Good v. Golden

Decision Date16 December 1895
Citation19 So. 100,73 Miss. 91
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
PartiesMARY A. GOOD v. R. T. GOLDEN ET AL

October 1895

FROM the chancery court of Leflore county HON. A. H. LONGINO Chancellor.

The appellant alleged in her bill of complaint that the appellees, R. T. Golden and Mary, his wife, were indebted to the Bank of Greenwood in the sum of $ 880, evidenced by their promissory note for that sum, which note was secured by their deed of trust on certain lands constituting the homestead of the appellee, R. T. Golden; that, when this indebtedness fell due, they were unable to meet it, and the bank threatened to foreclose; they applied to the appellant for assistance, and prevailed on her to pay to the bank the sum of $ 308, which was applied by the bank as a credit on the said note and trust deed, and that, in consideration of this payment, which was made in January, 1892, the bank abandoned its foreclosure, and extended the time for payment of the balance due; that Golden and wife afterwards obtained a loan from other sources, and, having discharged the debt due to the bank, obtained a discharge and cancellation of the trust deed; that, in response to appellant's demands, they repeatedly promised to pay her the $ 308, but had failed to do so; that Mary Golden, the wife, had died intestate and insolvent, leaving an only child, the appellee, Reuben Golden, and that the appellee, R. T. Golden, was also insolvent, and that she, the appellant, by reason of the facts stated, was entitled to be subrogated to the rights and benefits of the bank in said trust deed to the extent of her said debt, other than which right of subrogation she was entirely without security, etc. The bill concludes with a prayer for a personal decree, and for subrogation to the benefits of the trust deed, sale of the lands, etc., and general relief.

The bill was filed in October, 1895, more than three years after the date of appellant's payment to the bank, and the appellees demurred thereto, setting up, among other causes of demurrer, the bar of the three years' statute of limitations. This demurrer having been sustained, the appellant amended her bill by showing that a note for said indebtedness, which she exhibited with the amended bill, had been executed and delivered to her by Golden and wife. The appellees also demurred to the amended bill, assigning, among other causes of demurrer, that the appellant had shown no right to the equity of subrogation prayed for.

Affirmed.

Rush &amp Gardner, for appellant.

The appellant paid the money directly to the bank, and upon the urgent and repeated requests of Golden and wife, and it would seem that she is entitled to an equitable assignment pro tanto of the note and trust deed securing it that she in part paid. If she had paid the whole amount due on the note secured by the trust deed, she would have been entitled to an assignment of those instruments, and there is no reason why her rights should not be the same to the extent that she did pay the debt. Bonner v. Lessley, 61 Miss. 392; Clark v. Wilson, 56 Miss. 753. The fact that the money is paid before the sale should not defeat an equitable assignment where the payment has the effect of averting foreclosure and saving the land. Prior to the code of 1880, a married woman was not permitted to borrow money and buy land and then refuse to pay the debt and still keep the land. The person advancing the money was subrogated in equity, and could follow the land and subject it to the debt. Clark v. Clark, 58 Miss. 68. This rule of subrogation did not arise because of any agreement by the married woman that the creditor should be subrogated, but in order to prevent her from doing an inequitable thing.

Where the money of a person has been applied to the payment of just debts against a trust estate which it was bound to pay, the party will be subrogated to the rights of the holders of the debts. "But it is only in a court of chancery that this just doctrine has yet found a home." Hines v. Potts, 56 Miss. 350. The appellant has no remedy save in equity.

In the case of Chaffe v. Patterson, 61 Miss. 28, it was held that the law gave to the complainant, Chaffe, the rights of a vendor of the land sought to be subjected, because his money had been used by the vendee in paying one of the purchase money notes.

Coleman & Somerville, for appellees.

A mere volunteer who pays the debt of another is not entitled to the equity of subrogation. The difficulty is to determine who are volunteers. In Staples v. Fox, 45 Miss. 681, in defining in whose favor subrogation will be decreed, it was said that "generally the person who discharges the debt by payment must be under a legal obligation to do so." It was also said in that case that where one pays off the heir to protect his own title, he will be subrogated. To this it may be added, that where one has innocently acquired an invalid title at a sale under a conveyance, or otherwise, he will be subrogated to the rights of him to whom his money has been paid. All these cases are explainable upon the idea that the payer has not knowingly undertaken the risk of his payment of the incumbrance, lien, or purchase money, and he will be protected because he has unwillingly been placed in such a situation that equity and good conscience require that he should be relieved and treated as the equitable assignee. No such reasoning, applies to one who understandingly advances money to discharge a lien.

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27 cases
  • Delta Cotton Oil Co. v. Lovelace
    • United States
    • Mississippi Supreme Court
    • 10 Junio 1940
    ... ... 105; Ellis Jones Drug Co. v. Coker, 156 ... Miss. 775; Wilkinson v. Wilson, 154 Miss. 726; ... Spencer v. Clarke, 152 Miss. 542; Good v ... Golden, 73 Miss. 91; Box v. Early (Miss.), 178 ... So. 790; 25 R. C. L. 1343; Walker v. Williams, 84 ... Miss. 392; Staton v. Bryant, ... ...
  • McLean v. Love
    • United States
    • Mississippi Supreme Court
    • 5 Noviembre 1934
    ...by express contract. Trust Co. v. Peters, 72 Miss. 1058, 1070, 18 So. 497; Berry v. Bullock, 81 Miss. 463, 465, 33 So. 410; Good v. Golden, 73 Miss. 91, 19 So. 100; 55 Am. Rep. 486; Howell v. Bush, 54 Miss. 445; McCowan v. Brooks, 113 Ga. 537; Aetna Ins. Co. v. Middleport, 124 U.S. 547, 549......
  • Wilkinson v. Wilson
    • United States
    • Mississippi Supreme Court
    • 30 Septiembre 1929
    ... ... title in the third person, where such third person is the ... purchaser for value in good faith ... 2 ... SUBROGATION. One acquiring lien is entitled to be subrogated ... to liens discharged by money paid out by him in ... him to subrogation ... Howell ... v. Bush, 54 Miss. 437, 440, 445; Good v. Golden, 73 ... Miss. 91, 95; Bank of Philadelphia v. Posey, 130 ... Miss. 530, 538; Berry v. Bullock, 81 Miss. 463, 465; ... Hitt v. Applewhite, 20 ... ...
  • Bank of Philadelphia v. Posey
    • United States
    • Mississippi Supreme Court
    • 10 Julio 1922
    ... ... inferable from the circumstances under which it was ... discharged, that the lien should be kept alive for its ... benefit. Good v. Golden, 73 Miss. 91, 19 ... So. 100, 55 Am. St. Rep. 486; Trust Co. v ... Peters, 72 Miss. 1058, 18 So. 497 ... 3. The ... ...
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