14 Or. 450 | Or. | 1887
The respondent commenced an action in the circuit court for Baker County against the appellant, to recover the possession of real property situated in said county of Baker, and described in the complaint as “ a tract of land, commencing at the southwest corner of Lot 2, Block 2, Fisher’s Addition to the Town of Baker, running thence east 100 feet, thence north 20 feet, thence west 100 feet, thence south 20 feet.” It is a part of said lot 2, in what is now Baker City, in said county. The respondent also claimed damages for withholding the property, and claimed to own it in fee. The appellant denied the respondent’s ownership, and alleged that he was the owner of it in fee. Both parties claimed title from the same grantor; the respondent, by quit claim deed executed to him in.the fall of 1885, by Heilner & Cohen, in accordance with a decree of this court rendered in the case of Manaudas v. Heilner & Gohen, reported in 12 Or. 335; the appellant, by a deed executed to him by the same parties long prior to that executed to the respondent. The deed to the appellant, however, although recorded, was not properly acknowledged so as to entitle it to record, and its admission in evidence was objected to by the respondent’s counsel. The appellant’s counsel offered proper proof of its execution, and offered to show that the respondent, when the deed to him was executed, had knowledge of the deed to appellant; but the court refused to receive it in evidence, and the appellant’s counsel excepted to the ruling. The deed appears to have been regularly executed, aside from the defectiveness of the certificate of acknowledgment.
Our statute of conveyances of real property was taken from the Iowa statute, and the construction which the courts of that state have invariably given it has been, that the want of the acknowledgment or the proof which may authorize the admission of the deed to record, does not invalidate the deed as between grantor and grantee ; and that it is good as to all persons who are chargeable with actual notice. (Blain v. Stewart, 2 Iowa, 378.)
The courts in this state have given it the same construction. In Musgrove v. Bonser, 5 Or. 313, Judge Prim, in delivering the opinion of the court, said : “ It seems to be well settled in this country, ‘ both in law and equity, that our recording acts only apply in favor of parties who have acted in good faith,’ and it is, therefore, generally held that a conveyance, duly recorded, passes no title whatever, when taken with a knowledge of the existence of a prior unrecorded deed. ”
The same ruling has been maintained by the circuit court of the United States for the circuit court of the District of Oregon., In Goodenough v. Warren, 5 Sawyer, 494, Judge Deady presiding, it was held that the record of a junior deed did not avoid an unrecorded elder deed to the same premises, when the junior deed was taken with knowledge of the existence of the elder one ; that the grantee in the junior deed, under such circumstances, was not considered a bona fide purchaser. This last decision is directly in point, and entirely sound.
By actual notice, it must be understood, is meant to include the knowledge of facts sufficient to put a party upon inquiry; hence, possession of the premises under an unrecorded deed is a species of actual notice. ( Williamson v. Brown, 15 N. Y. 354.)
The decree of this court, in pursuance of which the quit
The decision of this court and decree entered thereon in said case could not have been expected to bind persons not parties to the suit, nor give to Manaudas title to any of the property that had been sold by Heilner & Cohen to other parties. It could operate no farther than to put Manaudas in a situation to assert any right he might have to the property sold as against the purchaser thereof, by virtue of his having a prior right therein to that of such purchaser. Whether any facts exist, showing that the appellant took his deed from Heilner & Cohen in violation of the respondent’s rights in the property, does not appear. That question could not have been tried in the trial that was had in the circuit court, as appellant’s deed was not admitted in evidence, and the respondent had no need to attack it, nor the appellant to defend his rights under it. Such question could only be raised after the deed had been admitted in proof.
Judgment reversed and new trial ordered.