45 P. 290 | Or. | 1896
Opinion by
The single question in this case is whether a grantor of real estate by absolute deed, followed by delivery of possession to his grantee, has an implied equitable lien thereon for the unpaid purchase-money. It has been several times mooted in this-court, but the doctrine of the English court of chancery, which recognizes and upholds such lien, has never been recognized or established here, although the state is classed by many textwriters among those-in which the lien prevails. The earliest case in which reference is made to the question, and the one-most strongly relied upon to sustain the doctrine, is Pease v. Kelly, 8 Or. 417, but the court in that case only decided that by taking a mortgage to secure-the payment of purchase money the vendor waived the equitable lien, and therefore, could not maintain the suit. Nothing more was in fact decided in that case, although it is stated in the opinion that “the lien exists if there is no higher security.” It is next referred to in Kelly v. Ruble, 11 Or. 75, (4 Pac.
The doctrine seems to have been borrowed by the English courts of chancery from the civil law, as a means of evading the rule of the common law under which land was not liable, both during and after the life of the debtor, for simple contract debts, and, after the reason for its original adoption had ceased to exist, was enforced upon the ground that the previous decisions had “the effect of contract, though no actual contract had taken place”: Mackreth v. Symmons, 15 Ves. Jr. 329. Many of the courts of this country, following the English cases, have adopted the rule; but they have never been able, in our opinion, to place the doctrine upon any satisfactory principle applicable to the condition of affairs in a country where real estate is one of the principal articles of commerce, and liable for the debts of the owner, and in which a system of registration prevails. The doctrine has been variously stated to rest upon natural equity, a supposed intention of the parties, a trust arising out of the ven
The earliest English case which contains a full discussion of the doctrine and the reason and authorities by which it is supported is Mackreth v. Symmons, 15 Ves. Jr. 329. In that case Lord Eldon was only able to determine that two points were clearly settled: First, that, generally speaking, there is such a lien; and, second, that in those general cases in which there would be a lien as between vendor and vendee the vendor will have a lien against a third person with notice that the money was not paid. But as to what would be sufficient to make a case in which the lien would not exist he felt obliged to declare from the authorities that it was “ obvious that the vendor, taking a security, unless by evidence, manifest intention, or declaration plain, he
Under the authorities, it would seem that where the doctrine prevails each case must be determined upon its own peculiar circumstances, according to the views of the chancellor and the weight of argument at the bar; so that it is impossible to tell, without the judgment of a court, whether the lien does or does not exist. It may be well doubted whether any subject connected with the American law of real property has provoked more judicial discussion and controversy, and is now in a more chaotic state, than the doctrine of a grantor’s lien, where such lien is held to exist. There is hardly a rule upon the subject which has not been somewhere denied, and hardly any two states agree upon the essential points of the doctrine. “No other single topic belonging to the equity jurisprudence,” says Mr. Pomeroy, “has occasioned such a diversity and even discord of opinion among the American courts as this of the grantor’s lien. Upon nearly every question that has arisen as to its operation, its waiver, or discharge, the parties against whom it avails, and the parties in whose favor it exists, the
In courts of the United States the doctrine has been recognized where established by the local laws
Affirmed.