58 Miss. 846 | Miss. | 1881
delivered the opinion of the court.
The Mississippi Central Railroad Company was originally the owner of the land sued for, and as such executed, on May 1, 1872, a mortgage upon it, as well as upon all its other property, real and personal, to secure the holders of its bonds. This mortgage was not recorded in the county of Copiah, in which this land is situated. In April, 1874, the Mississippi Central Railroad Company and the New Orleans, Jackson, and Great Northern Railroad Company, in accordance with the provisions of an act of the Legislature authorizing the step, consolidated and merged themselves into a new corporation, which assumed the name of the New Orleans, St. Louis, and Chicago Railroad Company. (This corporation must not be confounded with the present defendant, known, by an inversion of the name, as the Chicago, St. Louis, and New Orleans Railroad Company, and which is the later creation of a subsequent organization.)
By the terms of the consolidation, the new corporation acquired all the property and franchises and assumed all the debts and obligations of the two corporations of which it was formed, and which became extinct by its creation. On the 17th of November, 1875, the mercantile firm of Faler & Co.. recovered a judgment against the consolidated company in the Circuit Court of Copiah County, the same being based on a default of its duty as a common carrier.
This judgment was regularly enrolled, and a sale of the land in question having taken place under it, the same was bought by Faler & Co., the plaintiffs in execution, who subsequently conveyed to the plaintiff in this suit. Plaintiff’s title, it will be seen, is thus derived through a judgment rendered against the consolidated corporation, who had obtained the land
Some question is made as to whether the consolidated corporation, through a judgment against which plaintiffs claim title, had actual knowledge of the unrecorded mortgage executed by the Mississippi Central Eailroad Company, from whom they obtained the land. We do not think that the consolidated company, or those who have title through it, can be heard to aver ignorance of any of the debts, contracts, or encumbrances of either of the companies by a merger of which it was formed. It exists and was created by an absorption of those companies. The acquisition of their property and franchises gave it being,' and tke payment of their debts and the fulfilment of their contracts was the law of its being.
It took the property burdened with the debts, and the payment of the debts constituted the consideration to be paid for the acquisition of the property. It held the property, therefore, charged with a trust in favor of all who had liens against it which were valid against those from whom it was derived .
The unrecorded mortgage, then, bound the land in the hands of the consolidated corporation, and could have been enforced against it. Can it be defeated by a creditor of the consolidated company, or by a purchaser under a judgment against it, who had no notice of its existence?
If available against him, it was equally so against his creditors and assignees by operation of law.
The judgment creditor still remains to some extent a volunteer, and it is still true that a purchaser at an execution-sale obtains only the interest of the defendant in execution, except where the registry laws otherwise provide. But those laws do provide that “every conveyance, covenant, agreement, deed, mortgage, and trust-deed ” must be recorded in order to be valid and effectual against “ subsequent purchasers and all creditors ; ” which is the same thing, of course, as saying that these conveyances shall, as to creditors, be absolutely void unless recorded.
Whenever an instrument which the registry laws require to be recorded has been made by a grantor having a beneficial interest in the property conveyed which is vendible under execution, and such instrument remains unrecorded, a judgment creditor who has no actual notice of it, nor anything to put him on inquiry, may subject the interest of the grantor exactly as if he had made no such instrument, and the purchaser at the execution sale will obtain a title superior to the rights of those who claim by, through, or under the unrecorded instrument.
The case of Walton v. Hargroves, 42 Miss. 20, illustrates that class of cases where the equity asserted is one that needs not to be recorded, and ordinarily cannot be. It was a case of a vendor’s lien, the creation of a court of equity ; and as no ' record of it was necessary, it was held that there was nothing to shelter the purchaser at execution-sale from its operation.
The case of Henderson v. Downing, 24 Miss. 106, illustrates the general class of cases where the right attempted to be set up against the purchaser at an execution-sale grows out of an instrument which the law requires to be recorded in order to be effective against creditors, and which has not been recorded. It was correctly held that the execution purchaser obtained a good title, though the instrument was recorded before he bought, because the record did not precede the judgment, and it was the judgment which fixed the rights of the parties. To the same effect are Humphreys v. Merrill, 52 Miss. 92, and Longbridge v. Bowland, 52 Miss. 546.
Both in our State and in others there has been much confusion of utterance on this subject, in consequence of a failure to bear always in mind the change wrought by the registry laws. Undoubtedly the correct doctrine' is that the judg
We have been speaking of the rights of the creditor as against those claiming under secret conveyances from his debtor, but the case in hand is not of that character. Neither the plaintiffs, nor their grantor here, are or ever were the creditors of the grantor in the unrecorded mortgage, but of the grantee under that instrument. The Mississippi Central Eailroad Company made the mortgage, and afterwards, by consolidation, conveyed the land to the New Orleans, St. Louis, and Chicago Eailroad Company. It was this latter company that became the debtor of Eater & Co., and it was as their property that the land was sold. The question presented, therefore, is, whether the creditors of a subsequent grantee are so protected by the registry acts that they can resist the attacks of one holding under a secret conveyance; made by the grantor of their creditor before the property came into the ownership of the latter. Who are “ the creditors ” referred to in those acts ? Are they the creditors only of him who makes the secret conveyance, or does the term embrace all who may, through all time, give credit to one who is clothed with the record title to the property ?
It is insisted, with very great earnestness and ability, that the object of the registry acts is to give record notice to all
It is further insisted that “ all creditors ” are placed by the law upon the same footing as “ subsequent purchasers,’’ and as the latter are protected where they buy in good faith from a grantee who has notice of the unrecorded instrument, so must the former be also. An exhaustive search of the authorities fails to bring to light any adjudicated case sanctioning this view. While it is true that there is great dearth of direct adjudication upon the point either way, it seems universally to have,been assumed, and has been quite frequently declared, both in this State and elsewhere, that the purchasers and creditors referred to are purchasers from and creditors of the grantor in the unrecorded instrument, and that it is such purchasers and creditors only who are protected. As to these, the purchasers must be “subsequent” ones; while “all creditors,” whether subsequent or antecedent, are embraced, provided they have acquired liens before notice, actual or constructive, of the secret conveyance.
This point was expressly decided by the Supreme Court of the United States in Pierce v. Turner, 5 Cranch, 154; and though one judge dissented on the special facts of the case, even he admitted, as a general proposition, that creditors of the grantee in a secret conveyance were not protected, by the statutes from the effects of a previous unrecorded instrument made by his grantor, of which he had notice, though his creditors did not. This seems correct on principle. The terms “debtor ” and “ creditor ’ ’ are correlative in character, and unless something appears to indicate a contrary intention, we must understand the one as referring to the other. So, when the statute speaks of the secret conveyance of a grantor being invalid as to creditors, unless some other intention is in some way indicated we must understand the term as referring alone to his creditors. All other creditors, therefore, — that is to say,
To the suggestion that the object of the statute was to put ^ subsequent purchasers ” and “ all creditors” upon the same footing, and that as subsequent purchasers from a second grantee of the grantor in the secret conveyance were protected, so must the creditors of such grantee be also, there are two conclusive answers.
If it be true that subsequent purchasers from persons other than the secret grantor are protected by the statute, it is because they may still be deemed purchasers from him where they have bought from his grantee; since, in such case, their title is derivative, and so flows through and from him that they are mediately, though not immediately, purchasers from him. Creditors, on the contrary, occupy no such relation to each other or to the successive owners of the property. The claim of each is.collateral to, disconnected from, and independent of the other, without any chain to bind the creditors of one to the creditors of the other, though both may have looked for satisfaction to the same property, owned in turn by their respective debtors. In no possible way, therefore, can language intended by the statute to be applied to the creditors of him of whose secret acts the law-giver is speaking, be extended, upon any idea of privity, to the creditors of a subsequent holder of the property.
But it is not true that the registry acts protect, or were intended to protect, those who buy from remote holders of the property. Such purchasers are protected by the common law and by their own good faith, or that of their vendors. If their vendors have had no notice, of the unrecorded deed, they will obtain a good title by reason of that fact, though they themselves knew of it. If their vendors knew of it, but they did not, the same result will follow because of their. own good faith ; and these results follow, not by reason of the registry acts, but because such was the law centuries before these statutes were enacted. The registry acts operate, not for the protection of
In the case at bar, if the plaintiff company had bought the land in controversy from the consolidated corporation for value, and without notice of the unrecorded mortgage executed by the previous owner, the title would have been perfect though its vendor had knowledge of that mortgage. That its good faith will not alike protect where it derives title through an execution-sale is due to the fact that no statute so declares, and that from the time whereof the memory of man runneth not to the contrary the law has been otherwise..
A deed or mortgage taken in good faith from one vjho knowingly holds property encumbered by a secret lien will always defeat the lien; a judgment confessed or recovered will not, except where the secret lien has been created by the judgment debtor, and is of such character as is required by the registry laws to be recorded, but has not been recorded. If the distinction seems without intrinsic merit, it must be abolished by other departments of the government than the judiciary ; and until it has been done, we can only say that time out of mind such has been the common law of England, and that as to it we must regard our law-givers as saying, with the barons at Runnymede, Nolumus leges Angliae mutari.
• Judgment affirmed.