60 Ala. 457 | Ala. | 1877
The primary question, rendering all others unimportant, presented by this record, is, whether a transferree by delivery of a promissory note, the consideration of which is the purchase-money of lands, — the transfer not being attended by any agreement, or by circumstances, which charge the vendor Avith a liability for the ultimate payment of the note, or of the consideration passing to him on the transfer, if the note is not available, — can assert and enforce the equitable lien of the vendor.
As a general rule, the holder of a promissory note, parting with it by mere delivery, must be understood to mean, he will not be responsible for its payment. A special indorsement, in the words usually employed, “ without recourse,” is an express declaration of the absence of responsibility. It is no more than the expression .of the implication of the law from a transfer by delivery merely ; and, except as passing the legal title to instruments which, under the statute, are made assignable, and are not by the law-merchant negotiable by delivery, its operation and effect, as between transferror and transferree, is that of a transfer by delivery. Assuming to transfer, whether by indorsement, or by mere delivery, necessarily implies the genuineness of the instrument, and the right to transfer; as is always implied, when power is exercised, that there is a right to exercise it, and a subject-matter over which it may be exercised. All this is implied in the ordinary transactions of business. A debtor may pay to his creditor bank-notes, and they may be accepted Avithout a word from the one to the other, — without any warranty of their genuineness ; yet, if they prove to be fictitious, the obligations of good .faith and conscience require that he should answer for their genuineness. "Without the imputation of criminality to him, and of gross folly, or of criminality to the creditor, it cannot be supposed he would tender, or the creditor accept, payment in spurious notes. But, if the notes are geuuine, and, without knowledge that the bank has failed and become insolvent, he pays, and the creditor receives, the loss falls upon the creditor. This has long been the settled law of this State.—Lowry v. Murrill, 2 Port. 282. So, if a promissory note is transferred, Avhether by delivery, or by a general indorsement, or a special indorsement declaring an absence of liability to answer for its ultimate payment, the law implies an obligation to answer for its genuineness, and an affirmation of authority to transfer. If the transfer is by delivery merely, and the genuineness of the note, or the authority to transfer, is not matter of dispute, the transferror ceases to be a party to the note, and incurs no responsibility. — Story on Prom. Notes,
The question was next discussed, though it did not arise, and, consequently, what is said is mere dictum, in White v. Stover, 10 Ala. 441; and the opinion is expressed, that the lien would pass to a transferree taking by delivery, without indorsement, the notes for the purchase-money. The judge delivering the opinion falls into the error of supposing that, in Hall v. Click, supra, the transfer of the notes was by indorsement expressed to be without recourse. "We can not perceive, if such had been the fact, that it would, in reason or principle, have justified any distinction in the two cases; for, as we have said, so far as the responsibility of the transferror is involved, it is not different, but the same in either case. It is enough to say, however, of that case, that the question was not involved. The vendor, having parted with the notes without indorsement, afterwards obtained them, on a valuable consideration, and he claimed to enforce the lien, not as an assignee, but by virtue of his original title, to which, with all its incidents and equities, he was remitted, when the notes were returned to him; subject, of course, to any defense, or equity, the makers may have acquired against the transferree, while the holder of the notes.—Page v. Green, 6 Conn. 338; Lindsey v. Bates, 42 Miss. 397; Cotton v. McGehee, 54 Ib. 570. Neither the transfer of the notes, nor his subsequent acquisition of them, operated an extinguishment of them ; nor was there any change of the relation existing between him and the vendee. The vendee stood as his debtor, holding his estate, which a court of equity would not, as between them, permit him to keep, without paying the consideration money. The case, in the light of its real facts — -and it is by these its authority as a precedent is to be determined — was that of vendor and vendee, not presenting any question of the rights and equities of a transferree.
The next case, in which an opinion on the question was expressed, is that of Plowman v. Riddle, 14 Ala. 169; in which the vendor had sold and transferred a mere equity, and had transferred the notes for the purchase-money by delivery, as collateral security for the payment' of a debt due from him to tbe transferree. The court say : “The rule is settled in this court, that the equitable lien of a vendor will pass to the assignee of a note, given in part payment of the purchase-money.” The only authority cited in support of the proposition is Roper v. McCook, 7 Ala. 318; which was not a case in which the vendor had an equitable lien, but in which he had reserved the legal title as a security for the
Reviewing the cases, in the order in which they have been presented, the case of Griggsby v. Hair, 25 Ala. 327, is the next case, in which the question was considered; and it was said: “It may safely be asserted, as a principle deducible from the decisions of this court, that when the vendor transfers a note, secured by a. lien of this nature, either by indorsement or delivery, and binds himself for its payment to the assignee or transferree, the lien on the land, unless expressly waived, is retained, and passes as an incident to the note, and may be enforced by the assignee.” Again, “It is true, if a note is assigned without recourse by the vendor, it amounts to an abandonment of the lien on his part, and his assignee can work out no equity to subject the land through him. But, whether or not the parties intended to abandon such lien, is a matter of fact to be gathered from the evidence, and the nature of the transaction.” The correctness of the latter sentence may well be questioned, if it is to be construed as importing that, whatever may be the intention of the parties, or their agreement, the lien will in any
The next case which may be supposed to bear on the question, is that of Griffin v. Camack, 36 Ala. 695, which was a bill filed by an assignee of a judgment, founded on notes given for the purchase-money of lands. What was the character of the transfer of the notes, is not expressly stated; and there is nothing to indicate that it did not impose liability on the vendor for their ultimate payment; nor does it appear that the vendor had conveyed to the vendee. The court say: “We think the law is settled in this State, that the unqualified transfer of a note, given for the purchase-money of land, or of a judgment upon the pote, is a transfer of the vendor’s lien on the land for the payment of the note.” The law of the State seems to us expressed in this sentence, with clearness, certainty, and precision; and it cannot be qualified or limited by judicial decision. It is an imqualified transfer, which passes the lien, or carries it to the assignee. Indorsements of promissory notes are treated by Judge Story, who but follows the elementary writers generally, as of four kinds: general, or absolute, restrictive, qualified and conditional. The first is, when the indorsement is in blank, or filled up payable to the indorsee, or his order, without any restrictive, or qualifying, or conditional words. A qualified indorsement “qualifies the duties, obligations, and responsibilities of the indorser, resulting from the general principles of law. Thus, for example, an indorsement of a note to A., “without recourse,” or “at his own risk,” &c.— Story on Prom. Notes, §§ 141-146; Hailey v. Falconer, 32 Ala. 536. An unqualified transfer of a promissory note — a transfer Avithout restriction or limitation, certainly without an exclusion of all liability of the vendor for the ultimate payment of the note — is the kind of transfer to which the court referred in this case. A transfer by delivery, generally, is a transfer without recourse, and a qualified, as distinguished from an unqualified transfer. The case of Wells v. Morrow, 38 Ala. 125, was that of an unqualified transfer; or, if there was any qualification, it was not in limitation or exclusion, but in enlargement of the liability of the vendor for the payment of the note — he was “to stand good for it, until it is paid.”
The equitable lien of a vendor is in the nature of a trust, and the principle on which it rests is, “that a person who
The equitable lien of the vendor has not, in the course of our decisions, been carefully distinguished at all times from 0the security the vendor carves out for himself, by retaining in himself the legal estate 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 reser
An assignment or transfer of the bond or note given for the purchase-money, when the vendor retains the title, will pass the security, without regard to its character. The transaction is then, in effect, a mortgage; the debt is the principal, and the security an incident. The vendee can never acquire the legal estate, until the debt is paid. The equitable lien is a trust, or a security for the vendor only, raised' and enforced for his benefit, and only on the equity existing between him • and the vendee, that the one should
It is on the principle of subrogation, when the transfer involves the transferror in liability, that the lien passes to the transferree. A party claiming subrogation to a security for a debt, which another party has obtained, either by operation of law, or by contract, if the security is not for the payment of the debt, but for the personal indemnity of the party obtaining it, is not entitled to it, if, as to such party, the debt or liability for it has ceased to exist.—Houston v. Br. Bank Huntsville, 25 Ala. 250.
Without valuable consideration, by gift, and by mere delivery, the appellee obtained the note for the purchase-money, from a transferree by delivery of the vendor; and at her suit the equitable lien of the vendor can not be raised and enforced.
The decree must be reversed, and a decree here rendered dismissing the bill. The next friend of the appellee must pay the costs in this court, and in the Chancery Court.