4 N.W.2d 392 | Iowa | 1942
On June 20, 1928, Ellen Bopp Billmeyer executed a deed to land owned by her, including the tract in controversy, naming as grantees her grandsons Ellis Billmeyer Shepard and Gordon Kenneth Shepard. The deed was delivered in escrow to Clare Shepard, father of the grantees, with instructions to place of record when the grantor died. The grantor reserved possession during her life and continued in occupancy. The deed was never placed of record.
On April 16, 1934, the same grantor, Ellen Bopp Billmeyer, deeded the tract in controversy and other land to her daughter, Mabel Billmeyer Pickworth. On July 24, 1934, Julius Boeckh, receiver of the First National Bank of Hawkeye, obtained a judgment against Ellen Bopp Billmeyer, and on August 19, 1935, *1308 commenced action against Mabel Billmeyer Pickworth and Ellen Bopp Billmeyer to set aside the deed of April 16, 1934. The action was settled by the conveyance on April 10, 1936, by Mabel Billmeyer Pickworth and husband and Ellen Bopp Billmeyer of the land involved here to Julius Boeckh, receiver. On March 16, 1937, Boeckh, receiver, under proper orders of court, deeded the land in controversy here to C.N. Freligh, plaintiff herein. All of the above deeds, except that of June 20, 1928, were duly recorded.
On June 10, 1941, Freligh, claiming to be an innocent purchaser for value and without, notice, brought this action to quiet his title against the grantor Ellen Bopp Billmeyer, the two grantees in the unrecorded deed of June 20, 1928, and Clare Shepard, their father and escrow agent. The trial court found for plaintiff. Defendants other than Ellen Bopp Billmeyer have appealed.
[1] The court's decree is based upon the finding that appellee Freligh was a good-faith purchaser of the land for value and without notice of appellants' rights under their unrecorded deed, which was therefore of no validity against said appellee because of section 10105, Code, 1939, providing:
"No instrument affecting real estate is of any validity against subsequent purchasers for a valuable consideration, without notice, unless filed in the office of the recorder of the county in which the same lies, as hereinafter provided."
We see no escape from the conclusion reached by the trial court. It appears without dispute that appellee Freligh is a subsequent purchaser for value and that he had no knowledge or notice of appellants' rights under their unrecorded deed until long after he acquired the property and paid for it. He is clearly entitled to the protection of the Recording Act. Bailey State Bk. v. Heinse,
[2] Appellants rely upon a decree in a case commenced by Mabel Billmeyer Pickworth, grantee under the deed of April 16, 1934, in which decree the validity of the unrecorded deed of June 20, 1928, as against said Mabel, was adjudicated. See Pickworth *1309
v. Whitford,
There is a dispute as to whether the case of Pickworth v. Whitford involved the tract in controversy here or was confined to other lands conveyed by the two deeds of June 20, 1928, and April 16, 1934. Appellants' contention that the Pickworth case involved the tract deeded to appellee Freligh may be accepted. Nevertheless, it is clear that the decree in Pickworth v. Whitford, supra, is not binding upon said appellee, who was not a party to that case, and who, unlike Mrs. Pickworth, is entitled to the protection of Code section 10105. As having some bearing, see Duke v. Park,
Appellants argue that appellee Freligh, upon discovering the unrecorded deed to appellants, could have rescinded the purchase from his grantor and been restored to statu quo. They cite Strothers v. Leigh,
The decree is — Affirmed.
All JUSTICES concur.