49 Tenn. 127 | Tenn. | 1870
delivered the opinion of the Court.
We are satisfied, from the pleadings and proofs in this cause, that John W. Summer, on or about the 21st
It is charged in the bill, that a title bond was executed by Summer for the conveyance of the land, on the payment of the purchase money, and that it passed into the hands of the administrators of Francis, who, in the first part of their answer, admit its existence, but state, in a subsequent part, that they may be mistaken, and that the paper which they saw may have been the plat and certificate of survey. Summer, in his answer, admits that he sold to Francis 97 acres and 5 poles of land; took three notes for the purchase money; retained the note first due; transferred the other two to complainant; says he
After Summer had conveyed, or agreed to convey, the land to Francis, he executed a deed on the 29th of June, 1861, to William Barton, as trustee, for 802J acres and 18 rods, with the reservation hereinafter mentioned, to secure a debt therein specified, due D. M. Jarrett; and Jarrett insists, in his answer, that if any title bond was executed, it does not include the land, or any considerable part thereof, conveyed in said deed of trust.
After the filing of complainant’s bill, A. M Alexander recovered judgment in the Circuit Court of Cannon county, on the 12th October, 1865, against Summer, for $878.11 and costs, under which, and the execution issued thereon, he purchased the land containing by estimation 97 acres, at Sheriff’s sale, on the 4th December, 1865, and took a Sheriff’s deed on the 20th August, 1867, conveying the •same by the metes and bounds set forth in the plat and certificate; and he and his agent, Fare, who made the purchase for him, insist that the contract between Summer and Francis was by parol, and deny the existence of the vendor’s lien claimed in the bill and amended bill.
A deed from Summer to James F. Floyd for the 8021-acres described in the trust deed to Barton, and bearing date 28th February, 1867, is contained in the transcript, but as it does not appear to have been put in issue by the pleadings, its provisions need not be here stated.
The questions principally discussed before us arise out of the question of fact, whether the .contract between Sum
It has been seen that Fare was a mere agent for Alexander in the purchase at Sheriff’s sale, and so far as this record discloses has no interest whatever in the land; aud the real contest is now between the complainant and defendant, Alexander, whose suit against Summer was brought. and prosecuted since the commencement of this suit, and who became a purchaser, pendente lite, of the land in controversy. And it is quite clear that' Alexander can not, for two reasons, successfully set up title: first, because the legal title was in Barton, the trustee at the time of his levy and execution sale, and he acquired nothing by his purchase; secondly, because he was a purchaser after the commencement of this suit. It is well settled that a purchaser will be affected with constructive notice whenever his purchase is made during the prosecution of the suit brought to enforce an adverse claim or title, which is set forth with sufficient certainty and distinctness to advise, him of its bearing on
As between complainant and Summer, there can be no serious question that the complainant, as assignee of two of the notes for purchase money, is entitled to a vendor’s lien. See 3 Head, 537; 2 Head, 128; 1 Hum., 537; Meigs, 52.
As it has been earnestly argued that the contract between Summer and Francis was by parol, it may not be superfluous to consider the case on the hypothesis that there may be some doubt as to whether a deed, title bond or other writing was executed.
The bill, as we have seen, alleges that there was a title bond. Summer, in his answer, states, as above remarked, that he had the land surveyed for the purpose of executing a title bond to Francis, but that Francis died very suddenly a short time afterwards; that he does not remember whether he executed to said E. Francis a bond for a title or not; but if he did not, he was to have done so, and had the land surveyed for that purpose, as stated in a previous part of this opinion. He says, expressly, that the ninety-seven acre tract is included within the boundaries of said deed of trust to 'William Barton; that the legal title to said land is yet in him, but belongs to the estate of E. Francis, deceased. Neither he nor any of the defendants named
But they could not have formally pleaded the statute of frauds, because the bill states an agreement in writing, and seeks nothing but an execution of that agreement through the enforcement of the vendor’s lien; and, in such a case, a plea that there was no agreement in writing, is not proper: 1 Story’s Eq. PI., § 762. Consequently, if Summer, Barton and Jarretfc were now before the Court, they could not, in any form, interpose the trust deed to Barton as a barrier in the way of complainant, for the obvious reason that the ninety-seven acres of land involved in this suit — with the possible exception of eleven acres, parcel thereof, as to which the proof is not clea&wkey;-were not, in point of fact, conveyed in, but were expressly reserved out of the deed of trust.
The argument which has been so confidently pressed before us, that the contract between Summer and Francis was a parol contract, as to the sale of land, and can not be enforced, rests upon the assumption that such parol contract was void under the statute of frauds; but, in Sneed v. Bradley, 4 Sneed, 301, it was said that “it would be more correct to designate such contracts as voidable rather
But the contract stated in the bill is a written contract, and the effect of Summer’s answer, admitting the sale of the 97 acres and 5 poles of land, and expressly denying that they are included in the deed of trust to William Barton, (with an indefinite exception mentioned in the answer,) would be to enable this Court to set up the bond, or conveyance, so admitted, as a lost instrument, independent of the statute of frauds; and, it may be added, that the defendant, Alexander, if he were not clearly repelled on the grounds already indicated, could not, being a third person and a subsequent purchaser, interpose to arrest the execution of the contract, if it had been by parol, on the ground that the requirement of the statute has not been complied with, as Summer, the vendor, admits the agreement, and is willing to perform it, and the other real parties in interest are, apparently, willing to accept the performance: 4 Sneed, 305.
As none of the defendants are before this Court, but
See, also, Norvell v. Johnson, 5 Hum., 491; Anthony v. Smith, 9 Hum., 511; Ellis v. Temple, 4 Cold., 320.
See contra Pipkin v. James, 1 Hum., 325, 329; Crippen v. Bearden, 5 Hum., 129, 131; Hurst v. Means, 2 Swan, 594; Acc. Cox v. Cox, Peck, 455; Hilton v. Duncan, 1 Cold. 314; Sheid v. Stamps, 2 Sneed, 172; Farris v. Caperton, 1 Head, 608; Wood v. Thomas, 2 Head, 162; Blair v. Snodgrass, 1 Sneed, 27; Wright v. Cobb, 5 Sneed, 143; Beard v. Brisker, 2 Swan, 53; James v. Patterson, 1 Swan, 313; Sullivan v. Ivey, 2 Sneed, 489. See also, Orand v. Mason, 1 Swan, 136; Lane v. Courtney, 1 Heis., 332; Raymond v. Huddleston, Jackson, April 8, 1871.