210 P. 1057 | Mont. | 1922
prepared the opinion for the court.
The plaintiff herein was, on the fifteenth day of December, 1913, the owner of two contracts, executed by the Northern Pacific Railway Company, as vendor, for the conveyance of a section of land in Yellowstone county, Montana. Under date of December 15, 1913, the plaintiff and one Baber entered into a contract by the terms of which the plaintiff bargained and sold the section to Baber. In the contract was the following provision: “It is understood and agreed that the two N. P. contracts mentioned above are collateral for the payment of $2,751.35 to the first party, his heirs and assigns.
“St. Paul, December 15, 1913.
“For value received, I hereby sell, assign and transfer all my rights, title and interest in the within contract to William II. Baker of St. Paul, Minn., as per exchange contract attached.
“ [Signed] G. M. Digen.”
Later a formal assignment was made of the Northern Pacific contracts by the plaintiff. This last assignment was, by its terms, made subject to the payment of $2,751.35 to plaintiff. The Northern Pacific contracts, together with, the last assignment, were delivered to the agent of plaintiff to procure the eonsent of the railway company to the assignment, in accordance with the terms of the Northern Pacific land contract, which assignment the company refused to approve, and thereafter the plaintiff executed a straight assignment of the contracts to Baker, which was delivered to the agent of plaintiff, to be delivered to Baker, to obtain the consent of the railway company to the assignment. When this was obtained, the contracts were to be returned to and held by the plaintiff in the nature of security for the payment of the $2,751.35.
At the time the plaintiff and Baker entered into the contract for the sale of the land covered by the Northern Pacific contracts, all the purchase price therefor, save and except the sum of $2,751.35, was paid, and for that sum Baker gave to the plaintiff five promissory notes of $550.17 each; Baker assigned the Northern Pacific contracts to one Derringer; and Derringer assigned them to the defendant Schultz. Thereafter, the defendant tendered the amount unpaid on the Northern Pacific contracts to the railway company, and demanded a deed; and about the same time the plaintiff tendered the amount due on the contracts and demanded a conveyance. Both were refused by the company, and the defendant herein brought an action in the state of Minnesota against
Findings of fact and conclusions of law were made and filed herein by the trial court, in favor of the defendant, and judgment was entered thereon, from which judgment and an order denying plaintiff’s motion for a new trial these appeals are prosecuted.
The questions presented in this court for decision are: (1) Did the plaintiff ever have a vendor’s lien? (2) Has the same been waived? (3) If not waived, does the defendant occupy the position of a tona fide purchaser for value?
Assuming, but not deciding, that the plaintiff ever had a vendor’s lien, we think that he waived it. As vendors’ liens are secret, unknown to the world, and often productive of much hardship, they are not encouraged by the courts, and should not be extended beyond the requirements of the settled principles of equity. If the vendor did not rely on his lien, it should be regarded as waived, and any act or declaration on his part, which shows that he does not rely upon it or has abandoned it, operates to prevent it from attaching or destroys it after it has attached. These principles are always strenuously enforced; and, even though the vendor may do no act which would indicate a voluntary waiver, the lien may still be lost as a result of his own acts or by his failure to act, and for all practical purposes become extinguished. (2 Warvelle on Vendors, sec. 698, p. 826; Moshier
A vendor’s lien is that lien which in equity is implied to belong to a vendor for the unpaid purchase price of land sold by him, when he has not taken any other lien or security for the same beyond the personal obligation of the purchaser. Such liens are the creatures of equity, and not created by contracts of the parties. A lien created by express written contract between the vendor and vendee is not a vendor’s lien, but is a security more in the nature of a mortgage. The lien of the vendor on lands for the purchase money is lost in all cases when any security is taken on the land or otherwise, for the whole or- a part of the purchase money, unless there is an express agreement to the contrary. That the additional security so taken should prove unavailing does not affect the question. The lien is waived by the taking of the security because it shows the intention of the vendor not to rely upon his implied equitable lien. (McKeown v. Collins, 38 Fla. 276, 21 South. 103-106.)
When the plaintiff attempted to reserve an equitable mort gage by his agreement of December 15, 1913,- by his assignment of the Northern Pacific contracts at the same time, and by his further assignment of the contracts on December 23, 1913, and when, after executing the assignment of January 8, 1914, he requested that the Northern Pacific contracts
It is urged by counsel for plaintiff that waiver is an affirma tive defense, which must be set up in the answer. This is undoubtedly the law, when the facts constituting the waiver do not otherwise appear. A waiver of lien is defensive matter which must generally be pleaded in the answer unless it otherwise appears. (25 Standard Ency. of Proc. 737.) The facts above related, constituting the waiver, are set forth in the plaintiff’s complaint, and are also testified to by the plaintiff himself, which may be taken advantage of by the defendant. (Scott v. Edgar (Ind. App.), 60 N. E. 468; Faves v. Robinson, 46 Tex. 204.) What we have said herein renders unnecessary a decision of the third question presented.
We recommend that the judgment and order be affirmed.
Per Curiam: For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion, the judgment and order appealed from are affirmed.
Affirmed.