157 Iowa 168 | Iowa | 1912
— The conceded facts of the case are as follows: One Rosa Weber, being the owner of a hundred
I will devise and bequeath all the rest, residue and remainder of my property after payment of the above legacies, which I may have at the time of my death of whatever kind, nature or description, real, personal or' mixed to be equally divided among my eight children now living, each to receive one-eighth; to my son, William, otne-eighth; to my son, Frank, one-eighth; to my son, George, one-eighth; to my son, Eddie, one-eighth; to my daughter, Mary Bothell, one-eighth; to my daughter, Annie Frisbie, one-eighth; to my daughter, Lizzie Weber, one-eighth.
Codicil.
I name and appoint my son, William Weber and A. B. Frisbie, my son-in-law, to be the sole executors of this will and my estate without bond and authorize and empower them to sell my real estate and sign a deed therefor as fully and completely as I myself could do. And said deed when so signed shall convey all right, title or interest I have in any of my real estate at the time of my death, and no bond shall be required for the sale of said real estate or other purposes. •
In the exercise of the power conferred upon them by the foregoing devise the executors on April 8, 1910, entered .into a written contract to sell and convey said land to Charles R. Hunter, plaintiff herein, and thereafter on March 1, 1911, a deed .of conveyance in pursuance of said contract was made and delivered. It further appears that the land was incumbered by a past-due mortgage of $2,500, and that other valid claims to the amount of $400 were outstanding against the estate. The testatrix left no personal property available for the payment of debts, and said land constituted the only fund from which means
But a judgment lien has no effect to create any property right in the judgment creditor. It does not attach to the land as distinct from the title held or obtained by the debtor. His lien simply gives him a prior right as against a general creditor to enforce his claim by levy upon and sale of the debtor’s legal or equitable estate in the land, .but he can not seize, sell, or acquire any greater interest than is owned by the debtor himself. If there be any equities, limitations, or conditions attaching to the debt- or’s title which would defeat it in the hands of the debtor himself, it would be subject to the same infirmities and liabilities in the hands of the purchaser under such levy. Even if the debtor has some real or apparent interest in land to which the lien his attached, yet if his title has been so qualified in the instrument creating it that it may be defeated or divested by a power intrusted to another, and it is in fact thereafter so defeated or divested, the lien falls with if, and the creditor can not pursue the property in the hands of a third person who has acquired it through the exercise of that power. This not only the reasonable rule, but is we think sustained by all the authorities. The thought will perhaps be more clear if we keep in mind the fact that a judgment lien does not attach to the land, but to the judgment debtor’s interest in it, and, if that interest be subject to any infirmity or condition by reason of which it is eliminated or ceases to exist, the lien attaching thereto ceases with it. Beaver v. Ross, 140 Iowa, 154; Thomas v. Kennedy, 24 Iowa, 405; Bucknell v. Deering, 99 Iowa, 548; Holden v. Garrett, 23 Kan. 98; Shipe v. Re-
Without quoting largely from the precedents, it may be said that their general purport is fairly reflected in Morse v. Bank, 47 N. J. Eq. 279 (20 Atl. 961, 12 L. R. A. 62), a case in which the facts are much like those shown in the record before us. There the will authorized the executor to sell and convey. A judgment creditor levied an execution upon the fractional interest of a devisee, and obtained a sheriff’s deed therefor. Subsequently the executor exercising the power given him by the will sold and conveyed to another purchaser. Upholding the latter conveyance the court says: “By the purchase at the sheriff’s sale, complainant acquired only Eichard’s estate as an heir at law, subject to the trust and power of sale contained in the testator’s will. If the power of sale subsisted and was capable of being executed at the time of the sheriff’s sale, the purchaser at the executor’s sale took a title under the testator’s will paramount to any estate derived from or through the heir.” The decision in in Wetmore v. Midmer, 21 N. J. Eq. 242, is also very closely in point upon the question before us. The case
The point made by appellant that plaintiff purchased the land with notice of the claim asserted by appellant is not controlling. If the judgment was a lien which would follow the title in the hands of a grantee in an executor’s deed, he would be held to have had at least constructive notice of it and could not be heard to object to its enforcement, but if, as we have said, there was no lien or if there was a lien, and it was such as would be extinguished by a conveyance under the paramount power, there is no rule of law or principle of equity which would forbid his taking such conveyance and insisting upon holding the title free from the claims of the alleged lien holder.
The equities of the case as argued by counsel for appellant growing out of the claimed fact that the sale was made by the executors for the purpose of cheating and defrauding the judgment creditors of the devisees are not very persuasive. We do not hold, nor must anything we have said be so understood, that the property or the property rights which the devisees obtained under the will are not liable to be subjected to the claims of their creditors. Our decision only goes to the proposition that a judgment creditor acquires no lien or claim upon the land left by the testator which can be asserted dr enforced against it in the hands of one to whom it has been conveyed by the executors in the exercise of power conferred upon them by the will. Beyond that we need not go. The creditors
It is unnecessary to further pursue the discussion. What we have said sufficiently indicates our conclusion that the trial court was not in error in holding that, upon the agreed facts, the appellant’s judgment constitutes no lien upon the land in the hands of the plaintiff.
The decree below 'is therefore — Affirmed.