93 Va. 404 | Va. | 1896
delivered the opinion of the court.
W. J. Biggs sold 450 acres of land to the Elliston Development Company, reserving a vendor’s lien to secure the deferred payments thereon. The Development Company subdivided this land into lots, streets, and alleys, and sold a number of the lots to purchasers, some of whom paid in full, and some only in part. The defendant company having failed to meet the deferred payments as they fell due, Biggs, who sues for his wife, Annie S. Biggs, to whom the debt had been assigned, filed a bill in the Circuit Court of Montgomery county to enforce the vendor’s lien. At the December term,1894, a decree was entered in favor of the plaintiff for the sum of $9,-550.08,with interest on $8,575.05, apart thereof,from the 10th day of May, 1894, and costs. Thereupon W. H. Edmundson, Huida Edmundson, Jennie B. Wilson, and Sydney Sheltman filed their answers, in which they allege that they had purchased lots of the defendant company and had paid the full purchase price therefor, and that, at the time of said purchase and sale, W. J. Biggs was a stockholder in said company
. The first error assigned is that the court erred in holding that the fact that W. J. Biggs was a stockholder in the Elliston Development Company estopped him, or his assignee, from asserting the vendor’s lien against the lots purchased by the defendants from the Elliston Development Company; secondly, that the court erred in holding that the streets, lanes, and alleys, set out in the plat and subdivision made by the Elliston Development Company, subsequent to their purchase from W. J. Biggs, should be excluded from said decree of sale.
We think that both these assignments of error are well taken. An incorporated company is, in a legal point of view, wholly distinct from the persons composing it, and may make any contract with one of its members or stockholders that it might make with a stranger. See Cook on Stocks and Stockholders, sections 6 and 11; 3 Pom. on Eq. Jur., section 1090. These propositions, however, are elementary and really call for no citation of authority in their support.
It is equally clear that the mortgagor cannot bind his mortgagee by any contract prejudicial to his title, and the same principle applies as between a vendee and his vendor who has reserved a lien for the purchase money. That this, as a general proposition, is true, is, we believe, not controverted, and we are of opinion that the mere fact that the mortgagee stands in the relation of stockholder to a corporation which is the mortgagor does not of itself constitute any exception to the rule, unless some act or. declaration
We are of opinion that the decree of the Circuit Court is, for the reasons stated, erroneous, and this court will enter such decree as the Circuit Court should have entered.
Reversed.