— The bill was filed to enforce a vendor’s lien upon fifty acres of land, sold by the appellant to the ap
Has a vendor an equitable lien upon land for the enforcement of such a claim, and is a court of equity of competent jurisdiction to enforce it? In Thomason v. Cooper,
In Williams, Assignee v. Craw,
In the case of Dayton Railroad Co. v. Lewton, reported in
In 2 Warvelle on Vendors, p. 206, ch. 27, section 14, the reason and the rule is stated as follows:' “Inasmuch as the vendor’s lien is based upon the theory that it would be unconscionable that the vendee should hold the land and not pay for it, and as equity regards the substance rather than the form of contracts, it is immaterial on principle what shape the refusal or neglect may take. Unless the vendor has evinced an intention, by the acceptance of other security, to release the vendee, it must bé presumed that he holds the land in trust to pay what he had agreed as the purchase price; and in the case of conditions annexed to a grant and assumed by the vendee, if the performance of the condition constituted an inducement to the sale, it is as much a part of the compensation to be paid as if the promise bad been to pay the vendor as part of the purchase-money a sum equal in amount to the-damages sustained by their breach; and the equitable lien will, it is held, attach to the land sold as well for such damages as for the purchase-money.”
In the case of Hooper v. Savannah & Memphis R. R. Co.,
In the case at bar, if the plaintiffs had obtained a judgment in a court of law against the respondents, for a breach of contract for failing to perform the covenants agreed to as the consideration for the conveyance of the land, and there were no other difficulties in the way, we hold that a vendor’s lien could be enforced against the land to secure the payment of the judgment.
We are of opinion that a bill for a specific performance would not lie under the facts as they appear in the present -case. The consideration expressed is the “erecting and oper
There is one feature presented by the averments of the bill in its present condition, which seems fatal to plaintiff’s right to relief. We have considered the agreement of the parties, only as it appears from the deed of conveyance, Exhibit A to the bill, and which is made a part of it, evidences a contract between the parties executed at the 'same time as the deed of conveyance. This contract must be construed together with the deed of conveyance. — Robbins v. Webb.
The judgment must be affirmed.
