothing in the case but the fact that appellant had notice, at the time he purchased the land, of the existence of the unrecorded and. unsatisfied mortgage, he would have taken the land discharged of the mortgage: because, under repeated decisions of this court, construing the statute providing for the registration of' mortgages, (Gantt’s Digest, chap. 98) actual notice of an unrecorded mortgage does not defeat the title of a subsequent-purchaser. Main v. Alexander, 9 Ark., 112; Jacoway v. Gault, 20 Ark., 190; Hannah v. Carrington, 18 Ib., 105; Carnall v. Du Val, adm’r, 22 Ib., 136; Jarratt et al. v. McDaniel et al., 32 Ib., 602.

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Bluebook (online)
33 Ark. 63, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/neal-v-speigle-ark-1878.