OPINION
dehvered the opinion of the court, in which
The issue presented in this priority dispute between a first deed of trust holder and a judgment hen creditor involves the legal effect of the inadvertent and erroneous release of the deed of trust. States Resources Corporation (SRC), Defen- *44 dantyAppellant, holds two liens on the same real property: one as suceessor-in-interest to a judgment creditor and the other as assignee of a promissory note for a construction loan, secured by a deed of trust originally held by Trust One Bank. Plaintiff/Appellee Holiday Hospitality Franchising (Holiday) also holds a judgment lien that, in relation to SRC’s filings, was filed last in time. SRC appeals summary judgment entered in favor of Holiday and contends that as assignee of Trust One’s note and first-filed deed of trust, it occupies the most senior lien position, notwithstanding the mistaken release of the deed prior to the assignment. Because Trust One’s release was inadvertent and unintended, and because restoring the deed of trust to its original priority position would not prejudice the rights of Holiday, an intervening judgment hen creditor, we hold that, as a matter of law, the mistaken release should be cancelled in part and the deed as to Lot 30 should be restored to its position as first deed of trust. Accordingly, we reverse and remand.
This dispute focuses on a secured creditor’s mistaken release of a deed of trust for real property securing a construction loan. At issue is the effect of this release upon the order of priority between the security interests of States Resources Corporation (SRC) and Holiday Hospitality Franchising (Holiday). On appeal, SRC claims the first and second positions through, respectively, the deed of trust at issue (acquired from Trust One Bank (Trust One)) and a judgment lien it obtained as a successor-in-interest to a judgment creditor. Conversely, Holiday asserts a second hen position through the judgment hen it filed after the deed of trust had been released.
Trust One Bank’s Deed of Trust
On April 21, 2000, on behalf of Talley Builders, Inc., Thomas Talley (Mr. Talley) executed two promissory notes and a deed of trust in favor of Trust One Bank (Trust One) to secure a construction loan for improving two lots. The deed of trust encompassed both lots, Lot 13 and Lot 30, located in the Brunswick Farms Subdivision in Shelby County. Trust One promptly recorded the deed of trust in the Register’s Office in Shelby County.
The problems began when Mr. Talley sold Lot 13 and used the proceeds to satisfy a portion of his debt to Trust One. In conjunction with the closing of the sale of Lot 13, Trust One recorded a trust deed release purporting to release the “[p]rop-erty as described in Deed of Trust of record at Instrument Number KD 7805.” The property referenced by the release comprised both lots, not just Lot 13, and the deed release further stated, without equivocation, that “[a]ll of the notes described in and secured by said trust deed have been paid in full” and that “as legal owner and holder of the notes secured by said trust deed, [Trust One] releases and discharges the lien of said trust deed, and to this end [quitclaims] and conveys unto [Talley Builders and its assigns] all its right, title, and interest in ... the [described] real estate.” Yet, the following notation appeared in the bottom left corner of the document: “Talley Builders, Inc./Lot 13, Brunswick Farms Subdivision.” The deed of conveyance of Lot 13 was filed of record on August 28, 2001, and the trust deed release was filed approximately two weeks thereafter.
On June 17, 2002, Talley Builders, Inc. conveyed Lot 30 by quitclaim deed to Mr. Talley (individually), and Mr. Talley then assumed the balance of the debt owed to Trust One, approximately $213,891. Mr. Talley and Trust One Bank executed a Modification and Assumption Agreement *45 without Release and filed it along with the quitclaim deed on July 11, 2002.
Little more than a month had elapsed after the filing of these instruments when Mr. Talley conveyed Lot 30 to his wife, Martha Reed Talley (Ms. Talley); he then recorded the quitclaim deed approximately two and a half months after the conveyance. Tragically, Ms. Talley was killed in an automobile accident on August 2, 2003. Ms. Talley devised Lot 30 to Mr. Talley in her will, which was admitted to probate in Shelby County on September 2, 2003. 1
SRC’s Judgment Lien
After the conveyance of Lot 30 to Ms. Talley, SRC, as successor-in-interest to the Bank of Alamo, obtained a judgment against Mr. Talley in the Crockett County Chancery Court on June 24, 2003, in the amount of $132,062.44 plus court costs. 2 SRC learned of Mr. Talley’s conveyance of Lot 30 to his wife and, shortly after Ms. Talley’s death, filed suit against the Tal-leys in Shelby County Chancery Court, averring fraudulent conveyance and seeking a writ of attachment. SRC then filed a number of records with the Shelby County Register of Deeds. First, it filed a certified copy of the Crockett County judgment on August 27, 2003. It later filed a notice of hen lis pendens in connection with its fraudulent conveyance action, as well as an abstract of the Crockett County judgment.
Holiday’s Judgment Lien
Meanwhile, Holiday obtained a judgment for $92,648.27 against Mr. Talley in the State Court of DeKalb County, Georgia on February 3, 2004. Holiday then registered its foreign judgment and obtained an order of judgment from the Shelby County Circuit Court on December 14, 2004. It perfected its interest by fifing a synopsis of its judgment lien on Lot 30 on January 4, 2005.
Trust One’s Assignment and Corrective Filings
After Holiday filed its judgment lien in January 2005, Trust One assigned the unpaid note and deed of trust to SRC. The parties executed the absolute assignment on April 12, 2005, and, one month later, Trust One executed two documents: one purporting to cancel the release and reinstate the deed of trust, and another releasing the deed of trust as to Lot 13. 3 Both documents were then filed with the Shelby County Register of Deeds on May 17, 2005.
Award of Summary Judgment
Holiday filed a complaint on June 16, 2005, seeking a declaratory judgment establishing the superiority of Holiday’s lien and resulting entitlement to payment in full from SRC. The complaint also prayed *46 for a declaration that Trust One’s cancellation of release was void and that, after the assignment to SRC, Trust One lacked authority to make the filing. Additionally, Holiday sought a temporary restraining order enjoining the disbursement of foreclosure sale proceeds 4 as well as an order requiring payment of the funds into the court pending the resolution of the case.
SRC denied Hospitality’s assertion of lien priority and instead charged that SRC occupied the first and second positions, leaving Holiday in a third priority position. It counterclaimed for a declaration that, notwithstanding the released deed of trust, it retained its superior priority position. As Counter-Plaintiff, SRC averred that the release was not a full release; that, alternatively, the erroneous release had been executed and filed because of mutual mistake; that after the release, Trust One continued to demand, and Mr. Talley continued to remit, payment on the remaining indebtedness; that Holiday had not relied upon recorded title information in asserting its judgment lien; and that equitable principles justified a reformation of the release to reinstate the original deed of trust. It prayed for a declaration of the validity of Trust One’s corrective filings or, alternatively, for reformation of the release to reflect the intended partial release.
SRC submitted, among various documents, three affidavits in support of its motion for summary judgment. By sworn affidavit, Thomas E. Willingham, a Senior Vice President at Trust One Bank, stated that Trust One had intended to effect a partial release as to Lot 13, as only that portion of the debt had been satisfied; that to the extent Trust One fully released the deed of trust, its filing constituted a mistake; and that, subsequent to this filing, Trust One continued to collect Mr. Talley’s payments on the remaining debt. Mr. Talley corroborated these points in his affidavit and confirmed his continued payments, remitted under the belief that Lot 30 still secured his debt to Trust One. Finally, Cory Butler, an employee of SRC, confirmed by affidavit SRC’s ownership of the note and deed of trust by way of an absolute assignment from Trust One.
Both parties moved for summary judgment. Notably, Holiday sought a declaration that it occupied the second lien position, junior only to SRC’s judgment lien. After a hearing on the motions, the chancellor granted Holiday’s motion for summary judgment and made the following findings:
A) That Trust One, as the Predecessor in interest to SRC, created a public record releasing its security interest in Lot 30.
B) That Holiday is entitled to take advantage of every legal opportunity to collect its judgment.
C) That T.C.A. § 66-26-103, et seq. must be construed strictly to give the intent of the legislature that the statute ... be read according to its ordinary and plain meaning of the words.
D) That the cancellation of the Trust Deed Release did not operate to reestablish Trust One’s (now SRC) priority lien position against subsequent judgment lien holders.
E) That Trust One (SRC) is not entitled to an equitable lien creating priority over [SRC’s and Holiday’s judgment liens.]
*47 F) That as between [the interests of Holiday and SRC], the following priority exists:
1. SRC Judgment Lien
2. Holiday Judgment Lien
3. Trust One/[SRC Deed of Trust]
Before turning to the applicable law, we will first attempt to reduce this narrative to a manageable time line of events. Rather than releasing Lot 13, Trust One filed a release encompassing both Lots 13 and 30. Yet, the debt on Lot 30 remained unpaid, and the course of performance between Trust One and Mr. Talley continued as if Lot 30 still secured the remaining debt. Mr. Talley assumed the debt and terms of the deed of trust when his business conveyed title of Lot 30 to him individually. He then conveyed title to his wife. Approximately eleven months later, a judgment against Mr. Talley was entered in Crockett County. Ms. Talley then died in an auto accident, and her will devised Lot 30 to Mr. Talley. After Ms. Talley's death, SRC filed a fraudulent conveyance complaint against the Talleys, its Crockett County judgment lien, a lien lis pendens, and an abstract of the Crockett County judgment. Holiday then filed its hen. Trust One subsequently assigned the debt and deed of trust to SRC and then attempted to correct the mistaken release by filing a cancellation of release and a partial release as to Lot 13. Asserting a second lien position, Holiday prevailed on summary judgment in the trial court.
Issue Presented
We recognize the multiple issues 5 presented by these facts but restrict our review to the only one raised by the parties. As presented by the parties to this appeal, the single issue before this Court is whether SRC’s deed of trust is superior to Holiday’s judgment lien. Thus, we now consider whether the chancellor erred in awarding summary judgment to Holiday and declaring its judgment lien to be superior to SRC’s deed of trust.
Standard of Review
A determination of the priority of rights among the holders of hens and mortgages is solely a question of law when the parties do not dispute the facts.
Bankers Trust Co. v. Collins,
In this case, the trial court resolved the matter by granting summary judgment in favor of Holiday. Summary judgment is appropriate when the movant establishes that there are no genuine issues of material fact and that the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Tenn. R. Civ. P. 56.04. Because no material issues of fact are disputed here, nor have any arisen on review, we consider whether *48 Holiday or SRC is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
Analysis
To identify which party holds the superi- or interest, we must address two fundamental sub-issues: (1) whether, under Tennessee’s registration laws, the released deed of trust remains effective as against Holiday; and, if not, (2) whether the equitable remedy of reinstating SRC’s deed of trust is appropriate. We hold that SRC is entitled to partial reinstatement of the deed of trust and, thus, to judgment as a matter of law.
Tennessee’s Registration Laws
On appeal, the parties first invoke different theories from Tennessee’s registration laws. Holiday emphasizes that SRC’s interest in Lot 30 is unregistered and thus ineffective as against it. SRC, on the other hand, contends that Holiday was on inquiry notice of Trust One’s true interest in Lot 30 and that notice prevents Holiday from now challenging SRC’s priority position.
Holiday contends that SRC’s deed of trust is null and void as against Holiday, whose interest in Lot 30 arose on January 4, 2005, when it recorded its judgment against Mr. Talley in the Shelby County Register’s office. 6 Under Tennessee’s recording system, an unregistered instrument affecting an interest in real property is effective as between the parties but cannot bind third parties without actual notice until the instrument is properly registered. See Tenn.Code Ann. § 66-26-101 (2004 & Supp.2006). Tennessee Code Annotated Section 66-26-101 provides, in pertinent part, that “[a]ll of the instruments [that may be registered as provided by] § 66-24-101 shall have effect between the parties to the same, and their heirs and representatives, without registration; but as to other persons, not having actual notice of them, only from the noting thereof for registration on the books of the register, unless otherwise expressly provided.” Id. Such unregistered instruments are “null and void as to existing or subsequent creditors of, or bona fide purchasers from, the makers without notice.” Tenn. Code Ann. § 66-26-103 (2004 & Supp. 2006). In essence, the failure to record leaves the debtor/grantor’s real property vulnerable to the grantor’s creditors, who can seize the land to satisfy the outstanding debt. See id. On the other hand, properly recorded instruments place the world on notice of the interest described therein and are effective as against all the world. See Tenn.Code Ann. § 66-26-101 (2004 & Supp.2006).
According to Holiday, SRC’s interest in Lot 30 is unperfected and unregistered because of the release Trust One recorded in September of 2001. Invoking Tennessee Code Annotated Section 66-26-103, Holiday contends SRC’s unregistered security interest in Lot 30 is null and void as against the creditors of Talley, Inc. Even more, it asserts that this provision alone prevents the reformation or setting aside of Trust One’s mistaken release. Such a *49 result would, of course, leave the real property of Talley, Inc., the grantor of the deed, vulnerable to its creditors. 7
On summary judgment and now on appeal, Holiday relies on
In re: Tate,
Emphasizing a different aspect of Tennessee’s registration laws, SRC instead relies on the application of inquiry notice to judgment hen creditors. SRC argues that Holiday cannot prevail on its bid for the second priority position because the recorded conveyance of Lot 13, the Trust Deed Release, and the subsequent corrective filings placed Holiday on inquiry notice of the true scope of the deed release. As best we can determine, SRC appears to assume the release rendered the original deed of trust unregistered; moreover, SRC seems to imply that even though technically unregistered, the deed of trust remained effective as against Holiday because the subsequent filings placed Holiday on inquiry notice. Tennessee law recognizes inquiry notice as a form of actual notice.
Blevins v. Johnson County,
According to our research, under Tennessee law, notice has never impacted the priority position of judgment lien creditors.
See McCoy v. Hight,
It is perceived there are five leading propositions embraced in the foregoing sections: (1) That, as between the parties themselves and their heirs and representatives, such instruments take effect and are good without regard to registration; (2) that they also take effect and are equally good as to all persons who have actual notice of them from the date of such notice, except creditors; (3) that as to creditors (that is, of the vendor) they are inoperative, ineffective, and practically nonexistent until they are noted for registration on the books of the register; (4) that as to all other persons (that is, all not embraced in the preceding classes) they are equally inoperative, ineffective, and nonexistent until so noted for registration; (5) that upon being so ‘noted for registration’ they become at once ‘notice to all the world,’ and so effective as to all the world.
Wright v. Black,
The Equitable Restoration of the Deed to its Original Priority
1. The Appropriate Remedy
Throughout its filings, SRC has understandably requested various forms of relief such as reformation of the release, cancellation of the release, reinstatement of the deed of trust, and the voiding of the release. The relevant case law reveals that either of two lines of authority, with slightly different rules, could arguably control this case. One alternative governs the reformation of instruments, and the other pertains to the cancellation of erroneous releases. Apart from differing terms of art, the primary practical distinction between the two lies in the type of error deserving equitable relief. A number of bankruptcy courts 10 applying Tennessee law have recently used these remedies and standards interchangeably and failed to distinguish between them; thus, we per *51 ceive the need to clarify the distinction and explain our selection of authority here.
Under reformation principles, the erroneously drafted instrument must result from
mutual
mistake, whereas inadvertence or unilateral mistake can satisfy the requirements for cancellation, so long as the error was unintended by both parties.
Compare Barker v. Harlan,
Pursuant to Tennessee law, a court of equity, under certain conditions, will reform an instrument or deed when it fails to reflect the true intent of the parties. The error in the instrument must have occurred because of the mutual mistake of the parties or because of one party’s mistake induced by the other party’s fraud.
Kozy v. Werle,
The requirement of mutuality in this context protects a party to a contract from the other party’s unilateral alteration of contractual rights and obligations. The understanding of one party to a contract cannot have binding effect when it has not been communicated to the other party.
Kozy,
Although the remedy of reformation is susceptible to broad application, we believe it is inappropriate in this context. The instant case does not involve the original *52 parties to the deed of trust, nor those claiming under or through them. 11 More importantly, though, the dispute does not involve the binding terms of the agreement as originally understood by Talley, Inc. and Trust One. The facts here also appear to be more akin to an oversight rather than mutual mistake in its truest sense; although Mr. Talley believed the release to be partial, the error lay in Trust One’s performance of its duty to draft and file the release, an act that did not require or involve Mr. Talley’s participation. We therefore decline to utilize the standards for reformation in this case, as the nature of the dispute and posture of the parties do not comport with the contract principles underlying the remedy. Although some courts 12 have found mutual mistake to exist in circumstances similar to these, we must respectfully disagree and analyze this case according to the standard for cancelling mistaken trust deed releases.
2. Cancellation of Erroneous Releases
The existence of an equitable lien in the creditor provides the foundation for a court to restore a released deed of trust to its priority position. Under Tennessee law, the mistaken release of a recorded deed of trust creates an equitable lien in favor of the creditor.
Jetton v. Nichols, 8
Tenn.App. 567, 574 (Tenn.Ct.App.1928) (“A Ken discharged by mistake is, in contemplation of equity, still in existence.”). An equitable Ken is “the right to have the property subjected in a court of equity to the payment of the claim. It is a floating equity until action by the court is invoked.”
Osborne v. McCormack,
SRC’s pleadings and affidavits provide ample support for the unintended and erroneous nature of the full release. This element requires no further discussion. The more demanding issue before us — one of first impression — is whether the intervening rights of Holiday as a judgment Ken creditor prevent the reinstatement of SRC’s deed of trust to its original, superi- or position. For the following reasons, we think not.
We rely upon the principles espoused in the case of
Needham v. Caldwell,
Generally, where the release or satisfaction of the mortgage is the result of fraud, accident, or mistake, it will not inure to the benefit of a person acquiring an interest in the property, who did not rely or advance anything on the face of such discharge. As the discharge, under such circumstances, did not enter into, or induce the transaction, the annulment thereof and the restoration of the mortgage to its priority of lien does not operate as a [prejudice] or place the person who acquired the interest in a worse position than he was before.
Id. Because the junior deed holder in Needham had decided to loan money to the debtor with full knowledge of the first deed, its rights did not prevent the cancellation of the release. Id.
In our estimation, because a judgment lien creditor has no duty to inspect title records and advances nothing in reliance on record notice, its intervening rights will ordinarily not preclude relief for the deed holder. Indeed, as noted above, the judgment lienor’s interest attaches upon the filing of the judgment in the appropriate office, and record notice does not affect the lienor’s rights. It only seems equitable to balance this benefit of absolution from record notice with the risk of deed reinstatement, where such restoration places the judgment lien creditor in no worse position.
In cases involving mistakenly released deeds of trust, some bankruptcy courts have reflected a different approach in resolving priority disputes between pre-petition creditors and bankruptcy trustees.
See, e.g., In re: Miller,
Unlike a purchaser of real property or a mortgagee, both of whom have an affirmative duty to conduct title searches, Holiday merely filed the synopsis of its judgment lien in the appropriate office. As a judgment lien creditor, Holiday did not act to its prejudice in reliance on the deed release for Lot 30. Moreover, the reinstatement of SRC’s mistakenly released deed of trust would place Holiday in no worse position than it would have been absent the release.
Accordingly, we reverse the chancellor’s award of summary judgment and remand the case for entry of summary judgment in favor of SRC and for a declaration of the parties’ relative priorities as outlined here. Costs of this appeal are taxed to the Ap-pellee, Holiday Hospitality Franchising, Inc., for which execution shall issue if necessary.
Notes
. Mr. Talley's answer indicated he had insufficient knowledge of whether Lot 30 actually passed to him under Ms. Talley’s will. SRC admitted in its answer that Mr. Talley was the beneficiary under his wife’s will and that her will had devised Lot 30 to him; however, SRC denied that Lot 30 was subject to Ms. Talley’s estate administration because the conveyance to her was fraudulent.
. According to a subsequent complaint filed by SRC against Mr. Talley, the Crockett County judgment pertained to Mr. Talley’s default on a promissory note maturing on September 3,2002. The judgment was unrelated to this action.
. The partial release appears to be missing from the record; however, the record does contain the register’s stamp confirming the filing of a partial release, and the parties do not dispute the contents of the filing. We therefore will presume that Trust One filed the partial release as to Lot 13, along with the cancellation of the full release, in the office of the Shelby County Register of Deeds on May 17, 2005.
. SRC had published a Notice of Sale in The Daily News and advertised the date of foreclosure sale as June 17, 2006, the day following Holiday's filing. SRC, however, voluntarily withdrew from conducting the foreclosure sale as advertised.
. Even though SRC’s answer disputed whether Lot 30 constituted an asset of Ms. Talley’s estate, we will not resolve that question here. SRC’s basis for this assertion rested upon a separate fraudulent conveyance action it filed but later decided to hold in abeyance pending a determination of the estate’s solvency. Additionally, the parties do not dispute the priority of SRC’s judgment lien, filed after Ms. Talley died. They agree that SRC’s judgment lien is superior to Holiday’s. Accordingly, we need not resolve issues impacting its status, such as when SRC’s judgment lien attached to Lot 30 or whether, with respect to SRC’s lien, Lot 30 would constitute after-acquired property and potentially alter the distribution of foreclosure proceeds. Nor must we determine how SRC stands in relation to creditors of Ms. Talley’s estate.
. A judgment obtained in Tennessee becomes a lien on the debtor’s real property when the judgment is recorded in the register’s office of the county where the land is located.
See
Tenn.Code Ann. § 25-5-101(b) (2000 & Supp.2006). Upon proper recordation, the judgment also becomes effective against any person having or later acquiring an interest in the debtor’s real property regardless of whether that person was a party to the action resulting in the judgment.
See
Tenn.Code Ann. § 25-5-101(c) (2000 & Supp.2006); Tenn.Code Ann. § 66-24-119 (2004 & Supp.2006). Moreover, once a judgment lien attaches to land, it remains with the land and cannot be destroyed by the debtor’s subsequent alienation of the property. ATS,
Inc.,
. As we have noted, the grantor's creditors could seize the property from subsequent grantees, assuming the grantor conveyed title after the creditor’s lien had attached.
. Pursuant to 11 U.S.C.A. § 544(a) (2004 & Supp.2006), at the commencement of a bankruptcy case, the bankruptcy trustee assumes the rights and powers of a judgment lien creditor, an execution creditor, and a bona fide purchaser of reed property and, by way of an adversarial avoidance action, may avoid voidable, pre-petition liens.
In re: Tate,
. This Court has found steadfast authority in this century-old statement, in spite of the substantial time lapse and intervening statutory amendments. In 1984, we noted that Tennessee Code Annotated Sections 66-26-101 and-103 "are with immaterial changes the same as 1858 Code §§ 2072 and 2075.”
W. & O. Const. Co. v. TVS Corp.,
The General Assembly’s 2005 amendment to Tennessee Code Annotated Section 66-26-103 narrowed its scope of application to instruments not "registered” or "noted for registration.” See Tenn.Code Ann. § 66-26-103 (Supp.2006) (amending Tenn.Code Ann. § 66-26-103 (2004) and excluding the classes of instruments not "proved,” or "registered and acknowledged”). Although the amendment apparently altered which instruments qualify as unregistered for purposes of record notice, it did not modify the effect of an instrument’s unregistered status. See id. Because this effect remains unchanged, the Tennessee Supreme Court's interpretation of these provisions remains as authoritative today as it was in 1984.
.
See, e.g., In re: Miller,
. This fact alone does not determine our decision to pursue a different line of analysis.
.
See, e.g., In re: Wilson,
.The Tennessee Supreme Court case of
Fidelity Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Guess,
involving an insurance agent’s fraudulent procurement of a trust deed release, lends weight to this authority.
Fid. Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Guess,
*53
In
Needham,
this Court began its analysis with this rule, but, finding it inapplicable, applied a rule based on the same principles underlying the fraudulent release rule.
See Needham,
