Court Opinion

ID: 7109143
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 12:24:18.955982+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:13:40.705583
License: Public Domain

Si-ibrwin, J.
1 2 3 On the tenth day of August, 1895, the plaintiff sold the defendant real estate for the agreed price .of one thousand dollars. One' hundred dollars was paid in cash, and the plaintiff agreed in writing to accept as full payment therefor, upon delivery of a warranty deed and abstract, the further payment of four hundred dollars cash and a note for five hundred dollars, bearing seven per' cent, interest per annum from the fifteenth day of August, 1895/ and due in one'year. The defendant *465took possession of the property, and thereafter difficulty arose between plaintiff and defendant, which resulted in the defendant’s refusing to pay the four hundred dollars cash and to execute the five hundred-dollar note. The plaintiff thereupon brought suit- to collect the nine hundred dollars balance of unpaid purchase money, and asked therein that a vendor’s lien to be given him for the same. In answer to that suit the defendant alleged that the plaintiff had failed to furnish him an abstract showing a good title to the land, as agreed, and had failed to remove certain clouds upon the title thereto*, and that he was ready to- perform his contract whenever the plaintiff would perform on his part. A trial was had, and the court decreed that the plaintiff was entitled to judgment for four hundred dollars, and that the defendant execute and deliver to the plaintiff his note for five hundred dollars, in accordance with the terms of the sale. This judgment was appealed from by the defendant, but the matter was subsequently adjusted by the parties themselves, the money paid, and the note executed to plaintiff as in the judgment required, and the appeal was dismissed. The note then given to plaintiff is the one sued on herein. There was no defense to the note itself,- but the claim for a vendor’s lien is resisted on the ground that it was waived by the plaintiff at the time of the sale and since, and that there was an adjudication of the plaintiff’s right thereto in the former suit. In the former action no issue was tendered as to the plaintiff’s right to a vendor’s lien. Upon the trial of the case the plaintiff tendered full compliance with his agreement, and the court, it is evident, thereupon decreed what was, in effect, a specific performance of the contract on the part of the defendant. There was no finding that the plaintiff was not entitled to his lien as prayed as to any part of the purchase price of the land. The plaintiff did not ask that it be established as a notice to third parties before the five hundred-dollar note became due, and the* court had no occa*466siou to pass upon the question. The decree put the, parties ■ in the position they would have been in at first had both complied with the terms of sale. Nothing further was attempted therein, and we reach the conclusion that there was no adjudication of the question under consideration, and no reason why it should have been determined at that time, at least so far as the amount represented by the note in suit is concerned. The law giving the vendor a lien for purchase money is well settled in this state. Pierson v. David, 1 Iowa, 23. The mere taking of a note, therefor, does not waive the lien. In order to so operate, it must be shown by a clear preponderance of the evidence that such was the express agreement of the vendor. Farwell v. Salpaugh, 32 Iowa, 583; Port v. Robbins, 35 Iowa, 208; Bank v. Gifford, 79 Iowa, 300. Nor is the written contract, in our judgment, conclusive upon the question. The note in suit represents nothing but a balance due for the purchase price of the land sold to the defendant, and we think the trial court rightly found that a waiver of the vendor’s lien was not sufficiently proven. The judgement is affirmed.