113 N.W. 1034 | N.D. | 1907
This is an action to foreclose a real estate mortgage. The Kerr Land Company, one of the defendants, claims that it has judgment liens on the mortgaged premises superior to that of plaintiff’s mortgage. These judgments were rendered against one Cassels, who, it is claimed, had an interest in the land under a contract for the purchase thereof when the judgments were rendered and docketed. Executions were duly issued on said judgments, and levies made upon the land involved in the mortgage in suit, and said land sold to the judgment creditors. The plaintiff is the assignee of the mortgage in suit, which was given on December 21, 1904, and assigned to the plaintiff on October 30, 1905. The mortgage was given by one Fred E. Harvey, who was the owner of the legal title and was in possession and control of the premises when the mortgage was given. He 'became the owner of these premises
It will be seen that the question is presented whether the original mortgagee, and the plaintiff as assignee, were innocent purchasers as against the judgments of the defendant the Kerr Land Company. It will also be seen that the contracts under which Cassels claims were never of record. Henpe neither the mortgagee nor the plaintiff had constructive notice by virtue of the recording acts. If they had any notice at all, it must have been such as was imputed to them by virtue of Cassells’ possession when the mortgage was given, if such was the case. Harvey received his deed to this land on December 9, 1904. At that time Cassels had assigned his contract for the purchase of the land to Harvey by an assignment absolute in terms, although as a matter of fact as security only. Cassels had also surrendered possession of this land under his contracts to Harvey and surrendered his contracts to Harvey. The assignments of these contracts were made, one of them on December 29, 1902, and the other on the 4th day of November, 1904. Cassels was in debt to Harvey at these dates, and the assignments were as security for that debt. In the fall of 1904 Cassels and Harvey entered into an oral contract by which these
It is admitted in the printed brief of appellant that neither the plaintiff nor her assignors had actual notice that the assignments were given as security and that Cassels had any interest in the land. That being so, the doctrine of notice of rights in land by virtue of the possession thereof has no application under our statute. The appellant’s contention in this behalf ignores the provisions of section 6179, Rev. Codes 1905. That section reads: “When a grant of real property purports to be an absolute conveyance, but is intended to be defeasible on the performance of certain conditions, such grant is not defeated or affected as against any person other than the grantee or his heirs or devisees or persons having actual notice unless an instrument of defeasance duly executed and acknowledged shall have been recorded in the office of the .register of deeds of the county where the property is situated.” This section was recently construed by this court in a case where the grantor of a deed, absolute in form, but intended as a mortgage, was in possession of the land, and it was held that such possession
The judgment is affirmed.