36 F. 14 | W.D. Va. | 1886
On the 25 th day of April, 1861, Hansford James, of Smyth county, Ya., executed to James Ward a deed of trust conveying to said Ward a tract of land lying in said county, to secure certain creditors.
“It appearing to tlie court that there is a lien asserted against said land by David E. James, which he claims is prior in date to plaintiff’s purchase, and that the lien is still subsisting and valid; and it further appearing that there is still a balance of purchase money due from the plaintiff, and that he claims to be entitled to rents and profits for the use of said lands during the time*16 that he has been dispossessed thereof, — it is ordered that he so amend his bill as to bring these matters, and any others he may be advised, before this court. ”
In pursuance of this order, McCormack filed his amended and supplemental bill, October 1, 1875, to which the defendants David E. James and Hansford James filed their answers October 21,1875. In the mean time, on the 19th of August, 1875, said David E. James filed his petition, praying that the said Micajah McCormack be' compelled to pay the debt of $2,225, secured in said deed of trust, due said James, and that said McCormack, W. 0. Austin, deputy-marshal, their agents, etc., be restrained from executing the writ of possession awarded McCormack by the decree of June 12, 1875. On this petition a restraining order was granted as prayed for. To this petition McCormack filed his demurrer and answer. On the 3d day of November, 1875, an order was entered dissolving the restraining order granted August 19, 1875, and allowing McCormack his costs against James. From this order an appeal was taken to the circuit court. On the 28th day of March, 1876, the appeal was docketed in the circuit court at Lynchburg, and an order issued restraining McCormack from all further proceedings in the district court, until the adjudication of the appeal in the circuit court. On the-day of March, 1877, the appeal was heard at Lynchburg, by Judge Bond, the circuit judge, and the decrees of June 12 and November 3, 1875, were affirmed, and the appeal dismissed. From this decree an appeal was taken by David E. James to the supreme court of the United States. In the supreme court the cause was dismissed under the six teenth rule of that court. Nothing more was done in the case until June 5, 1883,’ when a decree was entered in accordance with the decree oí 1874, and the prayer of the amended and supplemental bill filed by McCormack, October lf 1875, referring to M. H. Honaker, a special commissioner, to take an account, and report “what liability, if any, attaches to- the alleged deed of trust exhibited by the defendant David Ei James, with his' answer, purporting to convey to James Ward, for •the- purposes therein mentioned, the land therein mentioned, by said Hansford James', which paper béars date April 25, 1861. What would be a reasonable'rent for said land from the 24th of June, 1870, to the 5th day of July, .1875?” The question of rents and profits was, by agreement in writing, signed by the plaintiff and defendant, submitted to the arbitration of James T. Porter and R. C. Williams, as was also the question as to the value of permanent improvements put upon the lands by the defendant, David E. James, during his occupation under his purchase from Holbrook, assignee in bankruptcy of Hansford James. Said arbitrators made their award, which was adopted by the special commissioner, arid made part of his report.
The commissioner reports that the debt secured by the deed of trust is a liability attaching to the plaintiff by reason of his purchase of the land conveyed in the trust deed. The substance of the report is that the debt of $2,225 is. a lien on the land, and this is the main point of controversy in-this-cause.
The first exception filed by the plaintiff is for failure of the commissioner to report what facts were, according to his view of the evidence, proved. The report is in conformity with the requirements of equity rule No. 76, and this exception must bo overruled. For the same reason plaintiff’s exception No. 3 must be overruled.
Plaintiff’s fourth exception is that the commissioner erred in allowing the defendant, David E. James, charges for permanent improvements put upon the property while held by him under his purchase from G. J. Hol-brook, assignee of Hansford James, bankrupt. While it is true, as alleged in the exception, that this matter was not embraced in the decree of reference, vet the question is raised in the pleadings. The parties, plaintiff and defendant, examined witnesses as to the value of the improvements, and the plaintiff and defendant agreed to submit the same to arbitration. They had the power to do this. It was a matter in controversy, and the amount ascertained by the award was properly allowed by the commissioner, and this exception must be overruled.
Plaintiff’s fifth exception says: “The evidence shows that the trust debt was paid by Hansford James, and the commissioner should therefore have reported that there was no existing liability by reason of the deed of trust.” The evidence, in the opinion of the court, does not show the' debt to have been paid; and, granting that the testimony on this question was conflicting, it was the province of the commissioner to deter-mino its weight and credibility. The exception will be overruled.
This disposes of all the exceptions filed by the plaintiff and the defendant, except the second exception filed by the plaintiff. This exception states two grounds which, it is asserted, should defeat the claim of the defendant, David E. James, under the deed of trust of April 25,1861. The first is “that McCormack is an innocent purchaser for valuable consideration without notice of the deed of trust.” The second is “that the defendant, David E. James, participated in the negotiations which culminated in the sale to and the payment by McCormack of almost the entire purchase money, and that David E. James is estopped, by his conduct, to assert his lien by deed of trust.”
As to the first ground of exception, there is no principle of law that would seem to he more firmly established by an unbroken line of decisions than that a subsequent purchaser for valuable consideration without notice, in order to be protected, must be a complete purchaser; that is, a purchaser of the legal title, who, before notice of an unrecorded incum-
In some of the United States, recordation of deeds or other writings required to be registered in accordance wdth the registry acts is held to cnarge a subsequent purchaser with notice. It is difficult to see how a different view can be held as to a deed of trust properly recorded under the registry acts of Virginia. Chapter 118, § 5, Code Va. 1860, provides that every deed of trust or mortgage, conveying real estate or goods and chattels, shall be void as to creditors and" subsequent purchasers for valuable consideration without notice, until and except from the time it is duly admitted to record in the county or corporation wherein the property embraced in such contract or deed may be.” The very object of the legislature in enacting this provision was to give the purchaser or other person dealing with the property notice of any incumbrance thereon. For the convenience of persons desiring to investigate the condition of the property, the clerk is required to keep an index of the record-book, as well in the -name of the grantor as of the grantee. In order to give further notoriety to such transactions, the clerk is required to post, in the morning of the first day of each term of his court, at the front door of the court-house, a list of all writings admitted to record under chapter 121, Code 1860, during or since the preceding term, and a duplicate of such list is to be presented to the court, and entered of record in the minutes. Code Va. 1860, c. 121, §§ 8, 10. So complete are the requirements for the registration of all matters, touching the titles to land, so easy of access is the necessary information, and so general among all classes of people is the knowledge where and how it can be attained, that, in the language of a distinguished law writer, “for one to be deceived ar
As to the second branch of the second exception, that “David E. James was cognizant of and participated in the negotiations which culminated in the sale, and is therefore estopped by his conduct from asserting his lien by deed of trust,” the charges thus made rest upon the unsupported testimony of McCormack, plaintiff. The answer of David E. James, which is responsive to the allegations in the amended and supplemental bill, denies that he participated in the'negotiations for the sale, and asserts that McCormack had notice of the lien. The answer of Hansford James, in response to allegations in the amended bill, says McCormack had notice of the lien of David E. James. The testimony of the other witnesses is too indefinite in time and circumstances, or the time fixed as to conversations wfith McCormack on the subject of the lien is too remote from the date of sale, to be entitled to much weight. Fraud, actual or constructive, is the essential and central element (2 Pom. Eq. Jur. § 821) in an equitable estoppel. “Now, the principle of estoppel invoked by the appellants to preclude the appellees from setting up in this case a title in themselves as heirs of Clark, discharged of the trust, rests upon the ground of fraud.” Judge Joynes in Bargamin v. Clarke, 20 Grat. 552. Kerr, Fraud & M. 130; 1 Story, Eq. Jur. § 391. “ He who alleges fraud must clearly and distinctly prove the fraud he alleges.” Kerr, Fraud & M. 382, 383. If the ease here stood alone upon the testimony of the plaintiff, McCormack, and the answer of the defendant, James, the answer must prevail, and the charge of fraud is unsustained. Id. 398. Thelanguage employed by the defendant, David E. James, during the negotiations between McCormack and Hansford James, were we to admit that he used it, could not, we think, amount to an estoppel, had the equity been a latent, instead of a recorded, lien; for at that time David E. James had no interest whatever in the deed of trust, he having assigned his interest therein to Henry Horne more than 12 months before. The language attributed to him by McCormack, which is: “He asked me what was the reason I did not buy Hansford’s land. Said that I must buy it; it would enable him to buy the Mitchell Scott land, and pay every dollar he owed in the world,” — shows
It is to be noted that the cases of estoppel referred to by the counsel for the plaintiff, and cited by the text writers, are instances of latent, concealed, or unrecorded incumbrances. See 1 Story, Eq. Jur. §§ 398, 399. No case has been cited in argument, and the court has found none in the investigation of this question, where the beneficiary in a recorded deed of trust or mortgage has been estopped from asserting his lien on the ground of concealment, fraud, or misrepresentation to a purchaser of the land. It seems that a registered lien has been regarded by the courts and text writers as constructive notice to the purchaser of the land.
What has been said heretofore with regard to a registered deed of trust being constructive notice to a purchaser for value is equally applicable to this branch of the plaintiff’s exception No. 2, and need not be repeated. There were a few other points called to the attention of the court in the argument, but as they are not raised in the pleadings, it is not necessary that they be noticed or acted upon by the court.
There was, howevef, one question presented to the court, while not raised in the pleadings, which is apparent upon the record, and the court will dispose of it. It is as to the validity of the certificate of the justice taking the acknowledgment of Hansford Janies to the deed of trust to Ward, dated April 25, 1861. The certificate is as follows:
“ Virginia, to-wit: Smyth County, to-wit: This is to certify that Hans-ford James, whose name appears signed to the within deed, came this day before me, Robert C. Williams, acting justice for said county, and acknowledged the same to be his act and deed, and desired me to certify the same to the clerk of the county court of said county, that it may be duly recorded. Witness my hand and seal this 25th day of April, 1861.
“R. C. Williams, J..P.”
The provision of the statute of Virginia, as to the certificate of acknowledgment to be taken by a justice, is as follows:
“Such court or clerk shall also admit every such writing to record, as to any person whose nameus signed thereto, upon a certificate of his acknowledgment before a justice or notary public within the United States, written ■on or annexed to the same to the following effect, to-wit :■ County of-, to-wit: I,-, a justice of the peace for the county aforesaid, in the state of-, do certify that --, whose name is signed to the writing above (or hereto annexed) bearing date on the-day of-, has acknowledged the same before me in my county aforesaid. “Given under my hand this-day of-•”
See Code I860, c. 121, § 3.
It is not necessary that the language of the certificate be identical with that of the form given by the statute. It is only necessary that it conforms to it in effect. The certificate under consideration conforms to the form in tho statute in all the necessary elemónts, and this is all that is required. “It is a substantial compliance in everything material.” See Tod v. Baylor, 4 Leigh, 513; Siter v. McClanachan, 2 Grat. 294. None of the exceptions to the commissioner’s report being sustained, the report will be confirmed.