Studabaker v. Langard

79 Ind. 320
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1881
DocketNo. 8347
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 79 Ind. 320 (Studabaker v. Langard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Studabaker v. Langard, 79 Ind. 320 (Ind. 1881).

Opinion

Elliott, C. J.

— This case comes to this court upon a special finding of facts, upon which a conclusion of law was ¡stated by the court. The material facts stated in the finding are, in substance, these: On the 19th day of January, 1874, appellants’ testator recovered judgment against Joseph Langard for $1,000, an execution issued thereon on the 22d day of October, 1874, and on that day was levied upon the land in controversy. The land was bought by said Joseph Langard December 6th, 1873, for $7,000, of this sum $1,000 was paid at the time of the purchase, for the remainder of the purchase-money nine promissory notes were executed, and these were secured by mortgage. The deed executed to Langard and the mortgage executed by him were duly recorded. On the 3d day of January, 1874, Langard and wife reconveyed the land to Thomas B. Hedekin, and the latter, ¡at the request of Langard and his wife, executed a title bond” to Yictorine Langard, wife of Joseph Langard, agreeing to convey to her by deed the said land upon payment to liim of $7,000; that the $1,000, paid by Langard at the time ■of his purchase, was allowed and credited to the said Yictorine. That Hedekin paid no consideration to Joseph Langard .and that the conveyance by the latter to the former was for the purpose of defrauding appellants’ testator, but that Hed•ekin had no intent to defraud any person by said transaction. That Hedekin did not surrender the notes or mortgage executed to him by Langard. That neither the deed to Hedekin nor the bond to Yictorine Langard has ever been recorded. 'That Hedekin knew of the said claim against Joseph Langard when the last named deed and bond were executed, and knew also of the pendency of the action in which the judg[322]*322ment of appellants’ testator was recovered, and was informed by Langard when he, Hedekin, received the conveyance-from him, that he, Langard, would not pay the said claim. That after the execution of the bond Joseph Langard paid. $300 to his wife which was used by her in paying Hedekin; that all other payments were made with her own money. That on the 13th day of February, 1875, Victorine Langard sold and assigned the bond executed to her by Hedekin to-Peter Certia; that Certia agreed to pay said Victorine for such assignment the sum of $7,500, and did pay $800 at the-time it.was made and executed his promissory notes for $1,500,, the sum due Victorine, and that he assumed and agreed to-pay the sum due Hedekin upon the original purchase. That Certia had no knowledge or notice of any claim against theLangards, but that he purchased in good faith. It is also-stated in the special finding, that Joseph Langard had no-other property out of which the claim could be made, at the. time the aforesaid transactions took place, nor did he have when this action was commenced.

Appellants insist that they were entitled to judgment subjecting the real estate in controversy to the lien of the judgment obtained by their testator against Joseph Langard, and' that the court erred in finding in favor of the appellees.

Victorine Langard is not a party to this action. There is; nothing in the special finding showing that she had any knowledge of the claim of appellants’ testator, nor is there anything showing any fraudulent intent upon her part. The absence of a fact essential to the success of a party who has the burden of proof is, in effect, a finding against him upon that point. Ex Parte Walls, 73 Ind. 95, cases cited on p. 110;, Stropes v. The Board, etc., 72 Ind. 42.

"We must, therefore, treat the finding as showing that when. Victorine Langard received the bond from Hedekin, on the 3d day of January, 1874, she had no notice of her husband’s; fraudulent design, and that she acted in good faith. Indeed,, this is the ordinary presumption, for fraud is never presumed.. [323]*323It appears, too, that she was not a mere volunteer. When she received the bond from Hedekin, there was no lien upon the land and she was not, therefore, chargeable with constructive notice. Had she obtained a deed, she would certainly have been entitled to be regarded as a bona fide purchaser, with the right to hold and convey as such. The judgment subsequently obtained would not have been a lien upon the' land in her hands. The appellants’ testator had, when the bond was executed to Victorine Langard by Hedekin, no lien upon the land, nor any interest, legal or equitable, therein. He was a mere general creditor of Joseph Langard.

Leaving out of consideration the facts which we have stated and the rules of law to which we have referred, counsel argue that Certia had notice when he purchased, because the execution had been levied on the land prior to the purchase by him. This position can not be maintained. If Victorine Langard had acquired a good title then she could have conveyed one. This would be so even though she conveyed to one who had notice. Sharpe v. Davis, 76 Ind. 17. The fact that Certia purchased after an execution had been levied, would not have defeated his title, if it be true that his grantor was herself a purchaser in good faith. The judgment which furnished the foundation for the execution was the highest source to which appellants’ claim of right could rise, and this was lower than Victorine’s purchase, for that was anterior to the judgment. We can not, therefore, accept as correct appellants’ theory, that, as Certia bought after the execution was levied, that fact alone subordinates his rights to those vested in appellants by the judgment against Joseph Langard.

The character of the title acquired by Victorine Langard exerts an important and controlling influence. If she acquired all the rights of a bona fide purchaser, then this point must be ruled against appellants. If she did not, then there ’ is much force in appellants’ argument, that, as Certia bought after the execution had been levied, he is to be deemed a purchaser with notice. Back of this, however, lies the controll[324]*324ing question: Was "Victorine Langard a bona fide purchaser? The only infirmity in her title is that she held by an executory contract, and not by deed. She was not guilty of any fraud. She paid a consideration, and there was no purchase-money due the execution debtor when she parted with title. If the fact that she received a bond for a deed and not a deed is, as appellants insist, sufficient to deprive her of the character of a bona fide purchaser, then there would be ground for holding that Certia did not acquire a right paramount to that created by the levy of appellants’ execution.

If the vendor of land were asserting a right to his lien, or if some person owning a prior equity were contesting the question, there would be much less difficulty in solving the legal problem. Rut the case is altogether different. Whatsoever rights the appellants’ testator acquired in the specific property were such as his judgment supplied. Prior to the rendition of the judgment he had no interest in the land; he was but a creditor, with a general right to subject by legal process the property of the debtor to the payment of his debt. We do not think the case of Amory v. Reilly, 9 Ind. 490, in point. That was a case where a vendor Avho had executed a bond for title sought to enforce a lien for purchase-money against the land, after it had passed by assignment of the bond, into the hands of a third person who had no notice of the lien. It was rightly held that the rule, that a vendor could not enforce his lien against a purchaser Avithout notice, did not apply where the vendor had not parted with title. In the case of

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Bluebook (online)
79 Ind. 320, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/studabaker-v-langard-ind-1881.