— When the inquiry is whether the vendor of land intended to waive his lien for the purchase money, the purposes of the sale and conveyance may be quite material; and the averment in a bill to de
Moreover, another essential •'.element of such lien, or fact necessary to its existence, '.is wanting on the case made by the bill. “To maintain a bill to enforce [a] vendor’s lien, there must be a débt due to the complainant, contracted in the purchased the land, still unpaid, and which the purchaser, either at the time, or at some pi'ior date, was liable to pay as .a primary debtor, without condition.” — Thomason v. Cooper, 57 Ala. 560, 564; Kelly et al. v. Karsner, 81 Ala. 500, 504. The purchaser here, i. e., the grantee, is LeBron. The bill shows that he was never under obligation .primarily and without condition to pay Agee' anything, whatever for the land. He did not take a conveyance of; the land to his own use, but as a mere conduit for ’the passing of the title into the company. It was known beforehand what price the company would give for the whole tract, and it was contemplated that LeBron should receive for Agee three-tenths of one-fifth of the purchase money, being $3,600, the consideration recited in Agee’s deed to LeBron, and it was stipulated that LeBron should out of this sum pay a certain indebtedness of Agee and deliver the balance to him. And this was the full extent of LeBron’s obligation : to convey the land to the company, to receive the purchase money from the company for Agee, and to pay it out for and to Agee. When it is said the sale was to him on credit, the facts demonstrate that by this is intended that the conveyance to him was on the faith and confidence and credit that he would convey to the company at the price of $3,600, which, indirectly and substantially, he did, and would collect and receive that amount from the company, which, it appears, he has not done. But whatever he has done or failed to do in the premises, it is most clear that he at no time undertook to pay, or to account to Agee for, the $3,600, except out of and with the money he should receive from the company. And if he had retained the land and a bill had been filed against him to enforce a vendor’s lien, there is no question but that, while Agee might have been entitled to the land as upon
But it by no means follows that Agee is without equitable rights and remedies in the premises. Had LeBron received the recited consideration of $3,600, directly or indirectly, from the Oloverdale Company, he would have held it in trust for Agee, and the latter might either have' sued him at law in an equitable action for money had and received, or proceeded in chancery against any property into which LeBron had converted it. So, on elementary equitable principles, if LeBron had received tangible property intend of money in payment for the land, clearly the trust for Agee would have attached to this property. Clearly also, if LeBron had received neither money nor property in payment, but instead had sold and conveyed to the company, on a credit, as indeed, so far as anything appears in the bill is concerned, he might have done, and taken collateral security, such as bonds or other choses in action, for the payment of the purchase money, such collaterals would have been held by him in trust for, and in equity would have belonged to, Agee. And, of course, whatever trust in favor of, or equitable ownership in, Agee would have attached to such collaterals in the hands of LeBron, would equally attach to them in the hands of any person to whom they came with notice of Agee’s equity. It appears that Scheerer with full knowledge of the equities of Agee, finally sold the whole tract of land including Agee’s interest to the Oloverdale Co. on credit, and took as collateral security for the payment of the purchase price, bonds of said company secured by a mortgage on all the property of the company including this land. Those bonds, in the hands of Scheerer or anybody else taking them with notice of Agee’s rights, or so
The present bill, being filed by a stranger to the pending suit of Townsend. & Brown against the Cloverdale Land and Development Co. and McClellan and Scheerer, and setting up matters not involved in that case, nor necessary to the relief there sought, is not a supplemental, but an original bill, having something of the nature of a supplemental bill, perhaps, in that it seeks in one phase to fasten a.charge.,upon the subject matter there involved, and in another aspect seeks to give a particular direction to a part of the fund which would have cometo the hands of the court in that case had the decree granted all the relief prayed therein. Agee being, on the facts' averred in his bill, the equitable owner pro tanto of the bonds held by Scheerer to secure payment of the price the company.was to pay for the land, and Townsend & Brown having filed their bill against the company and Scheerer et al. to foreclose the mortgage securing these bonds, whereby, had this relief been insisted on and granted a decree would .have passed, under which Scheerer would have received the amount of these bonds which belonged to Agee, the latter’s equity to have such proceeds decreed to be paid to himself, in the contingency in contemplation when he filed his bill, can not, we think, be doubted.- But that relief, as appears by the amendment to Agee’s bill, was forestalled by the collusive and fraudulent agreement between Townsend & Brown and McClellan and Scheerer in pursuance of which the demand for foreclosure of the mortgage securing said bonds made in the bill of Townsend & Brown was protermitted, and a decree taken only for the sale of the company’s property, subject to said mortgage, the ulterior purpose of these parties being, as is alleged, to shuffle the bonds held by Scheerer but belonging equitably to Agee .into Townsend & Brown by such indirection as would enable them to claim protection against Agee’s
But the bill as amended, considered solely with reference to the aspect in which the complainant’s rights are
The demurrers which went to the bill in that aspect in which it asserted or claimed as upon a vendor’s lien should also have been sustained.
The decree overruling the assignments of demurrer referred to above is reversed A decree will be here entered sustaining said assignments, allowing complainant thirty days to amend his bill in the city court, and remanding the cause.
Reversed and remanded.