96 F. 630 | 7th Cir. | 1899
-This case was submitted on tbe briefs,, without oral argument. Tbe appeal is by Margaret J. Bragg, married, of Lebanon, Ind., from a decree of foreclosure of a mortgage on real estate in Lebanon conveyed to ber by tbe mortgagor, Joseph G. Bragg, who is ber son, by a deed of conveyance in the statutory short form of warranty deed, executed on tbe 15th and recorded on tbe 18th of March, 1889. Tbe conveyance, by tbe terms of tbe deed,, is “subject to a mortgage of $3,000, which tbe grantee assumes and agrees to pay, as so much of the purchase money.” Tbe mortgage-was given by Joseph G. Bragg to secure bis promissory note of even
The legislation of Indiana touching the disabilities of married women, and their powers to acquire, own, and dispose of property and to make contracts, ending with the act of April 16, 1881 (Rev. St. 1881, §§ 5115-5119; 3 Burns’ Rev. St. §§ 6960-6964), is reviewed and explained in the opinion of Judge Mitchell in Vogel v. Leichner, 102 Ind. 55, 1 N. E. 554. Numerous earlier and later decisions upon one phase or another of the subject have been made, and the last-cited (Grzesk v. Hibberd, 149 Ind. 354, 48 N. E. 361) is claimed to be much like the present case; hut the resemblance is only in particular features. In other respects there is a wide difference. The statute of 1881, after declaring abolished all legal disabilities of married women, except as therein otherwise provided, says:
“A married woman may take', acquire and hold property, real and personal, by conveyance, gift, devise or descent, or by purchase with her separate means or money; and the same, together with all the rents, issues, incomes, and profits thereof, shall he and remain her own separate property, and under her control, the same as if she were unmarried.”
It also gives her complete power of disposition of her personal property, but forbids her to “enter into any executory contract to sell or convey or mortgage” or to “convey or mortgage” her real estate, “unless her husband join in such contract, conveyance or
Under this inhibition against contracts of suretyship, it is settled by numerous decisions that a married woman may not part with her title to enable the grantee to mortgage the property to secure a loan not intended for the benefit of herself or her property, and that, if the purpose of a conveyance so made be known to the proposed mortgagee, the mortgage will be void. See cases cited supra. But in those and other cases cited it is implied, and in Long v. Crosson, 119 Ind. 3, 21 N. E. 450, it was decided, that equity will not interfere to annul a mortgage which had been accepted by the mortgagee on the faith of the recorded title, without notice that the disputed conveyance had been made by a married woman for the purpose of evading the statute. In the opinion in that case it was said that having purposely transferred her title to her husband with the intention that he should thereafter, as he might find opportunity, mortgage it as his own property for his own benefit, “as against one who subsequently made the anticipated loan, and who is not shown by clear and satisfactory evidence to have had knowledge that the conveyances were a mere contrivance to evade the statute, she is now estopped from asserting that the transaction was of a character different from what it appeared to be.” “The statute,” it was said in Vogel v. Leichner, supra, “affords ample means for the protection of the person who becomes a creditor. It provides that she shall be subject to an estoppel in pais, as any other person. This does not mean that she is to be estopped by the mere form of the contract, without more. She is to be estopped as any other person, by causing the lender to believe that a state of facts exists which does not, or that the transaction is one thing, while in fact it is another.” The evidence in this record establishes such an estoppel against the appellant, unless that conclusion is averted by the execution and registration of the deed of reconveyance of the property to her before the acceptance of the mortgage. That the loan was made and the mortgage accepted without notice to the mortgagee or her agent in the transaction of any infirmity in the title of the mortgagor is beyond doubt, and is not understood to be seriously questioned in the briefs, ,
Comment is made on the fact that it appeared on the face of the appellant’s deed that she was conveying to a son, but, if of any significance, that circumstance tended to establish rather than to impeach the conveyance. One unacquainted with legal refinements might well have supposed that what the mother had done for a son —in this instance an only child — she might be deemed to have done for herself. In some of the decisions it is implied that, if she had intended an outright gift of the property, it was competent for her to make the conveyance, no matter what her motive may have been.
It is said that the decision in Long v. Crosson, supra, does not touch the merits of the controversy, for five reasons:
*633 “(1) Because here there was no mortgage when the appellant’s deed was recorded. (2) Because the appellant’s deed was of record before there was even a contract to make a loan, — certainly before any money was paid or any mortgage accepted, ⅛<) Because there was no trick or artiiice on the part of the appellant, for she was in actual possession, and she placed her deed on record before any mortgage was executed. (4) Because the mortgagee had notice by the records and from possession, before she parted with any money, that the appellant owned the property. (5) Because the mortgagee’s agent at Lebanon had full knowledge of all the facts.”
By “appellant's deed” in the first and second propositions and “her deed” in the third are understood to be meant the deed of reconveyance. Of the fifth proposition it is enough to say it is not true in fact. The mortgagee had no agent at Lebanon, and the supposed agent, who in fact represented the mortgagor in the transaction, denied the knowledge attributed to him. The continued possession of the appellant was of no significance. A grantor’s possession is not notice of any right or claim of right inconsistent with his recorded deed. Tuttle v. Churchman, 74 Ind. 311, 314, and cases cited. This point eliminated, the several propositions are resolved into one, and present simply the question of the effect of the execution and recording of the deed of reconveyance upon the estoppel created by the execution and recording of the first deed. That was an equitable estoppel, the appellant being responsible for the false appearance; of title in her son. What is there in the reconveyance; to affect that appearance, or to give notice of the truth? Absolutely nothing. Besides, it is to be observed, the loan was consummated and the; mortgage accepted without knowledge on the part of the mortgaged or her agent of the existence of the reconveyance. The record, of course, constituted constructive notice. Such notice is a creature of law, and cannot be denied its legitimate consequences; but it has in its composition no ingredient or atom of equity, and, as we suppose, can never be the foundation or support for an equitable estoppel. If it could, it is not difficult to see that the laws which give the force of constructive notice to the registration of deeds or other instruments, instead of affording the protection intended, may be easily turned, under supposable conditions, into a snare. This record supplies an Illustration. The appellant gave her son the appearance of ownership in order to enable him to procure this loan. If the mortgagee had knowm the purpose for which she conveyed, she could say the deed was made in violation of law and is void; but, having given the mortgagee no notice that the facts were different from what they seemed to be, she is estopped to deny the acts by which she created that appearance; and could estoppel be more righteous? She could have escaped that result only by giving to the one about to act on the faith of her deed actual notice of its invalidity. Estoppel may be destroyed by estoppel, but, if the first is equitable, the other, if not by contract, must be equitable too. In this case Adeline Lam-port accepted the mortgage and parted with her money in reliance upon the record, and upon actual knowledge of the deed of the appellant to the mortgagor, and without notice that its validity was for any reason questionable. As against her, therefore, its validity remained beyond challenge by the appellant, notwithstanding the
This brings us to the ultimate question, which from the appellant’s standpoint is a purely legal one, but of a character to be controlled, by equitable considerations. It is whether the conveyance to her, executed as it was before the acceptance of the mortgage, gave her an unincumbered title. That would have been the effect, perhaps, but for the fact that the conveyance was made subject to the mortgage, which, by the terms of the deed, she assumed and agreed to pay, as part of the purchase price. It is said that she had no power to make the contract of assumption; but that does not seem to be so. By force of the statute of 1881 she was relieved of all disabilities, except as stated, find in the acquisition of property she had a right to assume personal obligations for the price. See Rinn v. Rhodes, 93 Ind. 389; Chandler v. Spencer, 109 Ind. 553, 10 N. E. 577; Berridge v. Banks, 125 Ind. 561, 25 N. E. 805. But, if the assumption as a personal contract was invalid, it was certainly competent for her to acquire or accept the title subject to an incumbrance by mortgage or otherwise; and the recital in the deed to the effect that the conveyance was made subject to an incumbrance as a part of the purchase price binds her as a recital of fact, if not as a covenant to-pay the incumbrance. If she could not charge herself with the mortgage debt, she could accept the property subject to the incumbrance; and to that extent, at least, the transaction was as if neither party had been under legal disability. If the covenant was one which she had power to make, the suggestion that it was without consideration can be established only by connecting this conveyance with that of January 19th, and showing its lack of consideration and its execution for an unlawful puipose; but that, as we have seen, is forbidden by the estoppel. On the face of the deed the consideration for the covenant to assume is expressly stated, and, the mortgagee having had only constructive notice of the existence and contents of the deed, it is not competent for the present purpose to show aliunde that the character of the instrument was different from what it seemed to be, or that the facts recited were not true. Assuming that the covenant was valid, she did not thereby bind herself, as surety, to pay the debt of another. She made the debt her own, and the original debtor became, in equity, only secondarily liable.
The final contention is that when the appellant received the deed of March 15th there was no mortgage in existence, and that the subsequent acceptance of the mortgage cannot be carried back by relation to the prior date of signing and acknowledgment, so as to cut off the intervening rights acquired by the appellant. The plain answer is that she acquired no right which was not understood and expressly declared to be subject to the mortgage as a subsisting lien. There can therefore be no injustice to her if the lien be made good
In Felton v. Smith it was said:
“The Action of relation is allowed force when equity requires that the last of a series of acts shall be carried back to the Arst or original act for the purpose of shutting out intervening claims. In no case is it allowed force where the party insisting upon it is endeavoring to secure an unconscionable result.”
In Smiley v. Smiley a deed of a father to his children, put in escrow for delivery after his death, was held good by relation against a second wife who before the marriage was informed of the deed. The general rule is everywhere recognized that the doctrine shall not be so applied as to do wrong to strangers; but the appellant, instead of being a stranger to this mortgage, came into privity with the mortgagor by accepting from him a conveyance of the incumbered title. She can no more dispute the mortgage than could her grantor, the maker of it. To quote from the opinion in Leiter v. Pike, 127 Ill. 287, 326, 20 N. E. 31:
“A deed placed in escrow conveys nothing until the conditions are performed. •But,’ says Shop. Touch. (Oth Ed.) pp. 57, 59, ‘when the conditions are performed, amt the deed is delivered over, then the deed shall lake as much effect as if it were delivered immediately to the party to whom it is made, and no act of God or man can hinder or prevent this effect then.’ And it needs no authority to prove that that which the grantor himself cannot do, in this respect, he canot empower his grantee to do, for his grantee can but occupy his position; assuming, of course, that his grantee is chargeable with notice of the deed in escrow.”
See, also, McDonald v. Huff, 77 Cal. 279, 19 Pac. 499; Jacobus v. Insurance Co., 27 N. J. Eq. 604.
The appellant at no step of the transaction disclosed was deceived, or acted without full knowledge of the facts affecting her interests. She should not be allowed now to convert her own acts and conduct, in which there was certainly no evil intention at the time, into agencies of deceit and of successful imposition upon another, who acted with innocent faith in appearances for which the appellant was responsible. The decree below is affirmed.