Bothe v. Gleason

Decision Date04 December 1916
Docket Number(No. 18.)
Citation190 S.W. 562
PartiesBOTHE v. GLEASON et al.
CourtArkansas Supreme Court

Suit by C. F. Prang against John G. Gleason and others to foreclose a vendor's lien. From a decree of the court permitting Edith O. Gleason, the wife of one of the defendants, to intervene and redeem the land from the commissioner's sale to H. Bothe, the purchaser appeals. Reversed and remanded, with directions to dismiss the intervention and to confirm the sale.

Appellant pro se. O. M. Young and Geo. C. Lewis, both of Stuttgart, for appellees.

McCULLOCH, C. J.

Appellant was the purchaser of the lands in controversy at a judicial sale, and appeals from the decree of the court permitting the wife of one of the defendants in the suit in which the original decree was rendered to redeem. The original suit was instituted by C. F. Prang against certain parties, including John C. Gleason, the husband of appellee Edith O. Gleason, to foreclose a vendor's lien on the lands in controversy. The chancery court granted the relief and entered a decree ascertaining the amount of the indebtedness due as purchase price of the land, and ordered the land sold by a commissioner. The sale was duly made by the commissioner, and appellant, H. Bothe, became the purchaser, and the sale was reported to the court, and when it came up for confirmation, appellee Edith O. Gleason intervened for the purpose of redeeming from the sale and the court permitted her to redeem.

There is a question presented in the case as to the amount required in redemption, if redemption be allowed at all, but we need not go into that if we reach the conclusion that appellee had no right to redeem.

There is no statutory right of redemption under a sale to foreclose a vendor's lien. Priddy & Chambers v. Smith, 106 Ark. 79, 152 S. W. 1028. The decision turns on the question whether or not the wife of a purchaser of land is a necessary party to a suit to foreclose the vendor's lien for purchase money; for, if the wife is not a necessary party to the suit, she has no right to redeem after the husband's right of redemption is foreclosed by the sale.

In 39 Cyc. p. 1859, the rule is broadly stated that:

"The wife of the purchaser is neither a necessary nor a proper party to a suit to foreclose a purchase-money lien upon land purchased by her husband unless the title to the land is in her, since no homestead right can exist as against the purchase money."

The same may be said with respect to the dower right; for no such right can exist as against the debt for the purchase money. Kirby's Digest, § 2691; Birnie v. Main, 29 Ark. 591. The rule stated in the encyclopedia is sustained by numerous authorities. Amphlett v. Hibbard, 29 Mich. 298; Fowler v. Bracy, 124 Mich. 250, 82 N. W. 892, 83 N. W. 374; Sarver v. Clarkson, 156 Ind. 316, 59 N. E. 933; Porter v. Teate, 17 Fla. 813; Mutual Building Ass'n v. Wyeth, 105 Ala. 639, 17 South. 45; Kuhnert v. Conrad, 6 N. D. 215, 69 N. W. 185; Waldon v. Davis (Tex. Civ. App.) 185 S. W. 1000.

In Fowler v. Bracy, supra, the Michigan court, in disposing of the question, said:

"The sole question, therefore, is whether, in a suit in equity to foreclose the lien of a land contract, the wife of the contract purchaser is a necessary party, when, as in this case, a portion of the land which is the subject of the contract is a homestead. This question must be answered in the negative. Stating the rights of the contract purchaser most broadly, they cannot be greater than a purchaser under a deed of conveyance who gives back the purchase money mortgage. Indeed, this is the relation which equity accords to the parties; that is to say, equity treats the purchaser as the holder of the title, subject to the lien of the vendor for the purchase price."

The authorities do not appear to be entirely in accord, at least so far as concerns the necessity for joining the wife as a party in a suit to foreclose a mortgage. In the last edition of Wiltsie on Mortgage Foreclosure, § 155, the rule is stated to be that the wife is a necessary party to a suit to foreclose a mortgage, and that her rights will not be affected unless she is made a party. Cases are cited which support the text. Notwithstanding the fact that in equity the parties to a vendor's lien and to a mortgage are treated as...

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