Stone, J.,
dissenting. The bill charges that in July, 1870, one George Way was the owner of some right, estate or interest in a certain water power and mill site, together with the mill buildings, machinery, fixtures and appurtenances, one storehouse, two dwelling-houses, and one office in Masonville Lower Mining District, Clear Creek county, Colorado. That he was desirous to sell the same, and authorized the complainant to negotiate a sale thereof under an agreement that all the purchase-money in excess of $3,000 cash, or $3,000 payable in one year from time of sale, at ten per cent interest per annum, should be retained by the complainant as compensation for his services in effecting such sale.
That the complainant, on or about the 6th day of September, 1870, sold the said property to the Franklin Silver Mining Company for $3,000, payable in one year thereafter, with interest at the rate of three per cent per month until paid; that said sale was ratified by Way, and complainant, in the name of Way, executed and delivered to the Franklin Silver Mining Company a bond conditioned to make title to said premises on payment of the purchase-money aforesaid.
That the amount due and payable to complainant for his compensation for effecting said sale was the sum of $780, out of the total sum of principal and interest to be paid by the Franklin Silver Mining Company.
That afterward, on or about the 26th day of February, 1871, the Franklin Silver Mining Company assigned the said bond for title to George McFarland.
That in August following, McFarland, in order to get further time of payment on the notes for the purchase-money, with the consent of complainant, gave his notes to one Erskine McClellan, then the attorney in fact for Way, payable to Way for $3,300, and his note to complainant for $780, due and payable on the 6th day of September, 1872, and McClellan, for Way, executed, in the name of Way, a bond conditioned to convey the said premises to McFarland on payment of the notes last mentioned.
Afterward, on the 6th day of December, 1872, said McFarland assigned said bond to the defendant.
The bill further charges, that, in order to defraud the complainant out of that portion of the purchase-money payable to him, McFarland and the defendant, Francis, caused the said bond to be delivered up to said McClellan, with an indorsement thereon that it was canceled, and the property fe-delivered to Way; whereas, the bond never was canceled, nór the contract of sale rescinded, but that either McFarland or Francis, in order to induce McClellan.to give further time of payment for the purchase money, and to execute a bond of title to Francis, paid McClellan for the use of Way over $1,000, part of the identical purchase-money agreed to be paid by McFarland to Way.
That, on the 6th day of December, 1872, for the purpose of cheating the complainant out of his share in the purchase-money, McClellan, in the name of Way, executed to Francis a bond for title to the said premises, conditioned upon due and full payment by Francis to Way of $3,597 and’ interest, to convey the premises to Francis, and that afterward, on the 2d day of September, 1873, a deed was executed by McClellan for Way to Francis.
The bill charges notice to Francis of complainant’s interest in the purchase-money, and insolvency of McFarland.
The answer of Francis denies that McFarland ever assigned the bond by Way to him, free, or that he ever had any right or title therein, that he is a purchaser of the property mentioned in the bill for a valuable consideration, without notice, actual or constructive, of any right, interest or claim of the complainant.
The question presented by this bill is, whether a third person having no title, but an interest in the purchase-money, and to whom a part of the purchase-money is, by the terms of sale, made payable, has a lien which in equity he may assert against the land sold for its payment, where the vendor gives a bond for title when the purchase-money is paid, and the purchase-money is not paid, and the vendor conveys to another.
It is a well-established principle of courts of equity, that the vendor of land has a lien on the land for the amount of the purchase-money, not only against the vendee himself, but against all subsequent purchasers having notice that the purchase-money was unpaid. The vendee becomes the trustee for the vendor to the extent of the lien, and all persons claiming under him, with notice that the purchase-money is unpaid, are in the same position as the vendee, and this lien exists independent of any agreement. It is an equitable lien in the nature of a trust, and the trust in favor of the vendor is implied, and, as a general rule, third persons have no interest in it. The rule is, that the lien exists as well for a part as for the whole of the purchase-money, and the burden of proof is on the purchaser to establish the fact that the lien has been waived by the consent or agreement of the parties, and if, under all the circumstances, it remains in doubt, then the lien attaches. 2 Story’s Eq. Jur., § 1224. It is clear that George Way was the owner of the property described in the complainant’s bill, on the 4th day of July, 1870, and that the legal title remained in him up to the time that Erskine McClellan, as his attorney in fact, executed the deed to the defendant, on or about the 6th day of September, 1873. On the sale of the property by the complainant, under the power of attorney from Way, to the Franklin Silver Mining Com- pany, lie was indebted to tbe complainant tbe sum of $780, as bis compensation for making tbe sale, tbat being tbe residue of tbe purcbase-money in excess of tbe price demanded by Way ; and it is plain tbat tbat sum was to be paid to tbe complainant from tbe purcbase-money arising from tbe sale of tbe premises. It is not denied by tbe answer, nor by any of tbe witnesses examined before tbe master. It is fully recognized in all tbe correspondence between tbe several parties. Blackman understood this when negotiating for tbe Franklin Silver Mining Company. It was included in tbe notes given by tbe Franklin Silver Mining Company to Way. It forms part of tbe consideration to be paid by it as a condition precedent to procuring a title from Way. It was well understood, when tbe time of payment was extended to McFarland, in August, 1871, and tbe new bond executed by Erskine McClellan for George Way to McFarland recites tbat $780 of tbe purcbase-money was payable to tbe complainant. It is clear tbat Myers, wbo acted for Francis in making tbe purchase, bad actual notice of all of complainant’s rights, and notice to tbe agent is constructive notice to tbe principal.
Tbe defendant having notice of this equitable claim of tbe complainant, is be, under all the circumstances of tbe case, chargeable with its payment 1 Or, in other words, is it a charge upon tbe property conveyed to him by Way ?
It is conceded tbat if a vendee, wbo purchases land on a credit, and takes a bond for title when be pays tbe purchase-money, fails to pay according to tbe terms stipulated, tbe vendor may consider tbe contract at an end, and may lawfully sell to a third person, and tbat such purchase would take tbe land free from all liens and charges of which he bad no notice. But tbe case is different when tbe vendee has notice of a charge or lien upon tbe land, and recognizes it as a valid and subsisting lien, and promises to pay it. Had McFarland acquired tbe title to this land from Way, knowing, as be did, tbat tbe complainant held a note for a part of tbe purchase-money, without paying tbe note, tbe complainant could enforce its payment out of the land by virtue of the equitable lien in him as the holder of note given for the purchase-money.
If Francis voluntarily takes the place of McFarland with the same notice that McFarland had of the equity of the complainant, and recognizes and expressly or impliedly promises to pay it, he is as much bound as McFarland would be had he acquired the legal title from Way. That Francis occupied this position, we think the evidence satisfactorily shows, and was properly admitted. The lien attaches by virtue of the consideration or purchase-money for the land remaining unpaid, as a security for its payment; it is independent of any contract, and, having once attached, continues until expressly waived, or a manifest intention is shown that the party entitled thereto intends to waive it. There has been no such intention manifested in this case, but, on the contrary, it is plain the complainant never intended to waive it. By the terms of the sale a part of the consideration, nearly equal to one-fourth of it, was made payable to the complainant, and to that extent he was substituted the vendor, by the act of the vendor, the vendor retaining the legal title; and we have been unable to find a single case where it has been held that a third person, to whom the consideration, by the terms of the sale, is made payable, has not a lien which he may assert against the land sold for its payment. A different rule has prevailed when the vendor, at the time of sale, parts with the legal title. In such cases it is held that the lien does not inure to the benefit of the indorser of the notes.
But when, upon a sale of land, only a bond to convey a title is made by the vendor to the vendee, and note given by the vendee for the consideration agreed upon, whatever title is passed is incumbered with a lien, which passes to the assignee of the notes, which cannot be defeated by a deed from the original vendor to a sub-purchaser of the original vendor. If the lien passes with the notes it cannot be avoided by the act of others. Dishmore v. Jones, 1 Cold. T. R. 554; Honore v. Bakewell, 1 B. Monr. (Ky.) 72; Thomp son v. Pyland, 3 Head (Tenn.), 537; Inland v. Berryman, 3 Bush (Ky.), 356; Johnson v. Jackson, 27 Miss. 498; Hamilton and Wife v. Gilbert, 2 Heisk. (Tenn.) 680.
A different rule would enable the vendor to perpetrate a fraud upon the party interested in the purchase-money, and manifestly defeat the actual intention of the parties at the time the sale was made. The rule as to a vendor’s lien is manifestly founded ón a supposed conformity with the intention of the parties upon which the law raises an implied contract; it is not inflexible, but yields to what manifestly appears to be the intention of the parties in the particular case. It is made subservient to all the equities between the parties. Gilman v. Brown, 1 Mason, 190. The whole testimony in this case discloses a condition of things in relation to this property inconsistent with any other idea than that the complainant has a lien on the land for that portion of the purchase-money represented by the note he holds, a lien, as the evidence shows, recognized and assented to by all the parties who have ever claimed any interest in the property. There is evidence to show, and, perhaps, sufficient to authorize, a legal inference that Francis holds the legal title for the use of the original vendee, the Franklin Silver Mining Company, and in that event he would be merely a trustee for that company, and subject to all the equities complainant had against it. It is, however, unnecessary to discuss that question. My associates, in the opinion announced in the case, seem to concede that, if the defendant, Francis, promised to pay the demand of complainant as part of the price of the land at the time the bond to him was executed, the lien of complainant attaches to the land. The court say: “ There can be little doubt of its validity, but no such promise is charged in the bill, and that a plaintiff must recover according to his bill, if at all.” It is true relief cannot be granted for matter not charged in the bill, that the decree is pronounced secundum allegata et probata, and it is equally true that a general charge or statement of the fact is sufficient; it is not necessary to charge minutely all the circumstances which may conduce to prove the general charge, for these circumstances are matters of evidence which need not be charged in order to let them in as proofs. Story’s Eq. PL, §§ 28, 257. It appears to me that the allegations in the bill, taken as a whole, are sufficient to sustain the decree. It is positively and distinctly averred that the demand of the complainant is founded upon the trust created by the vendor’s lien. That the defendant, Francis, was a purchaser with notice and took the property subject to the lien. These allegations are the substance of the issue involved, and by them the defendant is informed of the nature of the case against him. The circumstances attending the sale and transfer of title are matters of evidence tending to prove the main fact.
That such allegations are sufficient has been decided by this court. Logan v. Clough, February term, 1874.
In my opinion, the decree of the court below should be affirmed.
Reversed.