— The lien of a vendor who has conveyed the lands to the purchaser is a charge upon the lands sold, which a court of equity will raise and enforce for the security and payment of the purchase money. It rests upon the doctrine that it is inequitable for a purchaser to retain the lands of the vendor without paying the purchase price. The lien will not be raised except for the purchase money. In a case of that character, it is competent for the vendee to show by parol that a promissory note, reciting that it was given for the purchase money of the land, was in fact given, in part, for such purchase money, and, in part, for another indebtedness. — String fellow v. Ivie, 73 Ala. 209. But such is not the nature of the present case. There was no conveyance of the land by Hester to Hunnicutt. The equitable lien of the vendor did not arise. .The parties, by express contract, created the , security which it was designed Hester, the vendor, should retain, which was evidenced by the writings they executed. Hunnicutt executed to Hester his promissory note for $500, payable at a designated time. Hester, in turn, executed to- Hunni*287cutt his bond, by which he bound himself to convey the land to Hunnicutt upon payment of the note. As we have many times decided, such a transaction is, essentially, the creation of a mortgage for the security of the specified debt. See the cases collated in Bankhead v. Owen, 60 Ala. 467. In that case, Chief Justice Brickell drew the distinction between the lien which a court of equity raises for the security of the purchase money of land which has been sold and conveyed to the vendee, and the security carved out by the parties themselves in cases like the present,.in the following language : “The equitable lien of the vendor has not, in the course of our decisions been carefully distinguished, at all times, from the security the vendor carves out for himself by retaining in himself' the legal title until the payment of the purchase money. The two are often spoken of as if they were of the same character and operation ; and yet they have no common element, except that each is a security for a debt — the one by the contract of the parties, the other by operation of law and under a decree of a court of equity. There can be no just and proper distinction drawn between a. mortgage to secure the payment of the purchase money, executed contemporaneously with the conveyance of the land', and a reservation of the legal estate as a security for the payment.” Citing the authorities. Later decisions of this court have recognized the doctrine. The contract before us, then, is, that the lands are charged by virtue of its terms, with the payment of the specified note for $500. It is the same as if Hester had conveyed the lands to Hunnicutt and the latter had executed a mortgage to the former to secure a note for $500 given at the same time. It is true, if there had been a partial or total want or failure of consideration of the note, that defense would be open to Hunnicutt, on bill to enforce the quasi mortgage; but if there was not such — if the whole amount of the note is owing, based upon a valuable consideration — it is not permissible to show, in partial defense of the bill, that a part of it was for other than purchase money of the land. As we have said, the parties expressly contracted to charge the land with the whole sum, and by their contract they must stand. We think the evidence satisfactorily shows that Hunnicutt assumed the Wilson debt, and that he, therefore, owed the full amount of the $500, mentioned in the note.
*288We are aware that this court, in Alexander v. Hooks, 84 Ala. 605, applied the rule of Stringfellow v. Ivie, 73 Ala. 209, supra, to a case like the present, and in Sykes v. Betts, 87 Ala. 537, we gave expression to similar views; but in doing so, there was a failure to observe the clearly-established distinction-between the vendor’s lien proper, which is purely the grace and creation of a court of equity, based upon that principle of equity that it is wrong for a person to retain the lands of another without paying the purchase price, and an express contract entered into between the parties by the terms of which they charge the land with a specified debt. In the latter case, the express condition of the bond for title is, that the obligor will make title upon payment of the specified note. It is not proper to treat it as a vendor’s lien, based upon the equitable principle above stated, and it can not be done without setting aside the express contract of the parties. The cases of Alexander v. Hooks, 84 Ala. 605, and Sykes v. Betts, 87 Ala. 537, supra, in so far as they conflict with the views herein expressed, are overruled.
The complainant is entitled to $500, and the interest thereon — the amount of the note, secured by the bond for title — as a charge upon the lands. Against this, Hunnieutt seeks, by cross bill, to recoup damages for breach of warranty of title to a part' of the land sold him consisting of a certain mill race over lands alleged to be in the occupancy of, and belonging to, the James heirs, who have ousted and deprived him of the use and enjoyment of the race. It is alleged that Hester had no title, and can make none, to this race ; in consequence of which he, Hunnieutt, is materially damaged. The answer puts these allegations in issue and denies the right to the relief claimed by the cross bill, in this respect. We gather from the case that there was a water mill situated on the land purchased by Hunnieutt from Hester, and that the land was principally valuable for the purposes of that mill. The mill had been there and in operation for more than forty years. The water by which it was propelled flowed from a creek, through a race erected, in part, on and through adjacent lands, which, at the time of the sale to Hunnieutt, belonged, in part, to the heirs of Isaac James and, in part, to one McNatt. Hester had, for manv years, owned the lands sold to Hunni*289cutt, with the mill thereon ; and had owned the James land with a portion of the mill race thereon. In 1871 he sold the latter (80 acres) to Isaac James, and, on February 15, 1874, executed to him a deed thereto, no* mentioning the mill race located thereon. He, however, thereafter, continued to use the race for the operation of the mill, as it had been used since the mill was built, many years before, without objection or molestation on the part of James, except that in 1873, after he had sold to James, he changed the location of the race, on the land so sold, moving it, at the farthest point, about fifty yards from its original line. The change was really a benefit to the lands. The testimony of Hester, if it were admissible, shows that this change was made with the express consent of James (now deceased) who said he preferred to have it in its changed location. This testimony cannot be considered, however, since he would not be permitted to testify to the facts, in support of the title of Hunnicutt, in any litigation the latter might have with the heirs of James respecting the title. It does appear, however, that Hester continued to use the race, as he had always done, down to his sale to Hunnicutt, and that Hunnicutt used it, in the same way, for twelve months after his purchase, without objection or hindrance from any source, and began to operate it the second season, but voluntarily suspended operations, evidently because it proved unprofitable. It appears that after this time, Hunnicutt called upon Mrs. James (the widow of Isaac James, who had died in 1888) to know if Mr. Hester had a right to the race through her land. Up to this point neither she, nor any one else, had ever raised an objection to his use of the race ; but she did then object, and forbade Hunnicutt to further use it. As to his dispossession of the race, Hunnicutt testifies as follows : “I have been deprived of the race on the land I got from Hester by parties filling the race and cutting trees in it. The dam torn out and no water could come through the race, and I was deprived of the use of the mill. The dam torn away was on McNatt’s land and most of the race that was filled up, and part of it on the land of Mrs. James. McNatt tore the dam away and filled up that part of the race which was oh his land and which was a part of the race I bought from Hester. I flon’t know of my own knowledge who filled tip that part *290of the race which was on the James land. It was done without my consent.” Mrs. James testified: “I do not know whether any of the race on the James land was filled up or not. I am told that it is. I did not authorize it done.” There is no evidence that any of the James heirs made any objection to- the use of the race by Hunnicutt, or had anything to do with filling it up. We can take no notice of the supposed right of McNatt to a part of the race, since it is not mentioned in the pleadings, and there is no evidence of want of title in Hester to the same. The case'made by the cross bill is that the race belonged to the James heirs, or Mrs. James, and to that we must be confined. The evidence establishes to our entire satisfaction that Hunnicutt voluntarily abandoned the use of the mill and race ; and after such abandonment, himself, agitated the question of his title, and, by his own action, caused Mrs. James to interpose objections she would otherwise have never thought of making. He called upon her and raised a question of Hester’s title, and this incited her to claim the race, for the first time, and to forbid his further use of it; and this is all there is of his alleged eviction. Although this race had been appurtenant to his land, bought of Hester, for 43 years, and during all that time had been constantly maintained and used, in the operation of the mill, without let or hindrance from any source, upon the mere objection of Mrs. James, the widow, who is not shown to have any title to the land, brought about by his own conduct, he placidly submits ; concedes away his rights' and sues Hester for damages for breach of his covenant of warranty. We think, under these facts, there has been no real eviction, and that Hunnicutt is in no position to claim damages, even if it were conceded that there was a failure of title to the race — a concession which we must not be understood, by any means, to make. We are of opinion the chancellor erred in allowing damages, and his decree is accordingly reversed, and a decree will be here rendered granting the relief prayed for by the original bill and denying the relief prayed by the cross bill. The appellee will pay the costs of. appeal.
Reversed and rendered.