2 A. 309 | R.I. | 1885
The circumstances in which this suit was brought are stated in the opinion of the court. The complainant, in September, 1875, loaned thirteen hundred dollars to William H. Whipp, and received his note for that amount, together with a paper purporting to be a mortgage of certain real estate, as security for the note. This paper, in the ordinary form of mortgage, duly signed, acknowledged, and recorded, did not bear the seals of Whipp and his wife. In August, 1884, the respondent, Peck, attached all the right, title and interest of Whipp in said real estate, which he subsequently purchased under a sale by the sheriff. The complainant now prays for a reformation of the mortgage by affixing the seals, on the ground that they were omitted by accident and mistake, charging that Peck had actual notice of the mortgage. Peck demurs to the bill, raising the question whether the complainant is entitled in equity to hold a lien or claim upon the estate, and to have the same perfected, in preference to an attaching creditor who has actual notice of the claim.
Under our statute, conveyances of land must be sealed, as well as signed, acknowledged, delivered, and recorded. The respondent *197 contends that an instrument lacking either one of these requisites is void, and, therefore, that it cannot be reformed; hence, that the instrument before us is not a legal mortgage, but, at most, only an agreement to give a mortgage, which, though good as between the parties, is not good and not enforcible against third parties, whether creditors or others.
It is well settled that a person who takes a conveyance, with notice of a prior unrecorded transfer, takes it subject to such transfer. A man, knowing that another has paid money for the deed or mortgage of an estate, cannot, by procuring another deed and getting it first recorded, defeat the title of the prior grantee. Nor can a man stand by and see another part with his money upon the faith of a conveyance, and then, taking advantage of some defect known to him, claim that, under a subsequent conveyance, he has acquired a title superior in equity to that of the first purchaser. This is the law, even in the case of a purchaser for value. His title is affected by the notice which he has of the prior equitable title. The reason for this is forcibly stated inHart et al. v. Farmers' Mechanics' Bank,
The case of Lebanon Savings Bank v. Hollenbeck,
Demurrer overruled.