Ray v. Goodman

33 Tenn. 586
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1854
StatusPublished

This text of 33 Tenn. 586 (Ray v. Goodman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ray v. Goodman, 33 Tenn. 586 (Tenn. 1854).

Opinion

CaRuthees, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

There are several questions raised by the record in this case, but the one mainly argued, is, whether the statute of limitations protects the vendee of land in possession under a title bond, against a bill filed by the vendor or his assignee to sell the land for the unpaid purchase money, more than seven years after it became due.

As our opinion upon this point is decisive of the case, it is unnecessary -to notice the other grounds assumed in defense.

This point arose and was decided in the case of Lusk & Cain vs. Layne, at Nashville, the term before last, and a written opinion delivered, which was withheld from publication, because at the ensuing term here several cases came up, including the one now [588]*588under consideration, involving the same question, which, at the urgent request of a portion of the bar, who regarded it as a question of great importance to the community, as it certainly is, were continued for reargument at the present term.

After giving the fullest consideration to the arguments now made, and patiently reviewing the whole subject and the authorities bearing upon it, we are unable to change the opinion heretofore formed and announced.

¥e think a possession of seven years, by the ven-dee claiming the land by virtue of his purchase, as evidenced by the bond for the title under which he holds, gives him a right of possession that cannot be disturbed by the vendor by a bill to enforce his lien for unpaid purchase money, which has been due above seven years. Such lien is barred by § 2 of the act of 1819, ch. 28. The words are that no person shall have “any action or suit, either in law or equity, for any lands, tenements, or hereditaments, but within seven years next after his right to commence such action shall have come, fallen or accrued; and that all suits, either in law or equity, for the recovery of any lands, tenements or hereditaments, shall be had and sued within seven years next after the title or cause of action or suit, have so accrued or fallen, and at no time after the said seven years shall have passed.”

This is a suit in equity upon a cause of action. The object is, to take the land for the satisfaction of the notes for the unpaid purchase money on the ground of lien retained. This, then, is the “cause” and object of the present action. "When did it “ accrue, come, or [589]*589fall,” in the words of the act, to the complainant, or Ms assignee'? The answer is, certainly on the day the notes became due for the consideration.

The defendant has been all the time holding for himself, and claiming under his. purchase a right to the land to the boundaries prescribed in the title bond. It is an equitable title, to be .sure, but still he claims to be the owner and to hold for himself alone. He certainly claims to hold against the vendor, because it is Ms title which he has purchased, and of which he holds a good and valid transfer in. equity.

It is true that the legal title remained in the vendor, that is, he did not transfer the .title according to the forms of law, and was not bound to do so until the consideration was fully paid. The vendee could not force the conveyance of the legal title without shewing that he had paid for the land, nor could the vendor force the payment of the price without maMng the title good. In this respect they were trustees for each other, the one for the title and the other for the money, and be dealt with as such by a court of equity. These trusts, however, in cases of ordinary title bonds, are not express, but implied. Express trusts may be certainly raised in the contract of the parties, but in the usual bonds simply for title, the trusts are only implied by law. 10 Peters., 224. So, if there be any thing in the argument that 'the statute will not run because of the existence of a trust which is not admitted to be beyond doubt since the act of 1819, yet it does not control this case, because we do not understand that an express trust exists in such a case as the •present. If it be an implied trust, it is admitted on [590]*590all Rands, that so far as that is concerned, it presents no obstacle to the application of the statute. The limitation acts generally apply only to suits in courts of law, and are only enforced in courts of equity, by analogy, in cases of concurrent .jurisdiction. There was much propriety, .then, in the principle, that in cases of express trusts which were only cognizable in a court of equity, that the statute of limitations did not run. But our act of 1819 expressly applies to all suits in equity as well as law, for the recovery of land. It may, therefore, be well doubted whether any such distinction now exists in suits for land. But the view we take of the character of that trust, which exists between vendor and vendee, renders it unnecessary to decide that point.

It is argued that this relation of vendor and vendee by bond, is analogous to that of mortgagor and mortgagee, and that as the statute does not run in the latter case, it will not in the former. There is much plausibility in this argument, but it only needs to be probed to manifest its unsoundness.

It is true that the two relations are often assimilated to each other, and that they have some points of resemblance; but so far as regards the principles on which the statute of limitations are' applied, there is no analogy.

The mortgagee has a lien on the land conveyed for the debts secured by the mortgage deed; so has the vendor a lien upon the land sold for the debt contracted for it; and these debts attach to the lands, have priority over all others, and cannot be defeated but by the conduct of the creditor himself. In both cases, too, the [591]*591security for the debts passes to any one to whom the evidence of them may be assigned. In these, and some other respects, the two relations resemble each other, but in many particulars they are most dissimilar and unlike. The mortgagee only claims to hold the land as a security for his debt, and is accountable for the rents. He is bound to account. The vendee holds for himself, is not bound to account, and his title is alienable, devisa-ble and descendable. The former holds possession for the mortgagor until the debt is paid out of the rents and profits, and may, by the nature of the contract at the time agreed upon, if the debt is not paid, have the property sold for that purpose. In the ease of sale, the vendee is under no such obligation. He claims the property as his own; the rents and profits are his. The law, and not his contract, imposes the lien for the unpaid purchase money; the law, and not his contract, raises whatever trusts may exist in the case.

How, it is believed that .this view of the two relations conclusively shows that it does not by any means follow, that because the statute of limitations does not run between mortgagor and mortgagee, it does not apply between vendor and vendee.

It is clearly and uniformly held that the statute never runs, except the possession be adverse. And this, and not the question of trust, presents the only difficulty in the class of cases which we are now considering.

It is insisted that the possession of the vendee under his 'equitable title, is not hostile or adverse, but friendly and in subjection to the legal title of the vendor.

■ Let it be borne in mind that the true question is, not whether the title of the defendant is friendly to, [592]

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33 Tenn. 586, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ray-v-goodman-tenn-1854.