99 Ark. 350 | Ark. | 1911
Appellant, W. M. Wallace, was the owner of 813 acres of timber lands in Dallas County, Arkansas, and on July 27, 1907, sold and conveyed the standing timber on said lands to the Deola Dumber Company, a domestic corporation. He executed to said grantee one deed conveying the timber on .334^ acres of the land for a cash consideration of $1,645 an¿ two notes of even date each for a like sum, due and payable five and three months respectively from date, making $4,935 the total consideration expressed in the deed. On the same day he executed to said grantee another deed conveying the timber on 160 acres of the land for a cash consideration of $787 and two notes of even date each for a like sum, due. and payable five and eleven months respectively from date, making $2,361 the total consideration expressed in that deed. He also executed on the same day to said grantee another deed conveying the timber on 318^2 acres of the land for a cash consideration of $1,586 and two notes of even date each for a like sum, due and pa3^able five and three months respectively from date, making $4,758 the'total consideration expressed in that deed.
The two first named deeds each contained, a stipulation in the following words: “No timber specified 'in this deed to be cut until paid in full.” The third deed contained a stipulation in the following words: “It is agreed that the Leola Lumber Company has the right to immediately enter upon the 38^ acres in section 20, township 7 south, range 15 west, containing 40 acres. No other timber specified in this deed to be cut- until paid for in full.”
The deeds will be hereinafter referred to as deeds number one, two and three respectively.
Certain payments were made to appellant by the Leola Lumber Company which were credited on the notes referred to in deeds number one and two, and which reduced the aggregate amount of unpaid balance on those notes to the sum of $1,500.15. Said company also paid the sum of $500, which was credited by appellant on one of the notes referred to in deed number three, leaving an unpaid balance of $2,568 due on the two notes referred to in that deed at the time of the institution of this action.
The Leola Lumber Company then became insolvent, and was adjudged to be bankrupt, and its property was delivered to a trustee in bankruptcy. The property was sold by the trustee at public auction, and appellees .purchased at said sale for a nominal consideration the rights of the bankrupt in said timber deeds, accepting from said trustee a quitclaim conveying all of the right, title and interest of the Leola Lumber Company in and to the timber described in said deeds. At the sale public notice was given that appellant claimed a lien as vendor on the standing timber described in said deeds for the sum of $4,000 balance unpaid on said notes.
Appellees subsequently paid to appellant the sum of $1,500.15 in satisfaction of the balance on the notes described in deeds number one and two, which were then surrendered to them, but they declined to pay the amount of the unpaid balance due on the notes described in deed number three. All of the notes were sent for collection to a bank in Little Rock where the aforesaid payments were made by appellees.
After appellant learned of the refusal of appellees to pay the other notes, he asserted a lien on all of the timber described in the three deeds for the amount of the unpaid notes, and instituted this action in the chancery court of Dallas County to enforce his lien and to restrain appellees from cutting timber until the full amount shall be paid. The chancellor decreed a lien on the timber described in deed number three, but dismissed the complaint as to the timber described in the other deeds.
Appellees did not, by their purchase of the interest of the original grantee, obligate themselves to pay the consideration named in the several deeds. Their acceptance of a quitclaim deed, subject to appellant’s lien, did not imply a promise to pay the. debt. Patton v. Adkins, 42 Ark. 199; J. H. Magill Lumber Co. v. Lane-White Lumber Co., 90 Ark. 426. Nor were they estopped to dispute the lien on account of the notice given by appellant’s assertion of a lien for $4,000 on the timber. They were not innocent purchasers, according to the testimony, but by their purchase and acceptance of the deed -they were placed in the shoes óf the original grantee, and had the right to free the „ several pieces of purchased property from the lien which rested on it, by paying the debt which constituted the subject of the lien. There being no promise, either express or implied, to pay the debt, they were not bound to discharge the lien on the timber described in deed number three because of their election to discharge the lien on the timber described in the other two deeds.
The basis, however, of appellant’s contention is that the sale of the timber to the Leola Lumber Company was in fact for a gross sum, and that it was divided for convenience into three deeds, the gross consideration being likewise arbitrarily divided as expressed in the several deeds. He introduced oral testimony tending to establish those facts, and his counsel insist that no rule of evidence would be violated in admitting parol testimony to prove, for the purpose of establishing a lien against a subsequent purchaser with notice, that the sum expressed in all of the deeds formed the consideration for the sale, en masse, of all the timber described in the deeds. They invoke the (rule, established by decisions of this court, that the recitals of a deed may be varied by parol, .proof of other considerations not expressed therein. Vaugine v. Taylor, 18 Ark. 65; Barnett v. Hughey, 54 Ark. 195; Kelly v. Carter, 55 Ark. 112; Busch v. Hart, 62 Ark. 330; St. Louis & N. A. Rd. Co. v. Crandell, 75 Ark. 89; J. H. Magill Lbr. Co. v. Lane-White Lbr. Co., supra; St. Louis, I. M. & S. Ry. Co. v. Berry, 86 Ark. 309. This rule is, however, subject to the qualification that the terms of the writing cannot be contradicted by parol evidence. Busch v. Hart, supra; J. H. Magill Lbr. Co. v. Lane-White Lbr. Co., supra; 4 Wigmore on Ev. § 2433; Baum v. Lynn, 72 Miss. 932; Arnold v. Arnold, 137 Cal. 291; Hendrick v. Crowley, 31 Cal. 472; Parker v. Morrill, 98 N. C. 232.
The opinion of Chief Justice Cooper of the Mississippi Supreme Court in Baum v. Lynn, supra, is very instructive, and he there sums up the correct rule on this subject, as follows:
“Whenever in a deed the consideration,' or an admission of its receipt, is stated merely as a fact, that part of the deed is received as a receipt would be, and the statement is subject to be varied, modified and explained; but if the stated consideration is in the nature of a contract, that is, if by it a right is vested, created or extinguished, the terms of the contract thereby evidenced may not be varied by parol proof, but the writing is its sole exponent.”
We find the rule and its exception very concisely and properly stated in the case of Hendrick v. Crowley, supra, as follows: “There is no doubt but that parol evidence is admissible for the punpose of contradicting- or showing that the true consideration is other and different from that expressed in the written instrument. But this is not the rule, .but an exception to the rule, that the legal effect of a written instrument cannot be varied or defeated in whole or in part by parol evidence. The exception can never be allowed to override the rule, for that would be to dispense with the rule entirely and preserve the exception. The exception always loses its governing force when it comes in conflict with the rule which it qualifies, and must yield to its higher claim. Hence the consideration cannot be contradicted or shown to be different from that expressed when thereby the legal operation of fhe instrument to pass the entire interest according to the purpose therein designated would be defeated.”
Now, the proof in this case -which appellant relies on does not tend merely to enlarge the consideration expressed in the several deeds, but it goes in contradiction of the terms thereof in establishing the fact that the consideration was entire for all of the timber, whereas the deeds express separate considerations for the timber described in each and allows tlie grantee to cut and remove said timber when the separate sums named shall be paid.
The right to remove the timber on payment of the sum named in the deed is inconsistent with the assertion of a vendor’s lien for an additional sum, hence parol proof that the consideration for the separate deeds was entire contradicted the terms of the deed and is inadmissible. We are therefore of the' opinion that the chancellor reached the correct conclusion in holding with appellees on this question.
No effort was made to prove a mutual mistake m conveying the timber tracts separately as would justify the court in decreeing reformation. Nor is there any proof of fraitd in procuring' separate deeds, instead of a single deed expressing the entire consideration. The proof merely shows that this was done for convenience, and not through any mistake. The proof does not bring the case within the principle announced by this court in Lawrence County Bank v. Arndt, 69 Ark. 410, where relief was given in equity against a mistake of law on account of reliance by the parties on one side on the representation and superior knowledge of the other party to the contract.
It is also contended that the payments made by the Leola Lumber Company were improperly credited by direction of one of the appellees on the notes referred to in deeds number one and two. The proof is to some extent conflicting as to the circumstances under which the credits were placed on the notes and as to whether or not appellant directed the credits to be placed on those notes, but we conclude that the finding of the chancellor is not against the preponderance of the testimony.
Affirmed.