10 S.D. 276 | S.D. | 1897
This action is to foreclose a real estate mortgage executed by the defendants Mahany and wife. Defendant Anna Wright claims to own the realty under a conveyance executed ajid recorded prior to the execution and recording of plaintiffs’ mortgage, and that the mortgage was executed while she was in the sole, exclusive, and notorious possession and occupation of the premises. The action was tried by a referee, whose decision was accepted by the court, and judgment rendered in favor of defendant Anna Wright. A motion for a new trial having been denied, plaintiffs appeal from the judgment.
The motion for a new trial having been made after judgment, and not having been appealed from, the insufficiency of the evidence to justify the referee’s findings of fact cannot be reviewed, and the only question demanding attention is whether such findings sustain the judgment. Gade v. Collins, 8 S. D. 322, 66 N. W. 466; Bourne v. Johnson, (S. D.) 71 N. W. 140; Aultman, Miller & Co. v. Becker, Id. 753; Hawkins v. Hubbard, 2 S. D. 631, 51 N. W. 774; Manufacturing Co. v. Galloway, 5 S. D. 205, 58 N. W. 565.
The referee finds: That the plaintiffs’ mortgage was executed April 15, and recorded April 19, 1887. That on the last-mentioned date defendant Amos E. Mahany submitted to the
In this state, “every conveyance of real property other than a lease for 'a term not exceeding one year, is void as against any subsequent purchaser or incumbrancer, including an assignee of a mortgage, lease or other conditional estate, of the same property, or any part thereof, in good faith and for a valuable consideration, whose conveyance is first duly recorded.” Comp. Laws, § 3293. “An instrument is deemed to be recorded when, being duly acknowledged, or proved and certified, it is deposited in the register’s office with the proper officer, for record.” Id. § 3272. Under statutes which make the instrument operative as a record from the time it is filed for record,’the better rule seems to be that the grantee should be regarded as having discharged his entire duty when he has delivered his instrument, properly executed and acknowledged, or proved and certified, to the recording officer, and as being in the same attitude as if the instrument were at that moment correctly spread upon the record book, and that no subsequent mistake can deprive it of its operation as a recorded instrument. 2 Jones, Keal Prop. § 1472. It appears from the referee’s findings of fact that respondent’s deed was so delivered to the register, prior to the execution of plaintiff’s mortgage, that it was actually on deposit in the register’s office at that time, and that the failure to note it upon the abstract upon which plaintiff’s relied was caused by the mistake of either the register or attorney who transmitted it. The direc
Regarding respondent’s deed as recorded when first deposited with the register, it will be observed that when plaintiff’s
In his findings of fact the referee states in detail certain acts of the respondent’s husband in connection with the property, and concludes, as matters of law, “that the said defendant Anna Wright, or her husband, Alpha H. Wright, at and prior to the date of the execution of the mortgage in suit, was not in possession of the land described in the complaint, and any and all acts and claim of possession by the defendant Anna Wright or her husband, Alpha H. Wright, were insufficient to give the plaintiffs or their assignors any notice of said defendants’ title 'or interest in and to the land in question.” Whether or not the respondent was in sole, exclusive and notorious possession and occupation of the premises, is, we think, a question of fact not found in favor of the respondent, and therefore the judgment in her favor cannot be sustained unless the recording of her deed prior to the execution of plaintiff’s mortgage protects her title. Whether or not Mahany purchased in good faith, and for a valuable consideration, is not determined by the findings. In the absence of any finding on this issue, the presumption is that he did so purchase the premises, and the court below erred in concluding