Thorn v. Ingram

25 Ark. 52
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 15, 1867
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 25 Ark. 52 (Thorn v. Ingram) 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
Thorn v. Ingram, 25 Ark. 52 (Ark. 1867).

Opinion

Clendenin, J.

This was a bill in equity, brought by the appellee, against' the appellant and the heirs of Gr. W. and Scott Bayne, to enforce a vendor’s lien.

We le,arn from the record in this case, that, prior to the year 1859, T. F. Ingrain was the owner of lands in Jefferson county; that he died intestate, and that administration of his estate was granted to B. F. Ingram, who, in the course of his administration, applied to and obtained from the probate court an order to sell the lands of his intestate; that, in pursuance of the order, he sold 720 acres of the land to Gr. W. and Scott Bayne, for the sum of $6,000, who paid $2,000 in cash, and executed their two promissory notes for $2,000 each, payable at one and two years, with 10 per cent, interest; that the administrator then executed and delivered a deed to the purchasers, and reported his- proceedings to the probate court, where they were approved; that the said Gr. W. and S. Bayne and the said B. F. Ingrain then died, and that Alexander H. Ingram, the complainant in the bill, was appointed administrator de bonis non of T. F. Ingram ; that, at the time of the purchase of the lands, Gr. W. and Scott Bayne took possession of them, and continued in possession until their death, and that the widow of Gr. W. Bayne, and his children, continued in posses? si on until the intermarriage of the widow with B. II. Thorn,, the administrator de bonis non of Gr. W. and Scott Bayne, and that the said Thom and wife, and children of G-. W. Bayne,: are still in possession ; that the complainant, as administrator, &e., ibund tlio said notes, with' other effects of his intestate, and that they have never been paid, nor was any other security taken, and that he has an equitable lien on the lands for the payment of the notes. The proper exhibits are referred to, and attached to the bill.

.Richard Thorn, in his own right, and as administrator of G. ~W. and Scott Bayne, Elizabeth Thorn, and the children of G. W. Bayne, and the non-resident heirs of Scott Bayne, are made defendants to the bill, and are served with process.

Thorn and wife answer the bill, and admit the purchase of the land, as charged, by G. ~W. and S. Bayne; the execution of the notes for the unpaid part of the purchase money; that Thorn is the administrator de bonis von of G. W. and Scott Bayne, and that G. AV\ and Scott Bayne died in possession of the lands; that Elizabeth Thorn, now the wife of .Roland Thorn, was the widow of G. W. Bayne, and as such was entitled to dower in all lands of which said G. ~W. Bayne died seized and possessed. They deny the right of complainant to enforce an equitable lien for the unpaid purchase money on said lands, to the exclusion of the dower right of Mrs. Thorn, and demur to the bill for wrant of equity upon its face, and because the complainant endeavors to obtain a decree for the sale of the said lands to the exclusion of the dower right of the said Elizabeth Thorn. .

A guardian, ad litem, was regularly appointed for the minor heirs of G. W. Bayne, who filed his answer. The non-resident defendants, heirs of Scott Bayiie, interposed no defense. Replications were filed to the answers, and the cause set for hearing. At the hearing upon the bill, answers, replications and exhibits, the court rendered a decree for the complainant, pro ronfesso, against the non-resident defendants, and against the other defendants, finding the amount due and giving judgment against “the defendants” for the amount of the notes and interest and costs, and that unless by a day named in the decree, the amount found due was paid, the lands should be sold; and a special cominission was appointed to sell the lands for cash, to pay the amount decreed, and to hold the remainder for use of defendants, subject to the order of the court. .From this decree, Thorn and wife appealed.

The first question presented for our consideration by the answer and demurrer, and by the assignment of errors, is, has the widow a right of dower in lands purchased and occupied by her husband, for which a deed of conveyance has been executed and delivered, -whore the’purchase money remains unpaid?

It is now the well settled law that the vendor of land has in equity a lien for the purchase money, not only against the vendee himself and his heirs and other privies in estate, but also against all subsequent purchasers having notice that the purchase money remains unpaid, though there is no special agreement that there shall be a lien upon the land for the purchase money, and notwithstanding the vendor conveys the land by deed, and takes the note or bond of the vendee for the purchase money, 14 Ark., 634; 18 Ark., 142.

Section 1, chapter 60, Title, “Dower,” Digest of Arkansas, declares that “ a widow shall he endowed of a third part of the land whereof her husband was seized of an estate of inheritance at any time during the marriage, unless the same shall have been relinquished in legal form.” According to the statements of the bill in this case, the husband’s estate in the land was subject to the equitable lion of the vendor, for the unpaid purchase money, and he did not have such an estate of inheritance in the land as would entitle the widow to dower. The land was subject to the lien of the vendor -while in the hands of the purchaser, his heirs and other privies, and although a deed was executed and delivered, and the husband was the personal owner of the land, yet he was not, so far as the vendor was concerned, the substantial owner; because, until the land was paid for, there was an existing equity to which the land was subject, and while that equity continued, the widow could not bo endowed. The lien of the vendor is a kind of equitable mortgage, inherent in the contract of sale, and qualifying tlie ownership of the vendee, whether that ownership be legal or merely equitable. It is paramount to the right of the vendee, and of all succeeding to his interests, in the whole or in part, by operation of law. In equity, the vendee is not the owner, adversely to the lion of the vendor, but is treated as a trustee for him, until payment of the purchase money.

In a ease, upon a point similar to the one now before us, the court of appeals of Virginia, say: “A wife’s right of dower is an emanation from the ownership of her husband, and subject to all its qualifications — though not to his alienations or incumbrances during the coverture, -without her consent, declared in the mode proscribed by law. Her right is dependent upon his, as existing at the inception of the coverture, oras acquired by him during its continuance. If' ho mortgage his land before marriage, her claim to dower is subordinate to the mortgage, and, if that lie foreclosed, is completely divested. So if she unite with the requisite solemnity in his mortgage, made after the marriage, the effect of a foreclosure is the same. If, during the coverture, he purchase mortgaged land, her title, like his, is subject to the incumbrance, and the foreclosure of it destroys both. The result is the same -where an incumbrance is created by the very act of purchasing; for if the purchase money be unpaid, and not secured, an equitable mortgage is embodied in the transaction itself, and if that be foreclosed by a sale of the property, under the decree of a court of equity, the wife’s right of dower is completely extinguished.” 2 Robinson’s Va. Rep., 405. See, also, 1 Devereux, 195; 2 Bland, 242; 3 Paige, 513; 1 B. Monroe, 257.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 Ark. 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thorn-v-ingram-ark-1867.