247 P. 451 | Idaho | 1926
This action was to enforce payment of a promissory note given as the balance due on the purchase price of a certain lot, payable on demand, subject to the following condition appearing upon the back of the note:
"Shelley, Idaho,
"March 20, 1922.
"This signed by the payer under the express understanding that it shall be payable only after removal of a certain lien filed by the Boise Payette Lumber Company against a part of Lot one, Block thirty, in the Village of Shelley, Idaho.
"It is further understood that if the aforesaid lien shall not have been removed within one year from the date of this note, then this note shall be void, and the signer shall proceed to have said lien removed, paying F.E. Roberts only such amount as shall remain due on this note, after deducting all expense of the expenses incurred in having lien removed.
"GEO. P. HARRILL, JR."
This was a condition precedent to payment of the note. (Beck v. Payne,
Respondent contends that conceding that at one time there was a valid lien against the property, it had been removed by operation of law, no action having been commenced for the foreclosure of the lien within the limit fixed by C. S., sec. 7349. The lien was recorded. C. S., sec. 6961 authorizes an action to quiet title. Considering a similar statutory provision the Washington supreme court has said:
"It is an unquestioned fact that under our present system of registration laws, where records are so universally and entirely relied upon to show the character of the title, a matter of record adverse to the title of one seeking to convey, although seemingly void on its face, or which apparently could not be enforced in consequence of the statute *558
of limitations, would yet injuriously affect the value of the real owner's title, and he should be permitted to have the same removed as a cloud where rights adverse to his interests are claimed under it; and, independent of the statute, we should approve of the reasoning of the learned author (Pomeroy) against the rule." (Kinsman v. City of Spokane,
These cases arrive at such conclusion upon the theory that where such instrument is void there is no cloud. (Pomeroy's Equity Jurisprudence, sec. 1399, p. 2756, n. 4.) The first rule mentioned appears, however, to be based upon better reason and logic as pointed out in Pomeroy's Equity Jurisprudence, sec. 1399, wherein it is said:
"It leads to the strange scene, almost daily in the courts, of defendants urging that the instruments under which they claim are void, and therefore that they ought to be permittedto stand unmolested, and of judges deciding that the court cannot interfere, because the deed or other instrument is void, while from a business point of view every intelligent person knows that the instrument is a serious injury to the plaintiff's title, greatly depreciating its market value, and the judge himself who repeats the rule would neither buy the property while thus affected, nor loan a dollar upon its security. This doctrine is in truth based upon mere verbal logic, rather than upon consideration of justice and expediency."
Herein it was apparent there was a lien upon the property, since it had been recorded, and the only manner in *559
which it could be ascertained whether such lien was valid, whether the statute of limitations had run, or whether an action had been commenced upon the lien within proper time, was by resorting to extrinsic evidence, and in such case an action should be allowed to remove the cloud upon the title caused by such lien, even if in fact it was void. Wilson v. Stone,
Judgment reversed and costs awarded to appellant.
William A. Lee, C.J., and Wm. E. Lee and Taylor, JJ., concur. *560