178 So. 793 | Miss. | 1938
The question here involved requires a consideration of the equitable principle of subrogation and its proper application to the facts of this particular case. On March 17, 1930, the appellant V.M. Box, purchased a tract of land in Alcorn county from one J.W. Coleman, for which he paid $400 in cash and executed a promissory note in the sum of $2,350, secured by a deed of trust on the land, due December 17, 1930, both of which instruments were also signed by the appellant Mrs. V.M. Box, and were to secure the payment of the balance of the purchase price. This note was payable to J.W. Coleman, or bearer, and was therefore negotiable by delivery, but the same was duly endorsed by J.W. Coleman, as appears from the testimony and from the back of the note itself, and deposited by him with the First National Bank of Corinth, Miss., together with the deed of trust, as collateral security to an indebtedness owing by him to the bank in excess of the sum of $8500.
Shortly prior to November 10, 1930, according to the testimony of the then president of the bank, arrangements were made by J.W. Coleman with the bank to take over the Box note and to credit his indebtedness to the bank with the sum of $2200, which was the balance then due on the Box note, and with the understanding that a new note for this amount should be taken from V.M. Box and wife in favor of the bank, on which J.W. Coleman would become endorser. It was contended by the appellant V.M. Box, however, that he arranged for the $2200 loan from the bank by agreeing to pledge as security therefor two policies of life insurance in the sum of $1000 each, one of which was issued in 1925 and the other in October, 1930, and that the note was to be endorsed by J.W. Coleman in accordance with an agreement *29 with the bank in that behalf. At any rate, all the parties met at the bank on November 10, 1930, evidently pursuant to a general agreement among them, when V.M. Box and wife signed the note for $2200 in favor of the bank, and V.M. Box signed the deed of trust, which the answer of both appellants admits was drawn up and prepared to be signed by them to secure the payment of the said indebtedness, but which, for some reason, was not called to the attention of Mrs. Box at the time she signed the note. This note was thereupon duly endorsed by J.W. Coleman, and the proceeds of the loan were credited on his indebtedness, instead of being deposited as customarily done to the account of the makers of the note, and the said V.M. Box was charged on the loan ledger with that amount. Thereupon the bank surrendered the original note of $2350 and the deed of trust given by Box and wife to J.W. Coleman, and the deed of trust was then canceled and satisfied of record at the request of the said J.W. Coleman.
Under this state of fact it is contended by the appellants that the surrender to them of this $2350 note and the cancellation of the deed of trust, whereby the same had been secured, had the effect of extinguishing the vendor's lien, and that, since the land constituted their homestead, and the new deed of trust had not been signed by Mrs. Box, the bank was left without remedy to force the collection of the $2200 note given by them to the bank, as against the land.
In view of the position so taken by the appellants, this suit was brought in the chancery court of Alcorn county by the appellee, Thomas A. Early, receiver of the First National Bank of Corinth, Miss., on this note for $2200, alleging substantially the foregoing facts, except as to who arranged for the $2200 loan, and further alleging that there was a balance of $1,726.51, plus 8 per cent. interest from date, and a reasonable attorney's fee, due on the note; and, in addition to its prayer for general relief and for a determination of the rights of *30 the appellee under the notes given both to J.W. Coleman and to the bank, respectively, the bill specifically asked for a personal decree against the appellants for the amount still due and unpaid, and for a sale of the land in question to satisfy this indebtedness as representing the balance of the purchase price of the land under a vendor's lien therefor. The court below so held and decreed, and from this decree appellants have prosecuted this appeal.
Regardless of whether the court below would have been justified in declaring from a technical standpoint that the bank continued to hold the vendor's lien on the land, as formerly evidenced by the note and deed of trust given by the appellants to J.W. Coleman, and which had been with the consent of the bank surrendered and canceled, there is presented for our decision the right of the appellee receiver to be subrogated to the rights formerly held by J.W. Coleman under the facts stated, and the prayer of the bill for general relief. In this connection it should be observed that the record shows without conflict that the $2200 loan made by the bank to the appellants on the endorsement of J.W. Coleman was not a loan that could be used by the appellants for any and all purposes at their will and pleasure, but was made for the specific purpose of being applied on the purchase price of the land and pursuant to an agreement, express or implied, that the bank was to hold a lien of equal dignity and position with that represented by the original note and deed of trust. On this point the appellant V.M. Box was asked whether it was the intention of the parties that his wife should sign the note and deed of trust to the bank, and he replied: "I suppose it was." And, when asked why she didn't sign it, he replied: "I don't know why, they didn't — but she didn't." Mrs. Box testified that she did not refuse to sign the new deed of trust, and the effect of her testimony is that it was just not called to her attention.
We think that the chancellor was warranted in finding *31 that it was the intention of all the parties that the bank should retain a lien on the land when the original note and deed of trust were surrendered for cancellation. Mrs. Box admitted that she signed the new note at the bank, and the proof shows that the deed of trust was prepared for the joint signature of the appellants, and there is no good reason that can be assigned as to why the bank should have been willing to release the land merely on the security of the new note and policies of insurance which had but little cash surrender value compared to the amount of the indebtedness, and on the security of J.W. Coleman's endorsement, since he was already liable to the bank for the same amount of the total indebtedness represented by this new note and the balance of his own account that existed after the $2200 had been credited thereon.
Under the facts shown by the record, the bank was not a mere volunteer in the transaction. It advanced the remainder of the purchase price on the land at the instance of both the vendor and the vendee and had an interest in getting the indebtedness of J.W. Coleman reduced at the bank and also an interest of its own to protect in its agreement for security on the land for the repayment of the purchase price advanced at the instance of the parties, and on which the vendor remained liable. If Coleman had been compelled to pay this $2200 note to the bank, then his right to have the original purchase-money deed of trust revived in equity for his benefit would not be questioned, since this amount of the purchase money on the land has never been paid by the appellants, and until when no homestead rights should exist in their favor against the vendor or his equitable assignee. Cansler v. Sallis,
Sections 505 and 2853, Code of 1930, the latter of which is relied on by the appellants as requiring a vendor's lien for the purchase money of land to be assigned in writing to enable the transferee to enforce the lien, are not applicable to suits in equity to enforce the right of subrogation; but, even if this were not so, section 2853 would enable the bank as holder of the original negotiable promissory note of $2350, given by the appellants to J.W. Coleman, and which was both endorsed in writing and delivered by him to the bank, to enforce the rights of an assignee, including the lien securing the same, since the remaining portion of that section does not limit or qualify the first sentence thereof dealing with the assignment of a promissory note when assigned in the manner provided for in the chapter on negotiable instruments, of which said section is a part.
Neither does the presumption that a lien secured by a deed of trust is extinguished by the cancellation thereof on the record, nor the presumption of payment that arises from the possession by the makers of a note and deed of trust given to evidence a purchase money or other lien, prevent a court of equity from reviving and enforcing the lien, where there are no intervening equities, when necessary to do so in order that right and justice may prevail. When we look through the form and to the substance of the transaction whereby the original note and deed of trust were canceled and the new note and deed of trust taken, it is clear that the real consideration of the latter was the balance of the purchase price of the land then remaining unpaid.
Nor is the right of subrogation in the present case denied under the authority of the case of Welch v. Thigpen,
In the case of Louisiana National Bank v. Knapp,
In Union Mortgage, Banking Trust Co. v. Peters,
The doctrine of subrogation is one of equity; its object is the prevention of injustice; it rests upon the principle of natural equity; and its basis is the doing of complete and essential justice between the parties without regard to form. Prestridge v. Lazar,
In 25 R.C.L., p. 1343, it is said: "It is well settled that where the security given for the loan which is used to pay off an incumbrance turns out to be void, although the person taking it expected to get good security, he will be subrogated to the rights of the holder of the lien which the money advanced is used to pay; and that in such case the person advancing the money cannot be regarded as a stranger or volunteer, there being no intervening equity to prevent. The rule has been applied where the security fails because of partial or total want of title in the person giving it, and also where it fails of its purpose because of some defect in its execution, or because of want of authority or capacity in the person executing it."
The foregoing rule was followed in the case of Russell v. Grisham,
In the case of Bell v. Bell,
We do not think that the cases of Berry v. Bullock,
Affirmed.