Sullivan v. Saunders

66 S.E. 497, 66 W. Va. 350, 1909 W. Va. LEXIS 164
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 1, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 66 S.E. 497 (Sullivan v. Saunders) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sullivan v. Saunders, 66 S.E. 497, 66 W. Va. 350, 1909 W. Va. LEXIS 164 (W. Va. 1909).

Opinion

Williams, Judge;

This is a suit to enforce the lien of a judgment in favor of John Sullivan against five-eighths of an acre of land formerly owned by B. L. Saunders, one of his judgment debtors, and now owned by 0. C. Rhodes. Previous to the judgment Saunders had given a deed of trust on the land, which was duly recorded, to secure a debt he owed to L. W. Simpson, and later conveyed the equity of redemption to Simpson. Simpson then conveyed the land to Rhodes and, later, executed a release of his trust deed lien. Sullivan then brought his suit against [351]*351Saunders, Simpson and Rhodes, and on the 17th of September, 1907, a decree was made renting the land to pay the judgment. From this decree Simpson and Rhodes have appealed.

On May 13, 1897, Sullivan recovered a judgment in a justice’s court against Geo. M. McDermitt, Gordon O’Beirn, R. L. Blackwood, W. G. Seiger, H. L. ICirtley and R. L. Saunders for the sum of $242.08, which was docketed on the 22nd of' June, 1897. On the same date of the docketing of the judgment, Seiger gave his note to Sullivan for the amount of the judgment, payable one month after date at the Huntington National Bank, endorsed' by E. M. Greene and E. M. Cobb, strangers to the judgment. Various sums were paid on this note at different times, until July 18, 1898, at which time there appeared to be due a balance of $200.00, and for this amount Cobb and Greene executed to Sullivan their individual notes for $100.00 each. Greene paid his note, but Cobb failed to pay any part of his. This note,, with its interest, represents the balance claimed by plaintiff on his judgment; and the purpose of this suit is to enforce collection of this amount, as a lien upon the land above mentioned.

Appellants insist that the acceptance of this note from one of the judgment debtors by Sullivan for the amount. of his judgment, with endorsers thereon who were strangers to the judgment, and the subsequent acceptance of the two notes by the individual endorsers, operated as a payment, and release, of the judgment. Was the note a payment of the judgment? This is one of the points presented for decision. Mr. Sullivan testifies that these notes were not taken in payment of the judgment, but were only intended as collateral security therefor. The settled rule in England and in most of the States of the Union is that, where a new obligation is taken in consideration of a prior one, it does not operate as a payment, or satisfaction of the old obligation, unless such was the agreement or intention of the creditor, notwithstanding the new obligation binds new parties. The question whether, or not, it operates as a novation of the old debt is one of intention by the creditor; and the burden of proving that such was his intention rests upon the one who asserts it. This rule applies in cases where the original obligation and the subsequent one are of equal dignity; it has even greater force in eases where [352]*352the' original obligation is of greater dignity than the new one. In the present case the notes did not operate to discharge the judgment; there is no evidence that Sullivan consented, or agreed, to treat the notes as payment. Consequently, the acceptance of them by Sullivan did not operate to discharge the lien of his judgment. 30 Cyc. 1194-1197; Cushwa v. Improvement Ass’n., 45 W. Va. 490; Feamster v. Withrow, 12 W. Va. 611; Barnetts v. Miller, 23 Grat. 551; Coles v. Withers, 33 Grat. 186; Gilbert v. Washington &c. R. R. Co., Idem 586; Karn v. Blacksford, 20 S. E. (Va.) 149; McGuire v. Godsby, 3 Call. 234.

On January 9, 1899, more than two years after the judgment had been obtained and docketed, Saunders and wife, by deed with covenants of general warranty, conveyed the land to L. W. Simpson; the consideration recited being $300.00. The proof shows that the actual consideration for the deed was the debt secured by the deed of trust, and a small amount of money besides; the exact amount of money is not proven. It is also proven that the $300.00 recited in the deed was the true amount of the consideration.

On February 13, 1899, Simpson and wife conveyed the land to C. C. Ehodes, with covenants of general warranty of title, the consideration recited in the deed being $250.00; and on the 27th of November, 1900', the lien of the trust deed was formally released by Simpson.

The decree found the amount then due on the judgment to be $148.50, which the court held to be a valid and subsisting lien upon the land, and decreed that, unless the debt was paid by Saunders, or some one for him, within thirty days, the land should be rented. The decree does not expressly decide that the trust deed lien is extinguished; nor does it expressly subordinate the right of Ehodes in the land to the extent of said lien, to plaintiff’s judgment. But it does so in effect, because it directs the renting of the property to pay the balance due on the judgment, without regard to the prior trust lien.

The trust deed lien in favor of Simpson is not extinguished, in equity, by the conveyance of the land to him, so as to let in a junior lienor in preference to him; neither is the land in the hands of Ehodes rendered liable in any greater extent to the payment of plaintiff’s judgment than it would have been [353]*353if the land bad still remained in the hands of Saunders, the judgment debtor The trust lien should be treated as still existing, and Rhodes is entitled to the benefit of it. The general rule of law is, that where the holder of a lien upon land after-wards acquires the legal title, the lien is merged' in his estate, and is extinguished. But the rule is subject' to exceptions, and courts of equity will not follow it when justice requires the lien to be perserved in order to protect a right. Simpson’s trust lien was superior to plaintiff’s judgment lien. Why should he be in a worse position after becoming the owner of the land on which his lien existed than he was before; or why should Rhodes, his grantee, be put in any worse position than Simpson himself would have been, had he remained the owner? There is no good reason why Simpson’s lien should not be considered as still existing; indeed it must be so considered in order to do justice in this ease. There is a clear equity here in favor of upholding the lien of the trust deed' and preventing a merger of the lien with the legal estate afterwards acquired by Simpson from Saunders; and this equity attaches to the estate in the hands of Simpson’s grantee, Rhodes. The fact that the lien was formally released on the record by Simpson after he had conveyed the property to Rhodes does not destroy the equity; no one was misled thereby to his prejudice. The supreme court of New Hampshire, in the case of Staunton v. Thompson, 49 N. H. 272, says: “Whether the mortgage shall be kept on foot or not depends, ordinarily, upon the intention of the parties, but in order to protect the mortgage against an intervening title, the law will uphold the mortgage, even when the parties had undertaken to discharge it, unless injustice would be done thereby.” To the same effect are the following authorities: 4 Kent’s Com. 102; 2 Pom. Eq. Jur., section 734; Kanawha Valley Bank v. Wilson, 29 W. Va. 645; Brockenbrough v. Brockenbrough, 31 Grat. 580; Powell v. Bell’s Admr., 81 Va. 222; Allen v. Patrick, 97 Va. 521; Hanlon v. Doherty, 109 Ind. 37; Duffy v. McGinness, 13 R. L. 595; Bank v. Chesney, 87 Ill. 602;

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Bluebook (online)
66 S.E. 497, 66 W. Va. 350, 1909 W. Va. LEXIS 164, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sullivan-v-saunders-wva-1909.