Silvey & Co. v. Cook

68 So. 37, 191 Ala. 228, 1914 Ala. LEXIS 785
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 17, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 68 So. 37 (Silvey & Co. v. Cook) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Silvey & Co. v. Cook, 68 So. 37, 191 Ala. 228, 1914 Ala. LEXIS 785 (Ala. 1914).

Opinion

McCLELLAN, J.

The appellee filed this bill to establish and to enforce a vendor’s lien inuring to his intestate, Mrs. S. E. Camp, in consequence of a sale of land to W. P. Ayers on October 11, 1900. The respondents Silvey & Co., and Grambling-Spalding Company obtained judgments against W. P. Ayers in the circuit court of Cleburne county on March 10, 1901; and in April, 1901, executions to enforce their collection were levied on the property here in question, sale thereof ivas had in due course, and, the named companies being the purchasers at the sum of the judgments and costs, they received a. conveyance of the land from the sheriff. On the 6th day of April, 1910, the companies having theretofore recovered the possession of the property, an ex-ecutory contract of sale ivas made by the companies with C. K. Ayer, a respondent (at the price of $1,200), who made a cash payment of $500, and who has since through annual payments discharged his obligation to the companies, and, in consequence, received a conveyance which is in part a quitclaim and in part a Avarranty of therein described portions of the land.

[230]*230(1, 2) The only real issue in the cause was and is whether the named companies, or C. K. Ayer,, or all of them, were innocent purchasers for value and without notice of the outstanding vendor’s lien, and, if so, due to he protected under the doctrine thus established. The named companies trace whatever rights they had in or to the lands in question to their purchase at an execution sale under judgments in their favor against W. P. Ayers, Mrs. Camp’s vendee. If these companies had no notice of the vendor’s lien, claimed by the complainant, before or at the time they became judgment creditors with a lien, then they were and are entitled to the protection accorded innocent purchasers for value without notice.—Code 1896, § 1042; same section, Code 1907, § 3413; Preston v. McMillan, 58 Ala. 84; Walker v. Elledge, 65 Ala. 51; Dickerson v. Carroll, 76 Ala. 337; Truss v. Miller, 116 Ala. 494, 22 South. 863, among others. There are expressions in the cases of Clemmons v. Coco, 114 Ala. 355, 21 South. 426, and Ezisell v. Brown, 121 Ala. 150, 25 South. 832, and.perhaps others, that would seem to indicate a departure from the rule of the statute and of the decisions before cited. Such expressions must be regarded as inadvertent, and in no sense intended to deflect from the doctrine the statute and decisions under it have long since established in this state. The burden of proof was upon complainant to show that, before or at the time the companies became judgment creditors with a lien, they had notice of the vendor’s lien outstanding in Mrs. Camp, or in her successors in right, or knowledge of such facts or circumstances as should have put upon the companies the duty of inquiry.—Hodges v. Winston, 94 Ala. 576, 10 South. 535; Richards v. Steiner, 166 Ala. 353, 52 South. 200.

[231]*231(3) If the named companies were innocent purchasers for value at the execution sale under their judgments against W. P. Ayers, then even though C. K. Ayer had notice of this outstanding vendor’s lien before or at the time of his purchase from the companies, and so regardless of the character of the conveyance to him, G. K. Ayer would be protected in the rights acquired by him from such innocent purchasers for value without notice at the execution sale.—Martines v. Lindsey, 91 Ala. 334, 8 South. 787; Prince v. Carter, 186 Ala. 535, 65 South. 326.

We find no merit in the insistences that the amended answers were insufficient in the assertion of right to the protection accorded bona fide purchasers, or, that the predicate was too deficient to allow secondary evidence of the contents of the (lost) deed from Gamp to W. P. Ayers.

(4) The filing for record or the recordation of the notes of W. P. Ayers — as attempted to be amended by him by agreement with successors to the rights therein of the payee, Mrs. Camp — was without effect to impose notice, constructive or otherwise, upon the named companies; those instruments not being of the classes of instruments (contracts) allowed to be recorded, and, when filed or recorded, having the effect of imputing notice to those taking subsequent rights in the premises.—Code, § 3383. These were not instruments in the nature of a mortgage, or creating as the result of a contract an equitable mortgage, but simply (after amendment) promises to pay for the purchase price of land. The instrument considered in O’Neal v. Seixas, 85 Ala. 80, 4 South. 745, was totally different from these notes in its terms and legal effect,—See Kyle v. Bellenger, 79 Ala. 516, 520, 521. So the right of the companies to the protection accorded bona fide purchasers - [232]*232for value and without notice cannot be affected or'denied because of the registration of the notes set out in this record.

(5) In the two actions instituted in the Cleburne circuit court against W. P. Ayers by the companies, to enforce the collection of their respective debts against W. P. Ayers, he pleaded, in each action, the asserted fact that he had been adjudicated a bankrupt. The circuit court denied him any advantage from that fact. It is insisted that the pleaded fact of adjudicated bankruptcy of the debtor was sufficient to put the creditors, plaintiffs, on inquiry which, if pursued with reasonable diligence, would have led them to consult the debtor’s petition in bankruptcy, whereon, as contemplated by the Bankruptcy Act, was noted the further fact that lands owned or claimed by the debtor, defendant, were subject to a vendor’s lien for unpaid purchase money. It is said in Center v. Bank, 22 Ala. 743, 757, that: “Lis pendens is notice of every fact contained in the pleadings, which is pertinent to- the trial of the matter put in issue by them. * * * ”

Undoubtedly, and for even stronger reason, knowledge of the fact of the debtor defendant’s adjudication of bankruptcy must, in consequence of the pleading thereof by him, be conclusively imputed to' the plaintiffs, in those actions, regardless of whether they were actually informed of the fact or not. The concrete question then is: Was knowledge of the fact of the debtor defendant’s adjudication of bankruptcy sufficient or effective to put the duty on the plaintiffs to' consult the petition and proceedings in the bankruptcy matter to ascertain the nature and character of the defendant’s indebtedness and whether it was secured, in whole or in part, by liens, contractual or imposed by law, on '•the lands owned or claimed by the debtor defendant? [233]*233The information thus to he imputed to the plaintiffs was'to this effect and result: That'the defendant was indebted, and that to a degree beyond his power to discharge. “Notice of an incumbrance puts one upon inquiry as to the particulars of the indebtedness, but knowledge of the existence of a debt does not put one upon inquiry to ascertain whether it is secured.”— Johnson v. Valido Co., 64 Vt. 337, 348, 25 Atl. 441.

We do not think the fact that Ayers Avas by his OAArn assertion and as accordingly adjudicated in the bankruptcy court — both facts knoAvledge of Avhich were imputable to the plaintiffs — insolvent sufficient to deny or to qualify the application of the sound rule announced by the Vermont court.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
68 So. 37, 191 Ala. 228, 1914 Ala. LEXIS 785, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/silvey-co-v-cook-ala-1914.