Court Opinion

ID: 5549147
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-10 21:29:11.284631+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:35:01.027275
License: Public Domain

The Vice Chancellor:
As between vendor and purchaser, the rule is, to sustain the implied lien for the purchase money where the mere personal security of the purchaser has been taken; and to consider any bond, note or covenant given by him alone as intended only to countervail the receipt for the purchase money contained in the deed and to show the time and manner in which the payment is to be made—unless there be an express or manifest agreement to waive such lien. And, on the other hand, to consider the implied lien as waived, whenever security is taken on the land for the whole or any part of the purchase money or whenever the security of a third person is given (except, perhaps, in the single instance of a bill of exchange drawn upon a third person, as supposed in Hughes v. Kearney, 1 Sch. & L. 136, and as was the case in Grant v. Mills, 2 V. & Beames, 306:) unless there be an express agreement that the equitable or implied lien shall be retained: Fish v. Howland, 1 Paige’s C. R. 20; Blunt’s Ambler, 723, (n. 1.) where the English authorities are collected and arranged and these rules are extracted—see also 4 Kent’s Com. 146, and cases there cited.
In the case now presented, there is no evidence of any express agreement or understanding, either at the time of the sale or afterwards, that the defendant Shirley should relinquish his right to look to the property for the payment of the purchase money. He took no collateral security of a third person, and there was no. express charge or incumbrance upon the land itself, although, by the contract, a mortgage was to have been executed to him. His equitable lien, therefore, attached. Nor was it waived, according to the principle just stated, merely by taking the promissory note of the purchasers long subsequently to the purchase. *508That circumstance is not enough to operate as a waiver; and if there were any agreement or understanding by which the lien was waived, the defendants are bound to prove it. For these reasons, the lien must be deemed to have existed as against the Congress Steam Sugar Refinery. But it became subordinate to the mortgage given by the company to the executors of A. H. Lawrence upon this and other lots, because they took their mortgage upon the strength of the legal title in the company, and without notice of the equity in favor of their vendor.
The next question then is, and it is the important one: whether this equitable lien for the unpaid purchase money remains as against the defendant Dubois, who claims under a deed of conveyance from the company to him, in trust for the benefit of creditors ? This conveyance or assignment may be called a voluntary one, similar, in all respects, to an assignment of an insolvent’s estate by operation of law. It is not, however, a voluntary assignment, without consideration, and liable to be set aside as fraudulent. There is a sufficient consideration to support it in law, namely, the antecedent debts owing by the company, which it is intended to secure and pay as far as the property assigned will extend. But it is not pretended there is any other consideration—-no fresh advances of money, no new sale and delivery of goods by Mr. Dubois of any of the creditors to induce the making of the assignment. Nor do I understand it was founded upon or connected with any composition-agreement or stipulation on the part of the creditors to accept of its provisions in satisfaction of their demands or that they have relinquished any legal rights against the company in consequence of the assignment. The company have merely placed the property in trust for the benefit of their creditors by this voluntary act on their part, although, by the acceptance of the trust, the title may have passed and vested in the trustee without the express assent or concurrence of the creditors or their becoming parties to the instrument: Cunningham v. Freeborn, 11 Wend. 241. Under such circumstances, it appears to me, neither the assignee nor the creditors stands in a situation to claim the rights of actual pur*509wide difference between persons who have acquired legal rights in this way, and those who contract, in the first instance, for the purchase of property and, upon the strength of a conveyance to be made to them, pay their money or part with their goods. In the latter case, they are purchasers in every sense of the word ; and when they act in good faith, without notice of any prior equitable lien or incumbrance, they acquire a title which cannot be affected by any such claims. In order to produce this exemption, however, the title should be founded upon a present moving consideration, not upon a past one—such as an antecedent debt, especially where the party does not release the debt but retains it and takes a conveyance or assignment of property not as absolute payment in the first instance, but to be applied in payment when the money shall be realized from it. How, then, can the equitable lien of the original vendor be defeated by subh a transfer of the property ?
This question has certainly been passed upon in this court in the matter of Howe, I Paige’s C. R. 128 ; and the case itself called for a decision upon the point. There, Howe, the petitioner, had equitable rights in respect to land against Tompkins, who had made a general assignment for the benefit of his creditors and judgments also had been recovered against Tompkins ; and the question arose, whether Howe was divested of his equity by the assignment or by the recovery of the judgment? The chancellor held it to be a well settled rule of equity that the general assignees ef a bankrupt take the estate subject to every equitable existing claim of third persons and cannot avail themselves of the legal estate thus acquired to defeat a prior equity ; although they have no notice of it at the time of the assignment. In this respect, he observes, assignees differ from bona fide purchasers of the legal estate and from mortgagees who have advanced their money on the credit of the land. And no good reason can be perceived why a different rule should be applied in favor of general assignees for the benefit of all the creditors from that which prevails in respect to those created by operation of law. Neither could be considered as bona fide purchasers. Sir Simeon Stuart’s case, to which reference is had, supports the doctrine as equally applicable *510to trustees for the benefit of creditors under a conveyance made by the debtor as to assignees in bankruptcy. But the chancellor intimates, and I think, very correctly, that the case might be different where creditors, without notice ot the prior equity, had released their debts in consideration of an assignment made to trustees for their benefit.
In Warner v. Alestyne, 3 Paige’s C. R. 513, the lien of the vendor for a balance of the purchase money was sustained, not only against the heirs of the vendee but against the widow in respect to her dower, inasmuch as she takes her dower by operation of law and not as a purchaser from her husband for a valuable consideration.
It is true that no express adjudication of the English courts is to be met with upon the precise point that a lien for purchase money shall be preferred to a trust for creditors created by the voluntary assignment or conveyance from the purchaser; and, probably, for the reason that the operation of their bankrupt laws have put a stop to the practice of making such assignments, so that questions of this sort can, very rarely, if ever, arise. Yet there is good authority for believing that the law is so understood to be settled in England. Sugden, the distinguished author of the treatise on the law of Vendors and Purchasers (now in its ninth edition,) after laying down the rule that persons coming in under the purchaser by act of law, as assignees of a bankrupt, are bound by an equitable lien, although they had no notice of its existence: because, the assignment, by operation of law, passes the rights of a bankrupt precisely in the same plight and condition as he possessed them, observes “ and the creditors claiming under a conveyance from the purchaser are bound in like manner as assignees, because they stand in the same situation as creditors under a commission 2 vol 74, 75. And in Fawell v. Heelis, Ambl. 723, Earl Bathurst acknowledged the rule to be that the equitable lien for purchase money, where the seller has not waived it by taking other security, is good not only against the purchaser, but against his creditors, whether under a commission or under a deed of trust in the nature of a commission. It is certain, he says, that persons claiming under such a deed stand in the same situation as creditors under a com*511mission. The Lord Chancellor’s opinion, however, was that the seller, in the case before him, had waived the lien by giving a receipt on the back of the deed for the purchase money and accepting bonds from the purchaser for the amount—a doctrine since overruled. But had he considered the lien as existing, there can be no doubt he would have held it good against the creditors of the purchaser who, becoming insolvent, had conveyed the estate in trust for their benefit. A different opinion appears, nevertheless, to have prevailed in the Supreme Court of the United States in Bayley v. Greenleaf, 7 Wheaton, 46. Chief Justice Marshall, in delivering the opinion of the court, considers that the vendor’s lien cannot be asserted against creditors holding under a Iona fide conveyance from the vendee ; and doubts whether it is settled in England that the lien remains against the assignees of a bankrupt or creditors coming in under the purchaser by act or operation of law. Had the learned Chief Justice gone a little further and looked into some later cases—particularly Grant v. Mills before mentioned and Ex parte Peake, 1 Mad. C. R. 346, (for these do not appear to have fallen under his observation)—it is probable his doubts upon the point would have been removed. In the first of these cases, Sir Wm. Grant, M. R. treats it, as a.settled rule, not liable to be disputed, that whatever equity the vendor would have against the purchaser, he is entitled to against his assignees : and in the last case, where the question was between the vendor and the assignee and creditors of a bankrupt vendee, Sir Thomas Plumer, Y. C., after showing that an equitable lien existed without a special agreement to extinquish it, lays it down to be equally clear that the right of lien applies also, where the vendee becomes bankrupt, against his assignee: they being in no better condition than the bankrupt himself.
The Chief Justice, however, in the case before referred to, remarks that were it completely settled that the vendor should retain his lien against the assignees of a bankrupt, it would not follow he would be entitled to it against creditors holding under a bona fide conveyance from the vendee; and he considers it to be inconsistent with the principles of equity and-with the general spirit of our laws that such alien should be *512set up in a court of chancery to the exclusion of Iona -fide creditors. The reasons given for this conclusion are very concisely stated; and if by “ bona fide creditors”, creditors at large are meant, who have paid no present consideration and given Up no present right in order to obtain a conveyance of the debtor’s property, I, for one, must beg leave to dissent: for, upon no principle consistent with our laws, can the doctrine, in my opinion, as to creditors in this situation be supported. It would be to confound all distinction, which ! think clearly exists, as has been already observed, between them and actual purchasers for valuable consideration without notice and to put the rights of such creditors, having claims only for antecedent debts, upon the same footing as though they had made fresh advances of money or goods or parted with some right upon the strength of the conveyance. If creditors have acquired rights in either of the last mentioned ways, in good faith and without notice of a prior equitable lien or trust, I agree it ought not to be supported to their prejudice ; and I cannot help thinking that the reasons assigned, in the opinion of the late Chief Justice and the principles there stated, were intended to apply solely to a case of the latter description. It does not distinctly appear, from the report of Bayley v. Greenleaf, that it was not a case of this sort; but enough appears to authorize an inference, at least, that the creditor, for whose benefit and security the conveyance in the first instance was made, was not a mere volunteer. He had entered into engagements for Greenleaf, the plaintiff’s vendee, to a large amount and the deed was made to secure these and also to secure the creditor for any further advances he might make or future engagements he might enter into on account of Greenleaf. The creditor, therefore, may have made further advances and incurred subsequent liabilities on the credit of the security; and if so, he was a mortgagee, as he appears to have been considered, not merely for an antecedently contracted debt but also in consideration of fresh advances and liabilities. Under such circumstances, without notice of the prior lien claimed by the vendor for purchase money, the right of the mortgagor might well be preferred. But supposing these particular *513considerations not to have entered into the case of Bayley v. Greenleaf, and the decision to have proceeded upon the broader ground which would seem to be covered by the opinion delivered, it is not, 1 apprehend, to be implicitly followed as a binding authority in this court; and where the court has already established, as I think it has, a different rule, such decision cannot have the effect of disturbing it.
There are, indeed, a variety of instances in which the Federal courts, instead of overruling and undertaking to control the decisions of the state courts, submit to follow and be governed by the rules and principles which they establish : Jackson ex dem. St. John v. Chew, 12 Wheaton, 153.
I shall adhere to the rule as laid down In re Howe; and decree the lien to be a valid and subsisting one against the assignee and the creditors of the company. There is no difficulty about fastening this lien to the fund in the hands of the defendant Dubois, although it is not entirely the proceeds of the lot sold by the testator Shirley. As between the parties to this suit, the mortgage given to the executors of Lawrence must be deemed to have been satisfied out of the other lots which it covered, so as to leave the lien in question unimpaired, and the lot upon which it operated was sufficiently valuable to produce the money now in hand, so that the complainant’s demand with their costs, must be satisfied out of it.