73 Mo. 133 | Mo. | 1880
This was a proceeding in equity to subject to sale certain lands for the payment of that portion of the purchase money which was due at the time the suit was brought. The facts, as developed by the testimony are as follows: On the 2nd day of February, 1871,-one Richard Wilton, by deed of general warranty, conveyed to the defendant, David S. Eby, the land described in plaintiff’s petition, situated in Ralls county, Missouri. The consideration for this sale, as stated in the deed, was the sum of $15,000, to be paid as follows, as set forth in the deed: Eby was to pay off' and discharge at its maturity a promissory note for $5,000, executed by said Wilton to John B. Helm; and also to pay to Wilton $1,000 on the 1st day of Marchan each year from the date of said deed for a period of twenty years ; and at the end of twenty years Eby was to pay to Wilton the further sum of $10,000. Or, upon the payment by Eby at any time during said term of twenty years of all said installments due and unpaid, and the said sum of $10,000, he was to be discharged from any further indebtedness for said land. All of the above terms are recited and set forth in the conveyance from Wilton to Eby, which conveyance was filed for record in the recorder’s office of Ralls county on the 20th day of February, 1871. Under this deed Eby took possession of the land, and kept possession until the sale of the same to Fisher at sheriff’s sale, as hereinafter mentioned. Eby paid the first installment of $1,000.
On the 22nd day of February, 1873, the said Wilton and the plaintiff herein entered into a written agreement, whereby said Wilton, for a valuable consideration in said agreement set forth, assigned, transferred and set over to the plaintiff all of his (Wilton’s) right, title and interest in and to the debt above mentioned, and also his (Wiltbu’s)
When Eby made default in the payment of the second and third installments of $1,000 each, plaintiff' brought suit in the Hannibal court of common pleas agáinst Eby, and obtained two several judgments — one in September, 1873, for $1,000 and interest, and the other in December, 1874, for $1,000 and interest. These were both personal judgments against Eby; and on both these judgments executions were issued, directed to the sheriff’ off Ralls county, commanding him that of the. goods and chattels and real estate of Eby, he cause to be made the damages and costs in the executions mentioned. In obedience to the command of said executions, the sheriff of Ralls county did, on the 2nd day of March, 1875, levy upon and seize all the right, title and interest and claim of defendant Eby in and to the real estate conveyed by said Wilton to defendant Eby as above mentioned. After advertisement according to law, the said sheriff' of Ralls county, on the 26th day of March, 1875, while the circuit court of Ralls county was in session, did expose for sale to the highest bidder for cash, all the right, title and interest of defendant Eby in the land seized by said sheriff under said execution as aforesaid, being the same land conveyed by Wilton to defendant as aforesaid; and at said sale the defendant Eisher became the purchaser of all the right, title and interest of said defendant Eby in said lands for the sum of $8,000. Subsequently to the sale, the sheriff executed a deed to defendant Eisher, in which he acknowl
In this state of the case, the plaintiff brought suit against Eby for the amount of the fourth and fifth installments of $1,000 each, and praying that the real estate conveyed by Wilton to Eby be sold to pay the amount due, and for general relief. In this suit, John P. Fisher, who had bought the interest of Eby at sheriff’s sale, was made a party defendant. Eby filed no answer and suffered de.fault. Fisher filed an answer, which was substantially a demurrer to the petition. lie denied that the assignment from Wilton to plaintiff vested plaintiff with any right to subject the land to sale for the non-payment of the purchase money. The court, upon the hearing, dismissed the plaintiff’s petition. Plaintiff filed his motion for a rehearing, which was overruled, and the case is brought up to this court by writ of error.
Conceding, for the argument and purposes of this case, that the fact, which appears on the face of the deed executed by Wilton to Eby, that the purchase money was not paid, was sufficient to give Wilton a vendor’s lien for the purchase money on the land conveyed, without any express reservation'of such lien being made in the deed; and, conceding, further, for the like purpose, that the debt of Eby, together with the vendor’s lien, could be, and was, in fact, legally assigned to the plaintiff, Dickason, and that such assignment conferred upon the said assignee all the rights of the vendor; the only question remaining to be passed upon is, whether the plaintiff', after procuring his judgment
This precise question was before the court in the case of Outton v. Mitchell, 4 Bibb 239, and it was answered in the negative, and we think correctly. A vendor who has conveyed an absolute estate in land to his vendee, and has a vendor’s lien thereon for unpaid purchase money, may resort either to a court of equity, and ask for the enforcement of his lien by a sale of the l^ind to pay the debt, or he may procure his judgment at law for so much of the purchase money as remains unpaid, and subject the land to-sale by execution. A sale of the laud is the result, whether one or the other of these remedies is adopted; and if the-vendor elects to adopt the latter remedy, and the land is sold, he must stand by his election ; for it necessarily implies a waiver of his ‘right to effect a sale by means of the other remedy. The vendor by his own act having brought about and directed a sale under execution of all the right, ' title and interest of his vendee, will be presumed to have waived the right he had to go into a court of equity and accomplish the same by having a decree directing the sale of the land for the specific purpose of paying the purchase money, and will be estopped from asserting against a purchaser at such sale, a right to enforce a vendor’s lien by a re-sale of the land. McArthur v. Porter, 1 Ham. (Ohio) 99; Grubb v. Grane, 4 Scam. 153.
What is here said must be-understood as applying to cases like the one we are considering, where the vendor has conveyed to his vendee all the estate he had ; and must not be confounded with that class of cases where the vendor retains the legal title, and has simply given a title bond to convey, upon the purchase, the vendee taking nothing
It is contended by counsel that, as the sheriff only sold and conveyed all the right, title and interest of Eby, the land itself was not sold and did not pass under the sheriff’s deed. "We think this argument unsound.. The deed executed by the sheriff, which is in the usual form of such conveyances, conveying, as it did, all the right, title and interest of Eby to defendant, he took by virtue thereof all the estate which Eby had in the land, which, by the terms of the deed from Wilton to Eby, was a fee simple estate. In the case of Bogy v. Shoab, 13 Mo. 380, it was expressly held that a deed conveying all the right, title and interest of the grantor will undoubtedly pass the land itself, if the grantor has an estate therein at the time of the conveyance. The case of Gaston v. White, 46 Mo. 480, to which counsel have cited us in support of the position taken, does not sustain it. In that case White had sold to Gaston certain land, and given a bond for title on payment of the purchase
We find no error in the action of the circuit court in dismissing the bill, and will, therefore, affirm the judgment.