148 Tenn. 649 | Tenn. | 1923
delivered the opinion of the Court.
Steele sold a farm to Satterfield, retaining in his deed, which was promptly registered, a lien to secure balance purchase-money notes. Satterfield sold to Paris, and Paris to Hardison, who went into possession. Neither of the subsequent purchasers assumed the notes of Satterfield, nor was reference made thereto in the latter conveyances. Steele filed his bill to enforce his vendor’s lien, mating his original vendee, Satterfield, alone a defendant; Hardison being at the filing of the bill in actual possession, culti
Meanwhile, in an independent proceeding in the same court, a bill had been filed-by Grizzard against Hardison setting up title to the crops growing on the land at the time of his purchase at the court sale and seeking to restrain Hardison from wasting, destroying, or disposing thereof, and praying for a receiver, etc., to which bill a demurrer was interposed. Contemporaneously with the decree ordering the aforesaid writ of restitution to issue and consistent therewith, the determinative issues being the same, the chancellor sustained the material parts of the demurrer, and from this action an appeal was likewise prayed and granted-
“The special equities set up in the petition for a. writ of restitution should have been determined and a final decree entered in that case before an appeal to this court.”
And in the case of Grizzard v. Hardison that court reversed the decree of the chancellor, sustaining the demurrer of Hardison, and' remanded the cause with leave to the defendant to rely on the grounds of demurrer in his answer.
Both q)arties have presented petitions for review, and both agree that the court of civil appeals is in error in holding that the appeal from the decree in Steele v. Satterfield is prematuré, as the decree was in fact determinative of the only material issues remaining in the cause and in effect final. We shall so treat it. The issue presented by the demurrer in the case of Grizzard v. Hardison is practically the same as that arising on the petition for the writ, that is, whether or not this subsequent purchaser, in possession of the land at the time of the institution of the suit to enforce the lien by the original vendor, to which he is in no way made a party, is bound by the decree of sale so that a writ of possession thereunder may lawfully run against him in favor of the purchaser at said sale. Such a subsequent purchaser is not a necessary party, if the object is only to secure a decree against the original vendee for the debt and a sale of such title and interest as he may have in’ the land covered by the lien; and a writ
Learned counsel for Grizzard cite the following Tennessee cases in support of their insistence that the original vendee, Satterfield, was the only necessary party defendant: Mims v. Mims, 1 Humph., 425; Rowan v. Mercer, 10 Humph., 359; Fletcher v. Coleman, 2 Head, 384; Wilkes v. Smith, 4 Heisk., 86; Cook v. Davis, 2 Cooper, Chy., 496; Planters’ Bk. v. Fowlker, 4 Sneed, 461; Thomasson v. White, 6 Baxt., 148.
None of these cases appear to be decisive of the exact question here involved. The holdings in Mims v. Mims and Rowan v. Mercer, supra, that a decree of foreclosure of a mortgage is not invalidated by failure to malee either prior or subsequent encumbrancers parties, do not control here. These holdings are not in conflict with the theory that those not parties are not affected, but rather confirm it.
In Fletcher v. Coleman, supra, general language is used to the effect that it is unnecessary to bring in subsequent vendees, but the court was evidently not dealing with a case in which the subsequent vendee was in possession, and in other respects that case differs from the one at bar.
Thomasson v. White, in so far as it is authority on this question at all,, is directly against the contention of petitioner Grizzard; the court saying, “if he was in possession before the suit commenced, the writ of possession was improperly issued as to his removal” (he not being a party). Nor do any of the authorities-to which we are
On the contrary, in Terrell v. Allison, 21 Wall. (88 U. S.), 289, 22 L. Ed., 634, Mr. Justice Field says that “the writ of assistance can only issue against parties bound by •the decree;” that, “It is a rule old as the law that no man shall be condemned in his rights of property . . . without his day in court; that is, rvithout being duly cited to ansAver respecting them, and being heard or having opportunity of being heard thereon.” (It will be observed that the character of notice by which he will be bound is thus defined as “cited to ansAver,” not merely informal information'of the pendency of the proceeding as relied on by learned counsel for Gi'izzard in this case.) Mr. Justice Field then proceeds to indicate reasons for the rule which are manifestly sound on principle and applicable to the case at bar.
And not only is it the general rule that all parties having equitable or legal rights in the subject of the litigation should be made parties, but it is directly held that this rule applies to suits to enforce a vendor’s lien. 39 Cyc. of LaAV Procedure,- 1858-1860, and notes; Clements v. Motley, 120 Ala., 575, 24 South., 947; Bogan v. Hamilton, 90 Ala., 454, 8 South., 186; Story’s Eq. Pld., sections 207 and 201; Gordon v. Johnson, 186 Ill., 18-29, 57 N. E., 790; Wells v. Francis, 7 Colo., 396, 415, 4 Pac., 49.
These and other authorities hold that the express vendor’s lien is in the nature of a mortgage, so that the rule as to the rights of the owner of the property at the time of
It is also very generally held that in order to cut off the right of redemption of a subsequent vendee he must be before the-court in the foreclosure proceeding. See authorities cited in note to Priddy v. Smith, 44 L. R. A. (N. S.), 286, and also see note to Dickinson v. Duckworth (74 Ark., 138, 85 S. W., 82) in 4 Ann. Cas., 846. Many cases directly sustaining the proposition that a writ of possession may not issue except against parties, or persons in privity with parties, who have been concluded, by a decree, will be found cited in Ann. Cas., 1913D, 1124.
' It results, as already indicated, that while subsequent vendees are not always necessáry parties to the suit to enforce the express lien retained in the original deed, it is always necessary to make them parties if they are 'to be bound by the decree so as to authorize a writ of possession to issue against them when they have gone into possession before the commencement of the suit.
In a clear and able opinion appearing in the record, the learned chancellor has reviewed the authorities dealing with this question, and we concur in the conclusions reached by him, with the result that the decree of the court of civil appeals is reversed and the decree of the chancery court in both causes affirmed.