1 Hoff. Ch. 153 | New York Court of Chancery | 1839
In relation to the apparent discrepancy in the finding of the several issues, I am satisfied that can be reconciled. The jury plainly mean to find that the defendants had no personal knowledge of the claim, and therefore purchased bona fide, and had personally no such notice as should put them upon inquiry. The finding of the seventh issue leaves the question open, whether the notice to their attorney was sufficient in law to affect their purchase.
Upon this question, the cause has been chiefly argued,— first as to what information Wheaton possessed, and next, whether it binds the defendants.
It is necessary to advert to some of the rules of the court, upon this head.
“ Notice,” as Lord Erskine says, (Hiern v. Mill, 13 Vesey 120,) “ is actual or constructive. The former must be “ proved, as any other fact. Constructive is as where no-11 tice is given to an agent; but the agent must come to “ the knowledge, while concerned for the principal, and in “ the course of the very transaction which becomes the subject of the suit. The rule as to notice, arising from lis “ pendens, is a positive rule of law, made to prevent pur- “ chases of litigated titles.”
Constructive notice, I apprehend, is of two kinds. That which arises upon testimony, and that which results from a record.
A bill filed before our statute of 1823, was notice by record of all that the bill contained. A notice duly filed in the clerk’s office since that statute is of the same nature. Notice of this character, although only constructive, cannot be gainsayed. And there are some other cases of constructive notice, in which the legal presumption is not
And again, there are cases in which the constructive notice arises from facts, which in themselves are not necessarily conclusive, but may be so or not, according to peculiar circumstances. Thus, in Birch v. Ellames, (2 Anst. 427,) title deeds had been deposited as a security for a loan with one Peploes, and the party then executed a mortgage to the defendant. He admitted, that upon executing the mortgage, he inquired for the title deeds, and was informed of their being in Peploes’ hands, but that he understood them to be for safe custody only. He had received this information from his agent, who had prepared the mortgage. This notice was held sufficient to charge him, and he was decreed to pay the debt, for which the title deeds were held as an equitable mortgage. On the other side, in Plumb v. Fluitt, before cited, there was also a deposite of deeds, and then a mortgage, and it was in proof, that the mortgagee had inquired for the deeds, and was informed that they could not be given then, but would be sent in a few days, and no notice of the deposite was proven. The mortgagee was not affected with notice.
Thus we see that in one case, the knowledge that the deeds were in the hands of another, was sufficient notice, though the object was unknown; in the other case, the omission to get the title deeds was not sufficient, a call being made for them, but there being no notice of their being in the hands of another.
The doctrine of constructive or implied notice arose very early in the court; but it soon became obvious that from the course of business, the equitable claim of a party must be defeated in a vast majority of cases, if the notice must be personal to the actual party—if he must be charged with positive information, or as in the case of
This rule was qualified by the decision, that the agent must be one employed in the particular subject matter. If he had previously got the information in another matter, his principal was not bound by that. (Ashley v. Bailey, 2 Ves. sen., 368. Warrock v. Warrock, 3 Atk. 294. Francis v. Wood, Tamlyn, 175.) A modification of this rule, however, was declared by Lord Eldon, that each case must depend upon its own circumstances. The one transaction might follow so close upon another as to render it impossible to give a man credit for having forgotten it. (Mountford v. Scott, Turner & Russ. 279.)
There are some cases which refer particularly to the relation of solicitor and client. For example, in Tunstall v. Trapps, (3 Simons, 305,) the vice-chancellor said, that notice to a solicitor was actual notice to the client; that the security to Nicholas Pocoche, and the trust deed for sale were parts of one and the same transaction ; and therefore that the solicitors of Nicholas Pocoche, must have had notice of the judgment prior to the execution of the security to their client, and he held, that the party was as much bound by the notice of the judgment' given to his solicitor, though that judgment was unregistered, as parties who purchased under the Middlesex Register Act were bound by notice given to them.
The vice-chancellor here alludes to the decisions which established that notice of an equitable claim will postpone the purchaser,' although he has had his deed-registered
I consider that the phrase actual notice, as applied to the notice to an agent, is not strictly correct. Actual notice is personal, and that alone. The personal notice to an agent, when the principal is not charged with it, is equivalent to actual notice, but is still constructive. (Hiern v. Mill, ut supra.)
Upon the direct question as to the effect of lis pendens as a notice, it is necessary to refer to the decisions in our own court. Murray v. Ballou, (1 Johns. C. R. 566,) applied the rule in its full force. Winter, a trustee, had sold lands to the defendant, after a bill had been filed in this court to displace the trustee, and an injunction issued against his selling the property. He was held chargeable with notice and decreed to convey.
In Murray v. Lilburn, (2 Johns. C. R. 441,) land had been sold by Winter, the trustee, to Sprague, and a .bond and mortgage taken for the purchase money, which was assigned by Winter to the defendant Lilburn. The court gave the plaintiff liberty to take either the land or the bond and mortgage. The supplemental bill in that cause against Winter, made all the securities arising from or relating to the trust one of the subject matters of litigation. Then came the case of Green v. Slayter, (4 Johns. C. R. 39,) bearing more pointedly upon the present. The same trust was in question as in the prior cases before Chancellor Kent, but it was for the first time insisted that it did not appear by the bills filed by the cestui que trust, that the lands sold to the defendant, or the security taken for the purchase money, were trust property, or any part of the subject matter of the suit. The lands bought by the defendant were lots 16 and 21 in sub-division of great lots 83, 84 and 85, in Cosby’s Manor. The bill referred to several lands in different counties, and among others mentions “ divers lands in Cosby’s Manor,” which had been purchased by William Green, and mortgaged to Heatly, and that the mortgage was registered in the counties
The chancellor was obviously pressed by the argument of the insufficiency of this description. He held, however, that it was enough to require of the purchaser that he should have resorted to Winter for the source of his title, and was enough to put him upon inquiry.
In Carr v. Callaghan, (3 Little's Rep. 365,) it was held that to affect a party as purchaser pendente lite, it was necessary to show that the holder of the legal estate was impleaded before the purchase which is to be set aside.
In Frakes v. Brown, (2 Blackford's Rep. 295,) there was a suit for a divorce and alimony. An order was made, during its progress, for payment of a sum of money, and restraining the defendant from parting with his real estate. The order it was admitted affected the land, or could be executed against it. The defendant had purchased after the order was made without any actual notice of it. It was held that this was not constructive notice upon the doctrine of lis pendens. Actual notice must be proved.
In Edmonds v. Crenshaw, (1 McCord's Ch. Rep. 264,) it was held that the doctrine of notice by lis pendens must not be extended beyond the property which is the immediate object of the suit.
The result of these cases is that notice arising from a bill filed in this court is notice of what that bill contains, and nothing more. Whether the case is under the law as it stood before our statute of 1823, or since, the doctrine is the same. The notice of the statute is only a means of publicity. Whatever was sufficient before the statute to
Another rule to be drawn from the cases is, that collateral proceedings in a cause by which land becomes affected, are not constructive notice where the bill is not such. Actual notice must be proven.
It is impossible to say that the original bill affected the purchasers. It had no relation to any specific real estate at all. It does not explicitly ask even a discovery as to the real estate in which the funds of the child were invested. The utmost that it asks is, how the income has been applied ; and if loans were made, upon what security, and what real estate belongs to the complainant. Then the answer disclosed that the defendant held the lots in question claiming that he was the owner of them, and averring that he owned property enough to pay the complainant all the money of the estate received by him. Certainly no constructive notice could arise upon this.
The supplemental bill was filed after the purchase by the defendants was consummated. This therefore cannot aid the complainant.
Then the question rests upon the effect of the petition for a receiver, and the orders of the court under such petition, and the finding of the jury upon the seventh issue.
The petition was presented by the complainant on the 18th of March, 1836, stating that these two lots had been purchased with the money of the complainant, and praying an injunction and receiver-. An order to show cause was then made referring to the lots specifically, and an order absolute was made on the 4th of April, 1836.
Under the principle before stated as to collateral proceedings, this petition and the order were not constructive notice.
Then the remaining inquiry is, whether Mr. Wheaton, the attorney who examined the title for the defendants, had actual notice of these proceedings, or was otherwise apprized that the particular lots were then the subject of litigation. The finding upon the seventh issue seems to
The supplemental bill bringing in the defendants Nash and Keyser, was filed 25th of May, 1837, and charged that Wheaton was apprized of all the proceedings in the suit before the purchase was effected; and set forth an affidavit made by Wheaton, in which he swears that he acted as counsel of the defendants upon the purchase, and caused search to be made in the supreme court and in the court of common pleas, clerk’s office for the city and county of New-York for lis pendens in the cause, and could find none.
I incline to think that if this was the only evidence before the jury, it would not have justified the verdict. It would not have been a ground for charging the party with notice in this court. I have been desirous of having the actual evidence given to the jury before me. But I am satisfied that I cannot act upon it whatever may be its nature ; and that there is no mode in which this court can interfere under the statute of 1838, in pursuance of which the trial was had. But although- the finding is explicit, that Wheaton knew that the complainant had filed a bill, and that the premises in question were the subject of litigation in chancery, still this court has before it the fact as to the form and mode in which that litigation existed; not expressly in a bill, but in collateral proceedings taken under a bill which in itself plainly did not affect the property in question as against a purchaser. My impressions are, that where such notice can be actually traced to an attorney acting in the very subject matter, the principal must be bound. But I shall not decide the cause on that around. There is another which I consider saves the defendants. A purchaser with notice has a right to avail
Some questions here arise as to the application of this rule. First, whether the pleadings enable the defendants Nash and Keyser to avail themselves of it; and next whether Henderson, under whom they hold, was a purchaser unaffected with notice.
The rule is thus stated in Sweet v. Southcote, (2 Br. C. R. 66.) The bill was to discover whether the defendant, an assignee of a mortgagee had not notice that the mortgagor was only tenant for life, stating that the title deed by which this appeared was in the defendant’s hands. He pleaded that he was assignee for valuable consideration, and through many assignments from persons who had no notice. It was argued that the plea was not good, as it should have stated whether the defendant personally had notice. The master of the rolls allowed the plea, holding that it was immaterial whether the defendant had notice or not, if those through whom he claimed had not. (Bumpers v. Platner, 1 Johns. C. R. 213. Harrison v. Forth, Prec. in Ch. 51. Andrews v. Wrigley, 4 Br. C. R. 125. Alexander v. Pendleton, 8 Cranch, 462. Hogthorp v. Hook, 1 Gill & Johns. 273. Curtis v. Lunn, 6 Mumf. 42.) This rule was sanctioned by Lord Hardwicke in Brandlyn v. Ord, (1 Atk. 571,) with the qualification that the subsequent purchaser sheltering himself under the first, must be the purchaser of the same interest in every respect.
Another rule is, that if the purchaser with notice would avail himself of the want of notice in his vendor, he must expressly aver that ignorance in pleading. (Gallatin v. Cunningham, 8 Cowen, 361, S. C. Hopkins, 58. Woodruff v. Cook, 2 Edw. Rep. 264.) The supplemental bill states, that the defendants Nash and Keyser presented a petition to the court for discharging the order for a receiver, in which they stated a conveyance by Richard Griffith to Samuel P. Henderson, by deed dated 4th of November, 1835, for the consideration of §9,000. It then alleges that such conveyance, if any, was fraudulent and
The defendants answer these allegations by saying, they are informed and believe that the conveyance by Griffith to Henderson was not made for the purpose of defrauding the complainant, and therefore deny the same; that they have been informed and believe, that the said Henderson had no knowledge of the complainant’s alleged rights or interests in the premises, or of the proceedings of the said complainant in said suit, and they deny very fully all fraud in Henderson. They deny that he did not pay the consideration money. They also state that the deed was without date, but say that the acknowledgment was taken on the 4th of November, 1835, as appears by the register of the deed in Liber, 384, p. 48. There is a mistake in the answer as to this acknowledgment, in stating that it was the deed of Henderson and wife.
There are several objections to this answer. It does not contain a denial that Henderson had information of the proceedings, nor that his agent had knowledge or information, but barely that they have been informed and believe that Henderson had not knowledge ; it would be open to great objections if it was in the form of a plea of a purchase for valuable consideration by Henderson.
Again, the bill no where admits the existence of the deed to Henderson, but always makes the allegations against it, with supposing its existence, not admitting, it. The answer refers to the deed as on record, but it is not produced nor referred to in the evidence.
But the jury have found that the defendants were purchasers for valuable consideration, and that the purchase money was duly paid. And the answer sets up the purchase from Henderson. It is then established in the cause that Henderson had the title. That title is impeached iq the bill as fraudulent, taken with full knowledge of the
My conclusion is, though the point is doubtful, that Henderson under the pleadings and testimony may be assumed by the court to have been a purchaser without notice, and that the defendants can protect themselves under his unimpeached title.
The supplemental bill must be dismissed as to Nash and Keyser but without costs, and the complainant may have an order of reference to take the account prayed against Richard Griffith, and a decree that after such accounting he be removed from his office as guardian. Also