66 So. 483 | Ala. | 1915
While the general rule is different, Alabama has gone the full length in preserving the
The contract is silent as to the amount of the bond issue, but should be so construed as to mean that the parties contemplated only, such a limited’ amount of first mortgage bonds as would make the real value of same equal to their par value] and' did not intend that such an unlimited or disproportionate amount should be issued as to render the value of 'same considerably below par, or to malee the ascertainment of the value of same practically impossible in case of a failure by the said Campbell to comply with his contract. When contracts are susceptible of a reasonable construction which will uphold them, ’ courts should, in an effort to promote justice, s.o construe] them, and not place a construction upon them which will defeat the contract and thus obstruct justice.
We gather from the facts in this case that the wife of complainant did not join in the deed, and the agree
It is next insisted that the lien was waived for the reason that the vendor took a mortgage to secure a part of the purchase price upon a part of the land sold, but purposely omitted thé strip in question from the mortgage in order that' the vendee could use it in the promt)tion and organization of the proposed corporation ; 'also that the retention of the lien upon' the strip in question would operate in law as a fraud upon the proposed corporation' and the purchasers of its stock and. bonds. Had the vendor taken a mortgage on all the land to secure the purchase money, this would doubtless have been a waiver of the vendor’s lien, in the absence of an express retention of same.—Fields v. Drennen, 115 Ala. 558, 22 South. 114. Or if he had taken a mortgage on all the land for but a. part of the unpaid' purchase money, this would, probably be a waiver of the- lien as to the' balance, or had he taken a lien .on a part of the land for all of the un
It is true that the lien which equity, on principles of natural justice, creates as a security for the purchase of land sold and conveyed is the subject of waiver,. express or implied, from the acts of the parties. Generally the lien is regarded as waived if the grantor accepts. auy distinct or independent security, the authorities varying in the application of the rule to particular facts. There are cases in which no one of several acts is, of itself, sufficient. In such cases all the facts and circumstances should be considered, and if it appear that the vendor did not intend to look to the. land, but to rely on a substituted, independent security, or on the personal responsibility of the vendee, the presumption is rebutted, and the retention of the lien repelled.—Acree v. Stone, 142, Ala. 156, 37 South. 934.
Here we have no separate or independent security or collateral, but a mere agreement by the parties that the purchase money for the strip of land in question should be satisfied by first mortgage bonds to be issued by the proposed corporation. Had the corporation been organized and - the bonds issued and delivered, this would have operated as a satisfaction of the purchase price and an extinguishment of the vendor’s lien, or it might be that the lien could not prevail against 'the stockholders of the corporation or purchasers of the bond, who had no notice of the lien, or of the contract,'or who might not be responsible for a nondelivery of the bonds by Campbell to the complainant after the issuance of same; but we are not dealing with a bona fide purchaser from Campbell, or with a corporation which he should have organized, under the terms of the agreement. We are dealing with the vendor and vendee, and one whom the bill charges took a mortgage from Compbell with full notice of the vendee’s rights and equity, and instead of the enforcement of the lien being a fraud upon, any one, the nonenforcement of -same would reward an insolvent vendee for not performing his contract, and operate to give him and his mortgagee with notice the complainant’s land with little or no prospects for being paid for same. It would be almost, if not quite, a travesty upon justice to hold that this insolvent vendee, who had failed to perform his contract, should/ hold this complainant’s
The judgment of the chancery court is affirmed.
Affirmed.