Jenkins v. Craig

Court: Indiana Court of Appeals
Date filed: 1898-12-22
Citations: 22 Ind. App. 192
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Lead Opinion
Black, C. J.

— This was an action brought by the appellants to recover damages for breach of covenants in a warranty deed, whereby the appellee conveyed to the appellants certain real estate in the city of Noblesville. The court overruled the demurrer of the appellants to the second paragraph of the appellee’s answer. The first paragraph of answer was withdrawn, and, the appellants standing by their demurrer and refusing to plead further, judgment was rendered for the appellee. The overruling of the demurrer is assigned as error.

The essential facts discussed by counsel, upon which the court determined the cause in favor of the appellee, as

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gathered from the complaint and answer, were substantially ag follows: One Alexander Castor was the owner of two parcels of real estate in said city, which, for convenience, we will designate as “Lot A” and “Lot B,” both being subject to the general lien of a judgment obtained in 1889 against, said Castor by one William Vestal, when, in August, 18891, said Castor sold and conveyed lot A to the appellee, who immediately went into possession thereof. It does not appear whether or not this conveyance was by warranty deed; nor is the character of the conveyance stated. In January, 1890, Castor sold and conveyed to the appellants lot B, and they immediately went into possession thereof. In October, 1890, the appellee sold and by warranty deed conveyed said lot A to the appellants, at and for the sum of $500. In January, 1893, the appellants sold, and by warranty deed conveyed, to one David F. Moss said lot B. In June, 1895, an execution was issued on said judgment, said Moss still being the-owner, through said warranty deed of the appellants of said lot B, and the appellants the owners of said lot A. Prior to-the issuing of said execution, said Moss called the attention of the appellants to the fact that said judgment was a lien on the real estate conveyed to him by warranty deed executed by them, and that under the terms of said deed they were liable for the payment of said judgment. The appellants failed and refused to take any steps for the satisfaction of said judgment, or to secure the release of the lien thereof on said real estate, and thereupon the execution was issued at the instance of said Moss. In July, 1895, the sheriff levied the execution on said lots A and B; and in the same month,, ■under the direction of said Moss, the sheriff .sold said lot A to said Moss for $66.82, in satisfaction of the judgment, the-appellants having full knowledge of said sale. The attention of the appellee was not called to the judgment prior to-the sale, of which he had no knowledge. Said Moss received the sheriff’s certificate of sale, and, the real estate sa
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sold not having been redeemed, the sheriff, at the expiration of the year for redemption, issued a sheriff’s deed therefor to said Moss, who thereunder took possession of said lot A, and evicted the appellants therefrom. Said lot B at all the times mentioned, was of the value of $200 or more, an amount largely in excess of said judgment, including interest and costs. Said lot B was not offered for sale on said execution.

The complaint stated a good cause of action in favor of the appellants upon the covenants of the warranty deed of the appellee, but it is claimed that the additional facts presented by the answer constituted an equitable defense. The rule which it is sought to apply is spoken of in Bank of Commerce v. Nat. Bank, 150 Ind. 588, 593, as “the universally established equitable rule that property subject to a lien, if sold by the debtor in parcels, is subject to resale, for the discharge of the lien, in the inverse order of its alienation ” For applications of this rule and statements thereof, see Day v. Patterson, 18 Ind. 114; Aiken v. Bruen, 21 Ind. 137; Alsop v. Hutchings, 25 Ind. 347; McCullom v. Turpie, 32 Ind. 146; McShirley v. Birt, 44 Ind. 382; Sidener v. White, 46 Ind. 588; Houston v. Houston, 67 Ind. 276; Hahn v. Behrman, 73 Ind. 120; Henderson v. Truitt, 95 Ind. 309; Merritt v. Richey, 97 Ind. 236; Richey v. Merritt, 108 Ind. 347; Aurora Nat. Bank v. Black, 129 Ind. 595; Jennings v. Moon, 135 Ind. 168. Under some of the statements of the doctrine in these cases, it would seem from the general form of the rule announced that the grantee of the parcel first sold, in seeking to assert the equitable right against the purchasers of parcels subsequently conveyed by the same grantor need not, in pleading, state the character of the conveyance to such first grantee, but may simply allege, as in the case before us, that his parcel was “sold and conveyed” to him. “If a mortgagor conveys- the mortgaged land in separate parcels by warranty deeds, and afterwards pays the mortgage debt, he is not entitled to contribution from the pur

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chasers, because he pays merely his own debt, which his covenants bound him to pay.” 2 Jones Mort. section 1090. “If a mortgagor sells portions of the mortgaged premises in different parcels at different times by warranty deed, that which he retains is in equity primarily liable as against all but the mortgagee for the whole debt, and such grantee is not required to contribute.” 2 Jones Mort. 1091.

The foundation of the doctrine that, where the owners of the several parcels subject to a mortgage hold under the mortgagor by titles successive in order of time, the first grantee has an equitable priority as against the later grantee, so that the parcel last conveyed by the mortgagor is primarily chargeable with the whole mortgage debt, is said to be found in the equities which subsist between the mortgagor and such first grantee of a part of the mortgaged premises. 3 Pom.-Eq. section 1224. It is there said: “Whenever the mortgagor conveys a portion of the land ‘subject to’ a mortgage by a warranty deed, and retains the residue of the land in his own hands, that portion of the land retained by the mortgagor becomes, as between himself and his grantee at all events, ,the fund primarily liable for the whole mortgage debt. The form of the deed shows that the grantee not only assumed payment of no portion óf the mortgage debt, but did not buy his parcel even subject to the mortgage; and the entire burden was therefore left upon the portion of the land remaining in the ownership of the mortgagor.” It is further said: “The inference is natural, even if not necessary, that the same burden follows this portion, when subsequently conveyed by the mortgagor to a second grantee.” In the next section the learned author says: “The doctrine stated in the foregoing paragraph is one of purely equitable origin, and is not an absolute rule of law, and if the peculiar equitable reasons on which it rests are wanting, it ceases to operate. * * * The doctrine in its full scope and operation primarily depends upon the relation subsisting between the mortgagor, or other owner of the entire mortgaged

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premises, and his grantee of a parcel of the land. This relation, in turn, results from the form of the conveyance,, which, being a warranty deed, or equivalent to a warranty, shows conclusively an intention between the two that the grantor is to assume the whole burden of the encumbrance as a charge upon his own parcel, while the grantee is to take and hold his portion entirely free. * * * When the deeds to the successive grantees are not warranty or equivalent thereto, but simply purport to convey the mortgagor’s right, title and interest in the parcel, the intention is clear that the grantees respectively assume their portions of the burdens. Their several parcels are all liable ratably and not in the inverse order.”

In Guion v. Knapp, 6 Paige (N. Y.), 35, it is said: “The principle of charging different parcels of the mortgaged premises, which have been sold at different times, subsequent to the mortgage, in the inverse order of their alienation, is not always confined to the original alienations by the mortgagor who is personally liable for the payment of the debt. The principle is equally applicable to several conveyances at different times, by the grantee of the whole or a part of the mortgaged premises, where he conveys with warranty,” etc. See, also, Aiken v. Gale, 37 N. H. 501; Welch v. Beers, 90 Mass. (8 Allen) 151; Gill v. Lyon, 1 Johns. Ch. 446; Skeel v. Spraker, 8 Paige 182.

In Carpenter v. Koons, 20 Pa. St. 222, it was said by the court: “A man who purchases part of a tract covered by a mortgage, buying the title out and out, clear of encumbrances and paying a full price for it, has a plain right to insist that his vendor shall allow the remainder of the mortgaged premises to be taken in satisfaction of the mortgage debt before the part sold is resorted to. This being the right of the vendee against the mortgagor himself, the latter cannot put the former in a worse condition by selling the remainder of the land to another person. The second purchaser sits in the seat of his grantor, and must pay the whole value of what

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he bought toward the extinguishment of the mortgage, before he can call on the first purchaser to pay anything. The first sale having thrown the whole burden on the part reserved, it cannot be thrown back by the second sale. In other words, the second purchaser takes the land he buys subject to all the liabilities under which the grantor held it. But if the rule is to cease when the reason of it ceases, it cannot extend to a case where the first sale was made subject to a mortgage; and that is the condition of the present one. The defendant’s deed is older than his adversary’s, but it conveys him nothing but the equity of redemption. * * * There is a wide and palpable difference between one who buys land subject to a mortgage, and has a reduction in the price equal to the amount of the lien, and another who pays its full value and stipulates for a title clear of encumbrances. Such a distinction is anything in the world but a ‘theoretical subtlety.’ ” '

In Day v. Patterson, 18 Ind. 114, it was said: “It is probably a rule of law that where a mortgagor sells the equity of redemption in the lands mortgaged, at different times, to different purchasers, the first of such purchasers may compel the mortgagee to exhaust the portions later sold before selling his.” The case was not disposed of upon this question. It was made to proceed upon the agreement of the second purchaser with his grantor, the mortgagor, that such second purchaser would pay off as a part of the purchase money of his parcel the mortgage which was a lien upon it and also upon the parcel first sold by the mortgagor, being an agreement that the second purchaser would assume the entire mortgage, which was treated by the Supreme Court as a promise made for the benefit of the grantee of the first parcel sold. It was said of Day the first grantee, that his grantors, the mortgagors, “were bound to satisfy the encumbrance upon the land sold to him. In a sale to Patterson,” the second purchaser, “they, in effect, leave with him the amount of money

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necessary to discharge that encumbrance, as the consideration of his agreement to pay it off for the benefit of Day.”

In McShirley v. Birt, 44 Ind. 382, it was said that under the rule the eighty-acre tract, which was the last conveyed, would have been the first liable, as between the several vendees of the mortgagors, to the payment of the mortgage, without any stipulation by the purchasers of said eighty acres to pay the mortgage debt. It was shown that the prior conveyance of thirty-nine acres of the mortgaged property was by warranty deed, and that in the subsequent sale and conveyance of the remaining eighty acres to another grantee it was stipulated in the deed that the grantee therein should pay the mortgage as a part of the consideration for the eighty acres.

In Merritt v. Richey, 97 Ind. 236, the court said: “It is well.settled that when a judgment is a lien upon several parcels of land which are afterwards sold to various persons at different times, a court of equity will compel the sale of such land in the inverse order of its alienation. * * * This being the rule, in equity, it follows as a sequence that, as between the first and any subsequent purchaser, it becomes the duty of the latter to pay the judgment by allowing the land purchased by him to be first applied to its payment, and when such subsequent purchaser, upon whose land the writ issued upon the judgment has been levied, either pays the judgment or takes an assignment of the same to protect his land, such judgment must thereafter, as against a prior purchaser, be deemed extinguished if the land levied upon was of sufficient value to pay it.”

In Henderson v. Truitt, 95 Ind. 309, it was said: “Where a mortgagor sells a part of the mortgaged land by warranty deed, such deed exempts the land conveyed by it from contribution in favor of the mortgagor, or any one else claiming the remaining mortgaged lands under him, with notice of the conveyance. 2 Jones Mort., sections 1090, 1091. As has been seen, the purchase by Henderson of a part of the mort

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gaged lands was nearly a year and a half subsequent to the time at which John McClamrock received a warranty deed for the part purchased by him. Henderson, therefore, became the purchaser, of that portion of the mortgaged lands which remained in Jones after he and his wife had conveyed. and warranted a part to McClamrock. Consequently, applying the doctrine, deduced from the authorities as above, to the facts, as we find them in the complaint, the lands purchased by Henderson became primarily liable for the payment of the note sued on by Binford.”

In Jennings v. Moon, 135 Ind. 168, it was said: “When * * * Ereeman and wife sold the undivided one-half of lot 8, by warranty deed, to appellees, the obligation to pay the mechanic’s liens on all said lots remained upon Ereeman and wife, and any property owned by them was primarily liable for the payment of the liens. When, therefore, * * Ereeman and wife sold the remaining undivided one-half of said lot to appellants, they conveyed to appellants only the title which they then possessed, which title was coupled with a primary liability to páy the liens on the whole lot:”

In Clowes v. Dickinson, 5 Johns, 235, which is cited in Sidener v. White, 46 Ind. 588, and which is a leading case upon the doctrine now under examination, it will be observed in the statement of the facts that the plaintiff, the first purchaser of one of the two encumbered lots, received from his grantor a deed of conveyance in fee with covenant of warranty. In Sidener v. White, supra, the doctrine was applied in aid of a purchaser of personal property subject to the lien of an execution, the seller, the execution defendant, having other property, real and personal, out of which the execution might be made in full, without the sale by the sheriff of the property so sold by the execution defendant. In Aurora Nat. Bank v. Black, 129 Ind. 595, liens for wages due employes of a corporation, which covered all its property, were enforced. A certain contract for the delivery

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■of scrap iron, which was held to be property of the corporation, and which had been sold and assigned by the corporation, being the last property transferred by it, was held to be subject to the payment of the liens of the employes before resort to property transferred by the corporation at an earlier date. It was said that all who acquired title to the property ■of the corporation or liens upon it, acquired such title ■or liens subject to the prior and superior liens of those to whom wages were due, and that, for the payment of such superior liens, the property last owned by the corporation should be first exhausted, etc. The sale of a chattel in possession of the seller carries with it an implied warranty of title. Marshall v. Duke, 51 Ind. 62; Bash v. Young, 2 Ind. App. 297; Thurston v. Spratt, 52 Me. 202.

The warranty of title will be implied, whatever may be the character of the personal property which is'offered for sale. The doctrine extends not only to all kinds of goods, but also to all kinds of incorporeal personalty, such as choses in action, both negotiable and non-negotiable notes, bonds, .and open accounts, corporate stock and patent rights. See Tiedeman Sales, section 185. “The warranty of title ¡amounts to an assurance that the seller has a free and perfect title. Hence the warranty is broken by the enforcement, if not by the mere existence, of prior encumbrances, mortgages, pledges or liens.” Tiedeman Sales, section 186 and. cases there cited; Close v. Crossland, 47 Minn. 500, 50 N. W. 694; Hunt v. Sackett, 31 Mich. 18.

The character of the conveyance from the judgment defendant, Castor, to the appellee, not being shown, we cannot hold the appellee’s answer sufficient. That defect in the pleading renders it insufficient on demurrer, and we need not and do not decide the question as to what would be the rights of the parties, under the situation which has accrued as shown by the pleadings, upon an additional showing of a conveyance to the appellee of some supposable particular

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character. The judgment is reversed, with instruction to sustain the demurrer to the second paragraph of answer.

Wiley and Comstock, JJ., took no part in this cause.