58 F. 490 | 8th Cir. | 1893
after stating the facts as above, delivered the opinion of the court
Upon the evidence in the case it is indisputable that the intestate, Nichols, at the time of his death owed the plaintiffs the amount stated in the master’s report, and that by an express agreement between the plaintiffs and Nichols they had a lien on the cattle and other property mentioned in the bill to secure the payment of that indebtedness. The lien, which was created by agreement of the parties in this case, is called an “equitable lien” or an “equitable mortgage.” It is said equitable liens by contract of the parties are as various as are the contracts which parties may make. 1 Jones, Liens, § 27. Such liens do not depend upon the possession of the property by the creditor, as do liens at law. Nor do they depend upon any statute for their force and efficacy, and they are not affected by the registration laws. They are founded upon the contract of the. parties, which may be either verbal or in writing, and they will be enforced in equity against the party himself and his personal representatives, heirs, voluntary assignees, and purchasers with notice. Id. §§ 28, 30, 93; Fletcher v. Morey, 2 Story, 555, 505; 3 Pom. Eq. Jur. § 1235; Gregory v. Morris, 96 U. S. 619; Hauselt v. Harrison, 105 U. S. 401; Pinch v. Anthony, 8 Allen, 536; Tied. Eq. Jur. §§ 384, 385. The law gives no remedy by which such, liens can be established and enforced. Being an equitable lien, the enforcement of it is exclusively within the province of a court of equity. “Equity,” says the supreme judicial court of Massachusetts, “furnishes the only means by which the property on which the charge is fastened can be reachéd and applied to the stipulated purpose.” Pinch v. Anthony, supra; Hovey v. Elliott, 118 N. Y. 124, 136, 337, 23 N. E. Rep. 475. The lien asserted by the plaintiff was a matter of purely equitable cognizance, and was not, therefore, within the jurisdiction of the probate court of the Choctaw Nation, which is not invested with the jurisdiction or powers of a court of equity. The plaintiffs brought their suit in the proper forum; indeed, in the only forum which could rightfully assert jurisdiction over the parties and the subject-matter.. The lien which the plaintiffs were seeking to enforce being an equitable one, it could only be enforced in a court of equity; and in giving effect to and in enforcing such a lien a court of equity proceeds independently of the attachment laws of the state or territory applicable to common-law actions for the recovery of a debt. When appealed to for that purpose, a court
In the case at bar, upon the allegations of the plaintiffs’ bill, it would have been proper for the court to place; the property in the; possession of a receiver, and enjoin the defendant from interfering therewith until the hearing. In substance this is what was done. The marshal was directed to seize and hold the property. For some reason, not very apparent, this order, called in the record an attachment, was set aside, and the property restored to the custody of the defendant. From ihis last order the plaintiffs prayed an appeal to the supreme court of the United States, which was allowed, and one of the contentions of the appellant is that the lower court thereby lost jurisdiction of the case. The order discharging the so-called “attachment” was not a final judgment, and was not appealable, (Robinson v. Belt, 56 Fed. Kep. 328,) and the jurisdiction of the court over the cause was not affected by anything done in relation thereto.
A further contention of the appellant is that, as the plaintiff executed to Mchols written hills of sale for the cattle, in which they acknowledge the receipt of the purchase money, they cannot show by parol testimony that the price was not paid, and that there was an agreement that they should have a lien upon the cattle until it was paid. The objection is not tenable. Parol testimony is not admissible to contradict or vary the hill of sale so far as it contains a. contract; hut so far as it is a receipt for the purchase money of the property it inay he explained, varied, or contradicted to the same extent that it could be if it was simply a receipt for the purchase money separate from the contract of sale. It is common learning that, so far as a receipt goes only to the acknowledgment of payment, it is merely prima facie evidence of the fact of payment, and may be explained, varied, or contradicted by parol testimony. 7 Waite, Act. & Bef. 448, where the authorities are collected. An agreement for a lien on the property sold to secure the payment of the purchase price is a contract about a matter not dealt with by the bill of sale, and not inconsistent with anything therein con
It is objected that, the sale of the cattle having taken place and the contract for the lien having been made in Arkansas, the lien cannot be enforced in the Indian Territory. 'This contention is founded on the erroneous assumption that the lien sought to be enforced is the creation of an Arkansas statute. The Arkansas statue had nothing to do with the creation of the lien. It was an equitable lien, created by contract, and binding upon the parties in equity, and can be enforced in all jurisdictions where the equity jurisprudence of this country prevails. The sellers did not lose their equitable lien on the cattle by their removal into the Indian Territory, any more than the purchaser lost his title by that act. The legal rights and equities of the parties remained the same in the Indian Territory that they were in Arkansas.
We have looked through the - record carefully, arid find no error of which the appellant can complain. We think it proper to say. that the only errors disclosed by the record are those of which the plaintiffs alone could complain. We feel constrained to say that 'the order allowing the defendant $800 for attorneys’ fees to be paid out of the proceeds of the sale of the mortgaged property does not meet with our approval. The fact that the defendant was an administrator, and that the estate of which he was administrator was insolvent, or without means, did not entitle him to a large percentage of the proceeds of the sale of the mortgaged property to pay his •attorneys for resisting the foreclosure. The administrator represented his intestate, and was no more entitled to demand that a part of the proceeds of the mortgaged property, already insufficient to pay the mortgage debt, be diverted to pay his attorneys for defending the foreclosure suit, than the intestate, if living, would have been. We know of no case where a court can take the money of a plaintiff which happens to come into its possession, and use. it to pay his adversary’s attorneys. The cases are very rare where the court is justified in directing the payment of attorneys’ fees out of a fund in court, and, without stopping to enumerate them, it is sufficient to say this was not one of them. Trustees v. Greenough, 105 U. S. 527; Hauenstein v. Lynham, 100 U. S. 483, 491. In the case last cited the supreme court say: “It is a settled rule in this court never to allow counsel on either side to be paid out of the fund in dispute.” But the appellant is not complaining of this order, or the order quashing the attachment, and, as the plaintiffs did not appeal, this court is powerless to deal with them.
The decree of the court below is affirmed.