Watkins v. Clifton Hill Land Co.

91 Tenn. 683
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 1, 1892
StatusPublished

This text of 91 Tenn. 683 (Watkins v. Clifton Hill Land Co.) 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
Watkins v. Clifton Hill Land Co., 91 Tenn. 683 (Tenn. 1892).

Opinion

Caldwell, J.

On April 14, 1887, complainants, Mrs. Anna N. Watkins and Miss Alice M. Watkins, [685]*685sold and conveyed to the defendant, Clifton Hill Land Company, one hundred and ninety acres of land, near Chattanooga, in consideration of $125,-000, of which $35,000 were paid in cash, and the defendant’s obligation to pay the balance was evidenced by its five promissory notes for $18,000 each, maturing ■ respectively on the first day of March, 1888, 1889, 1890, 1891, and 1892, and bearing interest from .March 1, 1887, at the' rate of 6 per cent, per annum, payable semi-annually. A specific lien was retained in the deed, and the defendant agreed in the face of its notes that it would pay reasonable attorney fees, if resort to law became necessary for their collection.

On April 9, 1889, the ‘vendors filed the original bill in this cause, for the enforcement of their lien and collection of the said purchase-money notes by a sale of the land.

All of the notes were exhibited with the bill, two of them being past due at the time, and the other three yet to mature.

Amended and .supplemental bills were subsequently filed. Defendant answered the three bills, and proof was taken on both sides.

On May 12, 1891, the Chancellor heard the cause, on pleadings and proof, and directed a sale of the land on a credit of six, twelve,- eighteen, twenty-foúr, and thirty months, unless the amount then due complainant should be ¶ paid into Court within sixty days from the date of the decree.

In pursuance of that decree, the Clerk and Mas[686]*686ter sold the land, on August 5, 1891, to tbe complainant, at the price of $47,000.

The sale was confirmed and title divested and vested on October 12, 1891. In the same decree the Court adjudged the defendant to be indebted to the complainant in the full aggregate amouut of the five notes — although one of them had not yet matured — credited that sum by the net proceeds of the sale, and awarded execution for the balance. At a subsequent day of the same term, decree was rendered against the defendant for $4,000, as reasonable compensation to solicitors of complainants. From that, and all four decrees in the cause, defendant appealed, upon a bond for costs only.

The first question for our consideration arises upon a motion of complainants to dismiss defendant’s appeal. The ground of the motion is that the appeal bond is insufficient, being for costs only, and not for the unpaid part of the decree below ($75,000), damages, and costs. The bond was executed under § 8882 of Code (M. & V.), which is as follows:

“In all cases in which, by the decree of any Court of Equity, real estate is ordered to be sold, and the party whose real estate is so decreed to be sold, prays ’and obtains an appeal to the Supreme Court, he shall be required to execute a bond in an amount sufficient to pay costs of the cause in the Court below and the Supreme Court.” Whereas, complainants insist that bond should have-[687]*687been given as required, by § 3881, which, provides that “where decrees are for a specific sum of money, and against the party in his own right, the appeal bond shall be for the amount of the decree and damages and costs.” Code, § 3881.

Section 3882 originated in the Act of 1870-7-71, Chapter 106, and was intended as an exception to § 3881, an old provision. The exception was created, as said by this Court in Staub v. Williams, 1 Lea, 124, to relieve the debtor of the obvious hardship of giving personal security for the deci-ee against him, when by the same decree, or in the same cause, his laud was adjudged to be sold in the ■ enforcement of a vendor’s lien or a mortgage; the land itself in such a case being deemed sufficient security for the debt.

Such having been the object of the exception, the case before us would, confessedly, have fallen within its operation, and ' a bond for costs would have been sufficient, had the appeal been obtained before the sale occurred, as it might have been under § 3874 of the Code, in the discretion of the Chancellor.

Does the fact that the appeal is prosecuted after the sale and application of proceeds, and after a lai'ge balance of indebtedness is adjudged to be due complaihants, take the case out of the exception, and subject it to the original provision? We think not, cleai’ly.

It is, after the sale as before, a case in which a Court of Equity has, by decree, ordered the [688]*688sale of real estate for the enforcement of a vendor’s lien; and the land is no more a sufficient security for the entire decree in the one instance than are its proceeds in the other.

This appeal is not alone from the adjudication of defendant’s liability for $75,000 after the -exhaustion of its land — from a mere money decree for the balance of the debt — as assumed in argument for complainants. It is more than that. It is an unlimited appeal from all the decrees in the cause, and brings all of them before this Court for review; that adjudging defendant’s liability and directing sale of the land, that confirming sale and applying proceeds, as well as that adjudging balance and awarding execution.

Primarily, the land is the subject-matter of the litigation; it is that about which the parties contracted, and out of which defendant’s liability arose. Treating the land, upon the one side, as the representative of the debt; upon the -other side, the Legislature manifestly intended that, in the given case, whether the appeal was before or after sale, the land, or its proceeds, should stand as security for the debt, and that bond should be required ,for costs alone.

It would minimize the statute, and in a large measure defeat its object, to limit its application to appeals before sale, as counsel for complainants suggest should be done, for such appeals are allowable only in the discretion of the Chancellor, and never as a matter of right. Code, §§3872, 3874; [689]*689Gibson v. Widener, 85 Tenn., 16; Younger v. Younger, 90 Tenn., 25.

'Section 3882 lias been held to apply in case of decree to sell real estate for enforcement of a mechanic’s lien (Kinsey v. Stanton, 6 Bax., 92), but not in cases where land is decreed to be sold under attachment for ordinary debt. Staub v. Williams, 1 Lea, 36; same case, on motion to rehear, 1 Lea, 123; Rogers v. Newman, 5 Lea, 255.

Motion to dismiss is not allowed.

Questions arising upon defendant’s assignment of errors will next be consideréd.

First. — Defendant insists that complainants should have been repelled and their bill dismissed, on account of fraud, which it contends was perpetrated with refference to the price by complainants and its unfaithful agent in the sale of the land to defendant.

The merits of this question cannot be determined in this case, for two reasons: (1) because defendant interposes no such defense in its answers; and (2) because this record discloses the fact that there is now pending an independent suit, in which defendant seeks a rescission of the contract by reason of the facts here relied upon’ as evidence of fraud.

Second. — It is assigned as error that the land was ordered to be sold, and was sold, before a personal decree was rendered against the defendant on any of the purchase-money notes.

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Related

Gibson v. Widener
1 S.W. 497 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1886)
Younger v. Younger
90 Tenn. 25 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1891)

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Bluebook (online)
91 Tenn. 683, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/watkins-v-clifton-hill-land-co-tenn-1892.