17 Mo. 71 | Mo. | 1852
delivered the opinion of the court.
In this case, the plaintiffs below (Drapers) rely upon two titles for undivided portions of the premises for which this action of ejectment was brought. Shaw and Caldwell were originally joint owners of the lot, and the plaintiffs claim through Block, who, it is alleged, obtained the title of Shaw by a purchase at sheriff’s sale in December, 1823, and the title of Cald
As both parties have taken exceptions and writs of error, the questions decided against each, so far as they .are material to the settlement of the controversy, will be considered.
In the present case, there is no actual return under the hand of the sheriff. In Norwood v. Riddle, 1 Ala. Rep. 195, error was prosecuted to reverse a judgment by default, where there was no return by the sheriff, but where there was an endorsement upon the writ, signed by the defendant, in these words : “ I acknowledge the service of the within writ.” The entry of the judgment states the appearance of the plaintiff by his attorney, and proceeds thus, “ and upon the affidavit of Moses Jones to the hand writing of the signature of Henry Norwood, to the acknowledgment of the service of the writ upon him, and on motion of the plaintiff by his attorney, and the defendant, being solemnly called, came not but made default,” &c. The Chief Justice says : “The endorsement upon the process, purporting to he an acknowledgment of the service upon Nor-wood, is certainly not sufficient 'proof of that fact; but when it is shown, that the acknowledgment is subscribed with the ñame of Norwood, in his own hand writing, the evidence is satisfactory to show that the act was his own.” It is to be observed that this was a case where the party was seeking directly to reverse the judgment, and not one in which the judgment was simply used in evidence ; and there the acknowledgment of service, when shown to be made by the defendant, was held equivalent to a sheriff’s return of service, and authorized a judgment by default. If the record had been used in another collateral action^ and there had been no entry that the signature of the defendant to the acknowledgment of service had been proved, the court in which it was thus offered as evidence, would have been bound to intend that it had been proved; or rather, would have been bound to disregard the objection, because it was an objection only available in a proceeding to set aside or reverse the judgment. It was decided in this court, as early as 1823, in Cabeen v. Douglass, 1 Mo. Rep. 336, that a sheriff’s return to the original process
Now, if the effect of these deeds is to be determined by the act of 1817, that to Bryson will be the better title. Under the second section of that act, (1 Terr. Laws, 548,) the deed to
If the act of 1821 were applicable to the case, it would as decidedly give the preference to Bryson’s deed ; for, under it, the deed to Block would not have any effect, as against Bry-son, until it was filed for record, and before that event Bry-son’s deed was recorded. But it is not thought that the act of 1821 applies to the case, for reasons not necessary now to be stated, and this part of the title is disposed of under the act of 1817. The instructions given by the court which declared Bryson’s deed void, as against the coroner’s deed to Block, were erroneous.
The case, as now presented upon the record, requires that there should be another trial for the purpose of determining whether the title under the sheriff’s deed to Block shall prevail against Bryson’s deed. The Circuit Court, after deciding that the defects in the proceedings against Shaw’s administrator, render the sale and deed a mere .nullity, proceeded upon the coroner’s deed, and found for the plaintiffs for the part conveyed by it. As this latter deed is held by this court to be inoperative upon the case presented in this record, because not
In England, as late as the case of Doe v. Allsop, 5 B. & Ald. 442, it has been considered as a new question, under the Stat. 7 Ann, c. 20, whether a court of law could sustain an unregistered deed against a subsequent purchaser, on the ground of notice. In Jackson v. Burgott, 10 John. R. 458, the question is discussed by Chief Justice Kent, and the opinion expressed that the subsequent purchaser', taking his conveyance with notice of the prior unregistered deed, is guilty of a fraud, and that a court of law, as well as a court of equity, can grant relief against a deed thus fraudulently made, and that notice is equivalent to the registry. A subsequent statute in that state introduced the words “bona, fide purchaser,” which, of course, rendered notice as effectual as registry. The decisions in different states differ upon this question, but it is both most just and most reasonable, to give effect to the notice of an unrecorded deed in a court of law, as well as a court of equity. Let the judgment be reversed,