Grosvenor v. Allen

The Vice Chancellor.

The question which seems to have been intended to be presented here, and the decision of which will probably dispose of both suits, is, whether the judgment owned- by the complainants is a legal or equitable lien upon the interest of Rathbun in the leasehold estate, so that a sale under it would convey a title, either in law or equity, to the purchaser. To' decide this, we must look at Rathbun’s interest in this estate at the time of the rendition of the judgment. In November, 1834, he had contracted with Wilkinson to erect for him a block of buildings, for which Wilkinson was to pay him $9,000 in manner following, viz. “ he agrees to assign and transfer to him (Rathbun) a lease,” &c. (meaning the leasehold property.) Simultaneously, Wilkinson executes to Rathbun a power to go into possession of the premises, revoca™ *278ble at the pleasure of Wilkinson. Now if these in-instruments, either of them or both of them together, amount to a legal conveyance of the property to Rathbun, then is the judgment a lien, and the complainants in this suit must prevail. But I do not so construe this contract. The agreement set up in the bill is, in effect and to all intents, a contract on the part of Rathbun to erect for II ilkinson a block of buildings, upon the completion of which he was to be paid the sum of $9,000. The mode of payment was to be by an assignment of the leasehold premises. If the payment was to be made in cash, there can be no doubt but Rathbun, before he could recover the money, would have to prove the performance on his part. And though the payment i§ to be made by an assignment of a specific piece of property, still he could not come into court to enforce a specific performance of that contract, without averring and proving that it was fully performed on his part. It is true that Wilkinson gave Rathbun possession of the premises, that is, he gave him a power to go into possession, but this power was revocable at the pleasure of Wilkinson. He thus reserved in his own hands the right of resuming possession, in case Rathbun did not comply with his agreement. All this does not seem to me to amount to any present assignment of Wilkinson’s interest in the premises, to Rathbun. It is only a covenant to convey, upon the fulfillment of the agreement on the part of Rathbun; in other words, it is an executory contract or agreement on the part of Rathbun, to take a conveyance of the leasehold premises, as a full compensation for the erection of the buildings; and an agreement on the part of Wilkinson, to convey the said premises *279upon the completion of the buildings. This conveyanee was never made, itathbun had not,'at the time . — _ . . _ of the docketing of the complainants’ judgment, a conveyance of these premises: he has not had it since.

The statute (1 Vol. Rev. Stat. 744, Sec. 4) provides that the interest of any person holding a contract for the purchase of lands, shall not be bound by the docketing of any judgment or decree, nor sold by execution tipon any such judgment or decree. It makes provision, however, for reaching such interest by bill in Chancery.

Previous to the passage of this statute, it was not so. The statute now leaves the interest of a purchaser of lands by contract, upon the same footing that it leaves a judgment debtor who owns bonds, notes, or other choses in action. A judgment at law binds neither. An execution can touch neither. A judgment creditor can obtain no lien upon either, until bill filed after the return of his execution unsatisfied. If before such bill be filed, the judgment debtor transfers or assigns his interest in his land contract or his choses in action, a purchaser in good faith will hold it ag’ainst the judgment creditor. Such I deem to be the plain provisions of the law, and so I understand it to be construed by the Chancellor in Talbot vs. Chamberlain, 3 Paige, 219. In that case, the Chancellor says that even if the purchaser of lands by contract has paid the whole purchase money, but has not yet acquired the legal title, a judgment against him is no lien upon such lands.

In this case, I deem itathbun to stand in the light of a purchaser of lands by contract; and inasmuch as no conveyance of the lands specified in the con*280tract has ever been made to him, the judgment of the complainants could not attach upon them as a lien, néither could they be sold upon an execution issued uPon such judgment. The complainants’ only remedy was to file a bill under the other provisions of the statute. A valid conveyance has been made by Rathbun before this has been done: the assignees of Rathbun have acquired a valid title to the leasehold premises and, conveyed them by a valid agreement to the defendant Allen, and he can rightfully hold them.

The complainants, however, insist that if they have not a legal lien upon the premises, they have an equitable lien by virtue of their judgment, and the knowledge that the defendants had of the fact of the existence of such judgment.

Equities generally arise between contracting parties and their privies. Judgment creditors generally hold by virtue of their judgment. They come in ■ through the process of law, and they must take what the law gives them. There might have been equities as between Wilkinson and his assigns and Rathbun and his assigns. But the complainants here stand in the place of neither of the contracting parties—they are assignees of neither. They came in by virtue of their judgment, and they must take what the law gives them as the fruits of their judgment. If the similitude between lands held by contract and other equitable assets or choses in action, is correct, the complainants might with just the same propriety insist that their judgment constituted an equitable lien upon all the choses in action which Rathbun had at the time of its rendition. Such an idea has'never been entertained even as against a purchaser of a chose in action, with notice of the judgment,

*281In relation to all these interests, land contracts, notes, bonds, &c. the law favors the vigilant. The first judgment creditor, even if it be the youngest, who files his bill, acquires the first lien. And as to such matter, it is the filing of the bill, and the filing of the bill aloné, which creates the lien.

If either of these equitable interests are transferred by the judgment debtor bona fide, before the filing of such bill, the bill does not reach it. A transfer for the benefit of creditors, is a bona fide transfer, and for a good consideration. The creditors acquire rights by it; and from all I can see in this case, they are entitled to the avails of the sale to Allen; for this is, after all, a contest between the complainants and the creditors of Rathbun. The injunction must be dissolved with #10 costs.