112 P. 1032 | Okla. | 1910
Section 4285, Wilson's Rev. Ann. St. 1903 (sec. 5621, Comp. Laws 1909), provides: *470
"When the petition has been filed, the action is pending, so as to charge third persons with notice of its pendency, and while pending no interest can be acquired by third persons in the subject matter thereof as against the plaintiff's title; but such notice shall be of no avail unless the summons be served or the first publication made within sixty days after the filing of the petition."
This section was borrowed from Kansas (Comp. Laws of Kansas 1879, sec. 3608, sec. 81, Code of Civil Procedure.) InSmith v. Kimball,
"* * * We give the word 'title' in the section its broadest meaning and most comprehensive signification. Judge Story's definition is: 'A purchase made of property actually in litigation, pendente lite, for a valuable consideration, and without any express or implied notice in point of fact, affects the purchaser in the same manner as if he had such notice; and he will accordingly be bound by the judgment or decree in the suit.' (1 Eq. Jur., sec. 405.) Among the actions to which this doctrine will apply are suits for the foreclosure of unrecorded mortgages (Chapman v. West,
Under this decision, which seems to be binding upon this court (Farmers State Bank v. Stephenson et al.,
"The holder of an unrecorded deed at the time a suit is commenced and lis pendens comes in force must be placed in the category of a pendente lite purchaser. This is specially true where the recording laws declare that the instrument shall be effective as against purchasers and creditors from and after the filing for record or recording. As between the parties to the instrument it is valid without reference to its record; but under such statutes the instrument does not become effective as against purchasers and creditors until it is recorded. So, if prior to such record a suit is commenced involving the property, the lis pendens would take precedence of the rights of a grantee under an unrecorded deed or mortgage, and such grantee or mortgagee could have no better right than if the instrument had actually been made after the lis pendens had come in force, for the recording, as in favor of such persons, is one of the essentials to its validity. This is not an exception to the rule of lis pendens, but an application of the rule itself."
Had the holder of the unrecorded deed gone into and remained in the actual possession of said lot up to the time of the filing of the lis pendens notice, that would have caused a different conclusion herein to be reached.
In Edwards et al. v. Montgomery et al.,
"In the absence of any record title, where a grantee to a tract of land enters into the open, actual and exclusive possession thereof, the same is sufficient to put a subsequent mortgagee of the grantor on inquiry as to his rights therein, and he takes his mortgage subject thereto."
Further, had the plaintiff, at the time she filed her lispendens notice, had actual notice of the unrecorded deed of the defendant, likewise a different conclusion would be herein reached, for it could not then be said that plaintiff was asubsequent bona fide encumbrancer by mortgage, judgment orotherwise. The courts of California, *472 Minnesota, Montana, South Dakota, and other states have given similar provisions a strict construction, but we are bound by the construction of the Kansas court. True, Smith v. Worster etal., supra, was decided since the adoption of this section from that state, and is therefore only persuasive; but considering the binding force of Smith v. Kimball, supra, as to the construction of section 4285, supra, when you apply the same to said section 13, article 1, ch. 21, Okla. St. 1895, which reads as follows: "All deeds, conveyances or agreements in writing affecting the title to real estate, interests therein, and powers of attorney, for the conveyance of real estate or interest therein, only (duly) acknowledged or proven, may be recorded in the office of the county clerk, or the recorder of deeds, if the office of the recorder of deeds is separate from that of the county clerk, wherein such real estate is situated, and from and after the filing thereof, for record in such office, and not before, such deeds, conveyances and agreements shall take effect as to subsequent bona fide purchasers, and incumbrances by mortgages, judgment or otherwise." — the same conclusion as was by Judge Dester in Smith v. Worster will be reached.
See, also, Lewis v. Atherton et al.,
A lis pendens vendor's lien claim is an encumbrance under the term "or otherwise." As to whether it was bona fide depends upon whether the grantee in the unrecorded deed was in the actual possession thereunder of said lot or the plaintiff had actual knowledge of said unrecorded deed at the time of the filing of said lis pendens notice.
Said section 13, art. 1, ch. 21, Okla. St. 1893, was specifically repealed by act of the Legislature of Oklahoma Territory on March 12, 1897, the title being, "An Act regulating the conveyance of real property and mortgages thereon and contracts relating *473 thereto, and repealing article 1, chapter 21, entitled 'Conveyances,' and chapter 32, entitled 'Transfers,' of the Oklahoma Statutes of 1893, and other acts and parts of acts." (See Sess. Laws Okla. Ter. 1897, ch. 8, pp. 92-102.) But said section 13 being in force at the time said unrecorded deed was executed and the lis pendens notice was filed, and said unrecorded deed being afterwards recorded, but prior to final judgment, the rights of the parties are to be determined as the laws then existed, and not as the laws may now be in this state.
The judgment of the lower court is reversed and remanded, with instructions to grant a new trial and proceed in accordance with this opinion.
All the Justices concur.