271 S.W. 974 | Ark. | 1925
This is an appeal from a decree of the chancery court of Chicot County wherein Mrs. E. P. Gaddis was subrogated to Friedlander Oliven Company's lien for the balance of the purchase money, amounting to $452.46, on a sale of a certain forty-acre tract of land by it to Turner Grant, and for taxes she had paid on the land in the sum of $85.31. The correctness of the decree allowing Mrs. Gaddis to be subrogated to the rights of Friedlander Oliven Company to the extent of its vendor's lien is challenged, but not for taxes paid by her on the land.
Friedlander Oliven Company sold and conveyed the land to Turner Grant on March 2, 1918 reserving *928 a lien in the deed to secure the balance of the purchase money, evidenced by four promissory notes in the sum of $137.50, bearing interest at the rate of 6 per cent. per annum from date until paid, due respectively on the first day of December in the years 1918, 1919, 1920, and 1921. On the first day of April, 1919, Turner Grant and his wife executed a mortgage on the land to W. H. Stephenson to secure an indebtedness to him of $400, evidenced by a promissory note in said sum, due and payable on November 1, 1919, and to secure future advances to them, subject to Friedlander Oliven Company's lien for the balance of the purchase money. Turner Grant paid one of the lien notes, and afterwards applied to B. L. Ross, cashier of the Merchants' Planters' Bank of Eudora, Arkansas, for a loan of $1,000 with which to pay the others, and to build a house upon the land. The bank did not want to make a long-time loan, so the cashier agreed to take the loan for Mrs. Gaddis, whom he represented, with the understanding that the lien notes should be paid out of the loan and the lien released, having been informed by Turner Grant and believing that the notes for the purchase money constituted the only lien against the land. Turner Grant then inquired of Mr. Connerly, Friedlander Oliven Company's local agent, whether the bank would have the first lien if he borrowed the money from it to pay the vendor's lien notes, and was informed that it would, as the notes would be assigned to the party who loaned him the money to pay off the lien. Thereafter he requested Connerly to procure the lien notes and a release of the lien from Friedlander Oliven Company. Turner Grant and his wife then executed four notes for $250 each to Mrs. Gaddis, and secured same by a mortgage on the land. When the notes and a release were procured, the release deed and mortgage to Mrs. Gaddis were simultaneously filed of record, and the following notation was made on the face of the three Friedlander Oliven Company's notes, viz:
"Paid 10-16-1919, by Mrs. E. P. Gaddis." *929
The duplicate deposit slip given to Turner Grant from Mrs. Gaddis is as follows:
"Loan ............................... $1000.00 Less F. Oliven note ................. 452.46 _________ $ 547.54 Less interest (should be insurance) .. 81.78 _______ Recording fee, revenue stamps and mtg. fees ................................. 7.75 ______ $458.01."
There is a dispute in the testimony as to what disposition was made of the Friedlander Oliven notes after Mr. Ross made the notation quoted above on the face of the notes. Mr. Ross testified that, according to his recollection, he filed them away with the notes and mortgage to Mrs. Gaddis. Turner Grant testified that the three notes were turned over to him by Mr. Ross. However, the following question and answer appear in his testimony:
"Q. Now, when did you recall that Mr. Ross gave you these three notes? A. How, Mr. Grubbs, if I make no great mistake, it really seems to me that these notes were turned over to me when this loan was closed."
Mr. Ross testified that it was his understanding that Mrs. Gaddis was getting the first lien on the forty-acre tract of land when the loan was made, and, while Turner Grant testified that there was no contract or understanding about it before or at the time the loan was made, the following question and answer appear in the testimony:
"Q. You said in your cross-examination that you intended Mr. Ross to have the same rights that Friedlander Oliven Co. had. Did you intend Mr. Ross to have any greater rights than Mr. Stephenson? Which was first, the one to Mr. Ross or the one to Mr. Stephenson? A. The one to Mr. Ross. The Friedlander *930 Oliven Company was ahead of Mr. Stephenson. Mr. Stephenson would have second mortgage."
The mortgage to W. H. Stephenson was on record when Turner Grant and wife executed the mortgage for $1,000 to Mrs. Gaddis, but neither she nor her agent actually knew of the existence of the Stephenson mortgage. At the time Turner Grant applied to Mr. Ross for the loan, he asked him whether the Friedlander Oliven Company's loan was the only lien on the land, and Grant informed him that it was.
Appellant insists that, because there was no express agreement that Mrs. Gaddis should be subrogated to the rights of Friedlander Oliven Company when she advanced the money to pay the lien, and because the lien of Friedlander Oliven Company was released instead of being assigned to her, she is not entitled in equity to be subrogated to the company's rights. Mrs. Gaddis was not a volunteer. Rodman v. Sanders,
The rule of law applicable to cases of this kind is well stated in a foot-note on page 473 of 37 Cyc. It its as follows: "One who advances money to pay off an incumbrance on realty, at the instance either of the owner of the property or the holder of the incumbrance, either on the express understanding or under circumstances from which an understanding will be implied, that the advance made is to be secured by a first lien on the property, is not a mere volunteer; and, in the event the new security is, for any reason, not a first lien on the property, the holder of such security, if not chargeable with culpable and inexcusable neglect, will be subrogated to the rights of the prior incumbrancer under the security held by him, and to this end equity will set aside a cancellation of such security, and revive the same for his benefit."
In discussing the equitable doctrine of subrogation, it is said in 37 Cyc. p. 365, that "its basis is a doing of complete, essential, and perfect justice between all the parties without regard to form, and its object is the prevention of injustice;" and, at page 371, that "generally, where it is equitable that a person, not a mere stranger, intermeddler, or volunteer, furnishing money to pay a debt should be substituted for or in the place of the creditor, such person will be so substituted."
We think the facts in the instant case are sufficiently similar to the facts in the case of Southern Cotton Oil Company v. Napoleon Hill Cotton Company,
No error appearing, the decree is affirmed. *932