Lewis v. Pusey
Lewis v. Pusey
Opinion of the Court
delivered the oeinion oe the court.
In June, 1867, Mrs. Sarah A. Smith conveyed to Edward M. Johnson a tract of land in Meade County in consideration of fifteen hundred dollars, of which five hundred dollars were paid in hand, and for the residue Johnson executed his two promissory notes for five hundred dollars each, me due in twelve months and the other in two years from date, both bearing interest from tbe day of tbeir execution; and to secure their payment an express lien is retained on the land in the deed from the grantor to the grantee. These notes Mrs. Smith assigned to George Smith.
On the 30th of June, 1868, George Smith, the holder, instituted his suit in equity against Johnson, to coerce the payment of the note which matured on the 17th of that month. Before the trial of the suit the second note matured, and by an amended petition, with tbe proper allegations, judgment was prayed for a sale of tbe land to enforce its payment also.
Johnson filed an answer in which, after charging fraud on the part of his vendor, a defect of title, and her removal from the state, of all which no further notice need be taken, as his title proved to be unobjectionable, be made tbe answer a cross-petition against John Pusey and tbe Smiths, and alleged that he had sold and conveyed the same land to Pusey by deed, witb covenant of general warranty, and prayed that the title to the land be quieted, and for all proper relief.
Pusey, who was made a defendant to the original petition,
Lewis answered Pusey’s cross-petition, and alleged that the Smiths assigned him a note on Johnson for one thousand dollars, executed to them for an installment on the tract of land sold by them to Johnson, called the mill tract, and a
Without further elaboration it will suffice to state that the pleadings present all the facts essential to the determination of the rights and liabilities of the several parties; and the deeds from the Smiths to Johnson, the deed from Johnson to Pusey, and the proceedings, judgment, and execution of Lewis against Johnson, and the indorsement on said execution, are all made exhibits in the case.
On final hearing the court below adjudged that Pusey pay to George Smith the sum of five hundred dollars with interest from the 17th of June, 1867, till paid, aud the further sum of five hundred dollars with interest from same date, and costs; and on his failure to pay the same by a day named directed a sale of so much of the land conveyed by Mrs. Sarah A. Smith to E. M. Johnson as should be necessary to raise said sums. And it was further adjudged that Pusey should be credited by the amounts thus adjudged against him on the note for one thousand four hundred and twenty-five dollars, given by him to Johnson, and assigned by the latter to Lewis; and for the residue of said note, with the interest from the date of its maturity till paid, a judgment was rendered in favor of Lewis against Pusey, and a sale of so much of the land conveyed by Johnson to Pusey as should be necessary to pay the same was ordered; and for the balance of his debt Lewis was remitted to his legal rights against Johnson.
The deed from Johnson and wife to Pusey recites that for and in consideration of nine thousand dollars paid and secured in the manner therein described they have sold and conveyed to him, his heirs and assigns forever, two certain tracts or parcels of land on Doe Run, in Meade County. It then describes the smaller tracts by metes and bounds, giving the quantity as twenty-two acres and twenty-six poles, and concludes the description by saying “said piece of land was conveyed by George Smith, &c., to Josephine H. Johnson on the 2d of November, 1865, and said deed is referred to.” The other is described as being the same that “was conveyed by Mrs. Sarah Ann Smith to Edward M. Johnson on the 17th day of June, 1867, of record in the Meade County Court clerk’s office, deed-book L, page 428.” It is also further described by metes and bounds.
In the deed from George Smith and others to Mrs. Josephine Johnson, &c., a lien is expressly retained for the two deferred payments of one thousand dollars each, one of' which was assigned to Lewis, and is the same debt for which he recovered judgment. Of the existence of that debt, and of the lien on the land for its security, Pusey must have had actual notice before he paid either of the notes executed by hi in to Johnson for the deferred payments. The conveyance to him was executed on the 29th of July, 1867, and his notes were not due until one and two years from that date.
But it is insisted that the entry on the execution of Lewis against Johnson is a discharge of Pusey from his liability, which reads as follows: “This execution is satisfied, fully satisfied, by Ed. M. Johnson, by his transferring a note on John R. Pusey, due and payable July, 1869, which note is delivered over to me as attorney for plaintiff, and done by his
To secure the two notes for five hundred dollars each, executed by Johnson to Mrs. Smith, her assignee had a lien on the land she conveyed — a different tract from that on which the lien existed to secure the note for one thousand dollars assigned to Lewis on Johnson. If she had retained those notes and compelled Pusey to pay them, and George Smith, &c., had retained the note assigned to Lewis, in their attempt to enforce its payment against Pusey, it certainly would be no defense for him to say that he only owed one thousand four hundred and twenty-five dollars on the land; and having paid Mrs. Smith one thousand dollars of that sum, the residue thereof is all that he should be adjudged to pay. If it should be allowed as a defense, vendors’ liens would be mere illusions, or at most a fragile claim for what balance a subsequent vendee might admit he owed his immediate vendor of the price he agreed to pay for the land. Legal rights must rest on a more solid foundation.
Lewis occupies the same or at least as favorable a position as his assignors of the note on Johnson would if they had continued to own it. By accepting the note on Pusey, Lewis did nothing which can be construed as a waiver of his lien, which he unquestionably acquired when he got the note on Johnson. That note was for the purchase-money of the land, and in part for the same land that the note which the Smiths assigned him on Johnson was for. And while, as between Pusey and Johnson, the payment of the one thousand dollars to Mrs. Smith or her assignee would be a satisfaction pro tanto of his note to Johnson, it certainly could not be so in a suit of George Smith, &c., or their assignee, to collect their lien-debt. The transactions as between the remote vendors are distinct, and their rights very different.
Wherefore the judgment is reversed, and the cause is remanded with directions to render judgment consistent with this opinion.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.