78 Miss. 418 | Miss. | 1900
delivered the opinion of the court.
On March 22, 1887, Frank B. Lanier was the owner in fee simple of the lands in controversy, and on that date he borrowed $500 from L. N. Buck, to secure which, payable in five years, he presented a trust deed purporting to be signed and to be duly acknowledged by himself and his wife, Mary E. Lanier, before a justice of the peace, who has since died. The record appearing free from any incumbrances or liens, Mr. Buck furnished the $500. Mrs. Lanier; the appellee, testifies that she knew nothing of this loan; that her name to the deed is a forgery, which she “reckons’-’ was committed by her husband, Frank B. Lanier, who was not produced as a witness by either side. And she further testifies that the certificate of the justice of the peace that she acknowledged the instrument is false. The court below found in her favor on the facts, and we will not disturb the conclusion to which it arrived as to this. Mr. Buck, how
Afterwards, and on December 31, 1887, Mr. Lanier conveyed the whole land to his wife, Mary E. Lanier'. She was a volunteer, pure and simple, and paid nothing for it, and so she took it charged with all the equities of Mr. Buck. Subsequently to this donation by him to his wife, Mr. Lanier wanted more money; and so he negotiated a loan of $2,100 from the Jarvis-Conklin Loan Company, and, in order to get it, presented a trust deed purporting to be signed and acknowledged by him and his wife. Mrs. Lanier swears that this is another forgery, and the court sustained her, and we do not disturb the decree as to this. This'instrument is of date January 1, 1890, to secure the note of the grantors, Lanier and wife, payable five years after date, interest payable semiannually, as shown by coupons, at 6 per cent, per annum, but the coupons to bear 10 per cent, after maturity, and the debt to-become due in full, at the option of the beneficiary, on any default, and Lanier and wife were to keep the taxes paid; and this covenant as to taxes is in both the Buck trust deeds, before mentioned. Out of this' $2,100 the Buck debt was wholly paid, and he marked it ‘£ satisfied ’ ’ on the record of *the trust deed which had been given to secure him his $1,000. This payment to Buck was required to clear the record title, and complainant holds the notes by Buck’s assignment to a bank, and the bank’s indorsement in blank. Default being made in interest payments on the $2,100, the land was sold by a substituted trustee, and conveyed to Murray F. Smith, Esq., who-was agent for the Jarvis-Conklin Company, and his bid was credited on the $2,100 note. This conveyance was of date October 3, 1891. On October 19, 1891, Smith conveyed the land to Beardsley and Gilbert, who on December 12, 1894, conveyed it to the Western Investment Company, which on March 1, 1897, conveyed it to appellant, who, on June 17,.
The tax titles set up by Mrs. Lanier are traced through three tax conveyances to one P. H. Feld, each of the same date (March 2, 1891), purporting to convey each separate parcel of what Mrs. Lanier avers to be the land in controversy, and next a conveyance from Feld to Gibson of date May 25, 1892, and finally a conveyance from Gibson of date November 11, 1893, to her and ‘ ‘ her children then living, ’ ’ and the children are parties to this cause. She relies on this and the three-years statute of limitations in favor of purchasers at tax sales. Now, it is plainly manifest that Mr. Buck, and all the parties in interest under him, at the time they became interested, were in absolute ignorance of all the frauds of F. B. Lanier which have been recited. Every action was had in the utmost good faith, under the belief, derived from the face of the records, that the instruments were duly signed and acknowledged by Mrs. Lanier. Now, if they had been genuine, it is too plain to discuss that Mr. Buck could not have been defeated as to the $500 vendor’s lien paid on the whole land, and as to the $500 after-wards loaned by him when Mr. Lanier was sole owner, by the tax title or anything else set up by Mrs. Lanier and her children that appears in this record, short of the statute of limita-, tions from the time of notice of the fraud. They were in pos
But Mrs. Lanier goes even further in the effort to continue to enjoy the fruits of the monstrous frauds committed by her husband. Believing that the statute of limitation might save to her the plunder achieved by her husband’s unparalleled iniquity, she sets up the bar of the statute of limitations, and, aware that she could not show actual notice of the fraud, she endeavors to show constructive notice to start the running of the statute. In cases of fraud the cause of action “first accrues at, and not before, the time at which the fraud shall, or, with reasonable diligence might have been first known or discovered.'” Code, §§ 2731-2762. Plainly in the case at bar the statute of three years cuts no figure, as the debts were all evidenced by notes. The constructive notice on which Mrs. Lanier relies consists of a bill in equity (No. 2282 on the docket) filed in her name on June 3, 1892, against Beardsley & Gilbert, attacking the conveyance to Murray F. Smith, and his conveyance to Beardsley & Gilbert, as well as that from the substituted trustee under the first deed to secure the J[ar vis-Conklin Mortgage Company, on the ground that her husband or some one else had signed her name to the trust.
It is true it is shown that Murray F. Smith, Esq., out of whom the title had passed before the filing of bill No. 2282, which is apparently still pending, without any proceedings subsequent to the mere issuance of process, had notice of the bill and had agreed to answer it, but on account of pressure of business overlooked it; but it is nowhere shown that he had such notice within fourteen days after the process issued on it, which was June 3, 1892, and unless it was within that time, six years had not elapsed. But if the notice to him had been in time, it would not avail. He was not employed by Beardsley & Gilbert in that case. He was their counsel in Vicksburg to examine records and pass on titles, but it nowhere appears that he was. ever authorized to accept service of process for them'in any case. The doctrine of caveat emptor, of course, has no sort of application here. The chain of title shows purchasers innocent of any notice of the monstrous frauds, all in privity with Buck and clothed with all his equities, and parties in possession by gift must respond to them. They cannot avoid them and continue to enjoy a donation from the author of the fraud, or set up a tax title acquired by them while in possession. They took Frank B. Lanier’s title charged with all the duties he was charged with, and amenable to the compulsion of the same equities which he would be compelled to satisfy. They are not in the - category of innocent purchasers, whom the courts will
Affirmed in part and reversed in part.