124 Ark. 150 | Ark. | 1916
Mrs. S. L. Driver sued O. R. Lilly, Allen Holloway, M. P. Grant and Philip Lacer to recover on four promissory notes, each for the sum of $112.50 and to foreclose a vendor’s lien in a deed from O. R. Lilly to Allen Holloway to certain lands in' Mississippi County. At the September, 1914, term of the chancery court, judgment by default was taken against all the defendants except Lacer, who filed his answer denying the right of plaintiff to assert a vendor’s .lien on the lands in controversy and averring that he was an innocent purchaser for value without notice of any equities of the plaintiff.
The material facts are as follows: On the.24th day of June, 1907, O. R. Lilly conveyed to Allen Holloway the lands in controversy and as evidence of the purchase money Holloway executed and delivered to Lilly his four promissory notes each for $112.50, dated June 24, 1907, and due respectively oh or before Nov. 15, 1911, 1912, 1913, 1914. Lilly executed his warranty deed to Holloway and each of the above notes was recited in the deed ■and a lien was expressly reserved in the deed to secure the payment of the notes.
On the second day of December, 1909, Allen Holloway and his wife sold and conveyed the land to J. B. Barron and O. R. Lilly, who agreed to assume the $450 lien existing against the land in favor of Lilly by virtue of his former deed. On the 20th day .of May, 1910, Barron and wife conveyed his undivided one-half interest in the land to O. R. Lilly and the latter assumed and agreed to pay all encumbrances against the land. On the 12th day of September, 1910, O. R. Lilly and wife conveyed the land to M. P. Grant for a valuable consideration. On the '2nd day of January, 1912, M. P. Grant conveyed the land to Philip Lacer for a valuable consideration. On the 6th day of March, 1911, O. R. Lilly executed a promissory note for $10,000 in favor of Mrs. S. L. Driver, and put up as collateral security in addition to other notes, the four notes executed to him by Holloway above referred to. On the '20th day of January, 1914, Mrs. Driver caused to be entered on the record oif the deed from Lilly to Holloway a certificate to the effect that the four notes described in the deéd had been hypothecated to her to secure the indebtedness of O. R. Lilly to her.
The chancellor found that Philip Lacer was an innocent purchaser of the land for value without notice of the assignment of said notes, and that because the notes had not been assigned to Mrs. Driver until after the date .of the deeds reconveying the land to Lilly, that the legal and equitable title to the land merged in Lilly and constituted a cancellation of the vendor’s lien retained in the deed from Lilly to Holloway. Prom the decree entered of record the plaintiff has appealed.
It is contended by counsel for the plaintiff that this case is controlled by Hebert v. Fellheimer, 115 Ark 366. They insist that the facts in that case are in all essential respects similar to the facts in the instant case; .but it will be noticed that in that case the vendor had transferred the notes to a third person before the land had been reconveyed by the purchaser to him. There, as here, the holder of the note purchased them in the usual course of trade for value and before maturity, but in the instant case the reconveyance of the land to Lilly was made before he transferred the notes as collateral security to Mrs. Driver. While there is this difference in the facts, we think the principle of law announced in that case is controlling here. It is true the . general rule is that where one having a vendor’s lien on land becomes the owner thereof, the lien is entirely extinguished, still there are exceptions to the rule and this is one of them.
Under the principles of law decided in Hebert v. Fellheimer, supra, and cases cited, Lacer was necessarily affected with notice of the lien retained for the benefit of Lilly in his deed to Holloway. This is in application of the settled rule that one is bound 'by.whatever, affecting his title, is contained in any instrument through which he traces title, even though it be not recorded, and he has no actual notice of its provisions. The notes were specifically set out and recited in the deed from Lilly to Holloway and this deed being in Lacer’s chain of title he is bound by whatever is contained in it. On the other hand the deed to Lacer was not in the chain of title to Mrs. Driver. The notes were transferred before their maturity. She paid value for them and had no notice whatever that the land had been reeonveyed to Lilly or that Lilly had conveyed the land to Grant and that Grant had conveyed it to Lacer. So far as she was concerned, then, there was no merger of the legal and equitable title in Lilly by reconveyance of the land to him. Lacer being 'bound by the recitals in all the deeds through which he must trace his title will be deemed to have knowledge that the notes were outstanding and not yet due at the time the land was reconveyed to Lilly. Therefore in order to protect himself he should have required Lilly to have produced the notes or to have canceled them on the margin of the record of the deed from himself to Holloway. In no other way could be protect himself against a bona fide holder for value of the notes before their maturity. The notes having been described in the deed, the notes and the vendor’s lien stand in the same relation. “They are as inseparable as the note and mortgage. \As in the latter case, the note is the principal and essential thing, and the lien the accessory and incident.. The lien passes with the transfer of the note and expires when it is paid. The lien is, in effect, a mortgage, and, like it, passes to the assignee of the note, it being negotiable, ■freed from any defense the maker had against it in the hands of the vendor.” Pullen v. Ward, 60 Ark. 90.
It follows that the decree must be reversed and the cause will be remanded with directions to the chancellor to render a decree in accordance with the prayer of the complaint.