63 Ala. 347 | Ala. | 1879
In Hightower v. Rigsby, 56 Ala. 126, and in Bankhead v. Owen, 60 Ala. 457, it was decided, after much consideration of the question, that the equitable lien of a vendor of lands, for the payment of the purchase-money, did not pass by a transfer of the note, which did not involve the vendor in liability for its ultimate payment, and which, in effect, operated, so far as he was concerned, and secured to him all the benefits of a payment. The bills, in those cases, affirmatively disclosed that such was the character of the transfer of the notes; and its operation to pass the lien was a question raised and decided in the Court of Chancery. In this case, it does not affirmatively appear that such was the character of the transfer, nor does it appear that, in the Court of Chancery, the sufficiency of the transfer to .pass the lien was controverted.
It is a very general rule in appellate courts, which this court has observed very closely, that questions not made and decided in the primary courts, will not avail on error to reverse a judgment or decree, unless it be a want of jurisdic
Affirmed.