1 S.E.2d 251 | W. Va. | 1939
The sole question herein for decision is the sufficiency of an amended bill to which the trial chancellor sustained a demurrer, and certified to this court the queries whether the plaintiff has presented a cause for equity cognizance, and whether laches appears from the allegations of the amended bill, barring the plaintiff from the right to prosecute this suit.
The proceeding is based on Code,
From the amended bill it further appears that at the time of the execution of the deed the plaintiff, as assignee and liquidating agent of the Bank of Hillsboro, held a negotiable note for $2,549.00, dated November 15, 1926, signed by L. P. McLaughlin, C. P. Brown, J. K. Marshall and A. W. McLaughlin, payable on demand to the Bank of Hillsboro. Against the makers of the note the plaintiff instituted an action of debt April 20, 1931. Process was promptly executed on all of the defendants except Brown. On the 18th of May, 1931, after process had been *43 served on L. P. McLaughlin in the action at law, the above mentioned deed from him to his wife was executed and acknowledged by him. Four days subsequently the deed was recorded in the office of the clerk of the county court of Pocahontas County. Later that year judgments on the debt were rendered in favor of the plaintiff against L. P. and A. W. McLaughlin and Marshall.
This suit, seeking cancellation of the deed as a fraud, was instituted early in 1938 and the original bill was filed at May Rules.
Because of the intervening of much time — a period of almost seven years — between the execution of the deed and the institution of this suit, the grantee in the deed, the defendant, Julia B. McLaughlin, assigns as the principal basis of her demurrer the laches of the plaintiff allegedly disclosed by the amended bill.
Lapse of time is an element but not the controlling factor of laches. 10 Ruling Case Law, p. 396. Unlike the inexorable bar of a statute of limitations grounded solely on the passing of time, laches does not arise prima facie from the mere fact that time has gone by within which equity might have been invoked.Williams v. Croft Hat Notion Co.,
If delay in the institution of a chancery cause can be reasonably explained (Williams v. Croft Hat Notion Co.,supra), and if no prejudice to another has resulted from the delay (LePage v. Bailey,
In the amended bill the plaintiff alleges that this suit was not instituted at an earlier date because no officer nor agent of the plaintiff had knowledge of the McLaughlin deed of May 18, 1931, until a short time prior to the institution of this suit; that following the date of the execution of the deed by L. P. McLaughlin to his wife there was no change of possession of the property, and no circumstance nor incident of any kind had caused any *44 representative of the plaintiff to deem it necessary to examine the public records of the county to ascertain if the McLaughlin land had been aliened or encumbered subsequent to the time that McLaughlin became indebted under the note above mentioned.
For the demurrant, however, it is urged that the recordation of the McLaughlin deed in May, 1931, made available to representatives of the bank the information that the transfer had been made, and if they did not take advantage of the opportunity to obtain the actual information from the record the fault is theirs and they should not now be heard to say they remained ignorant of the transaction until just prior to the institution of this suit.
This raises the interesting and important question whether the recordation of a deed operates as constructive notice to antecedent creditors.
Our recordation statute provides that a title paper affecting real estate "shall be void as to creditors, and subsequent purchasers for valuable consideration without notice, until and except from the time that it is duly admitted to record in the county wherein the property embraced in such contract, deed, trust deed or mortgage may be." Code,
It is not within legislative or judicial contemplation that a recording act can become either a haven of refuge for a fraudulent grantor or a shield of defense for a grantee in iniquity.
The grantor and grantee in the deed under attack are living and are before the court as defendants to the *46 amended bill. So far as appears from the record, they can as well now defend against the charge of fraud as they could have done had the suit been instituted more promptly. Nor does it appear that the rights of any third person have intervened.
It follows that the amended bill does not disclose laches. There is sufficiently presented a cause for determination in equity.
The demurrer should have been overruled.
For the reasons set forth we reverse the decree of the trial court and remand the case for further proceedings.
Reversed and remanded.