This is a bill filed by Mrs. S. A. Spears against B. I. Taylor, I-I. H. Dowling & Co., and H. H. Dowling and Mrs. Neal Dowling, individuals composing the firm of H. H. DdAvling & Co. The purpose of the bill is to enforce a vendor’s lien on the lands described in the bill. The critical question for determination is: Did the complainant, under the circumstances accom*182partying tlie sale, waive lier vendor’s lien hy talcing personal security to secure the deferred payment?
The undisputed facts are that on August 30, 1904, the complainant, through her husband, who was her general agent, sold the lands to R. I. Taylor for the sum of $1,100, and the complainant executed to Taylor an absolute deed to the lands. Taylor paid $1,000 of the purchase price in cash, and complainant accepted 1ns note for $100 with W. E. Clements as surety for the balance, due November 15, 1904. The note recites that it was given in part payment of the lands, and describes the land. The first case involving this question that came before this court was decided in 1842. — Foster o. Trustees, etc., 3 Ala. 302. In tliat case the court, speaking through Ormond, J., after reviewing the English and American eases, concluded with this summary: “It cannot, therefore, Ave think, admit of serious doubt that the Iuav on this interesting subject ought to be considered as settled, at least in the United States, that, Avhere a vendor of land executes a conveyance and takes personal collateral security as a pledge or mortgage, no lien exists on the land itself. So far as the presumed lien on the land for the purchase money rests for support on the supposed intention of the parties, it may be confidently stated that in this state it rarely, if ever, exists in the contemplation of the parties Avhere a conveyance of the land is made.” The doctrine as stated in that case has never been departed from by the court, as Avill be seen by reading numerous cases decided since its promulgation. — Walker v. Carroll, 65 Ala. 61; Walker v. Struve, 70 Ala. 167; Donegan v. Struve, 70 Ala. 437; Donegan v. Mentis, 70 Ala. 437; Tedder v. Steele, 70 Ala. 347; Williams v. McCarty, 74 Ala. 295; Carroll v. Shapard, 78 Ala. 358; Chapman v. Peebles, 84 Ala. 283, 4 South. 273; Jackson v. Stanley, 87 Ala. 270, 6 South. 193; Hubbard v. Buck, 98 Ala. 440, 13 South. 364.
But the question of Avaiver, it has been held, is one of intention, and the burden of proof is on the vendee to establish in the particular case that the lien has been intentionally displaced, or waived, by consent of the parties, express or implied. “If it remain in doubt, then the lien must be held to attach.” — Tedder v. Steele, *18370 Ala. 347, 351, citing 2 Story’s Eq. Jnr. § 1224; 1 Perry on Trusts, § 236. In respect to the burden of prof it has also ben held that “the burden of proof is, in the first instance, on the party asserting a waiver of the lien; but, when it is shown that a distinct or independent security, sufficient to operate as a waiver, has been taken and accepted, the onus is shifted on the vendor to prove an understanding or agreement for its reservation.”' — Jackson v. Stanley, 87 Ala. 270, 6 South. 193. While it is true that the note upon which the vendor’s lien is sought to be enforced in the case at bar has upon it a personal surety, which fact evidences the waiver of the lien, it is also true that the note contains these recitals : “It is understood that this note is given in part payment on the S. A. Spears land, better known as the ‘W. M. Sheppard Place.’”. Immediately following the recitals quoted is a description of the land by the government subdivisions. In this state of the case the rule is that such recitals are cogent facts indicating an intention not to waive or abandon the. vendor’s lien, but to retain it — so cogent, and the presumption so strong, as to overcome and rebut the weaker presumption of waiver arising from the taking of personal security on the note for the purchase money. — Tedder v. Steele, 70 Ala. 347; Chapman v. Peebles, 84 Ala. 283, 4 South. 273; Hammett v. Stricklin, 99 Ala. 616, 13 South. 573; Graylee v. Lamkin, 120 Ala. 210, 24 South. 756; Hood v. Hammond, 128 Ala. 569, 30 South. 540, 86 Am. St. Rep. 159. So it would seem that in the instant ca.se the burden of proof remains with the vendee to establish that the lien has been intentionally waived. — Tedder v. Steele, supra.
The chancellor held that the complainant was not entitled to relief, thus necessarily holding that the lien was intentionally waived. No presumption of correctness can be indulged in favor of the chancellor’s decree; but we must reach our conclusion without regard to it. The oral evidence has been carefully considered, in connection with the documentary, and we are unable to concur with the chancellor. Our conclusion is that the preponderance of the evidence shows that the lien was not waived, and that respondents Dowling & Oo. took *184their mortgage with notice of the lien. It follows that the decree of the chancery court must he reversed, and a decree will he here rendered granting the relief prayed for.
Reversed and rendered.
Tyson, C. J., and Haralson and Simpson, JJ., concur.