233 Mass. 158 | Mass. | 1919

De Courcy, J.

Piantadori sued Mary A. Nally in an action of contract, and on May 29, 1917, a special precept issued for an attachment of the "estate of the said Mary A. Nally standing in the name of Edwin L. Stone.” Attachment was thereupon made of all right, title and interest the said Mary A. Nally had on that date in and to any and all real estate in the county of Middlesex, and also of “the following described real estate, the record or legal title to which now stands in the name of Edwin L. Stone,1 to wit,” the demanded premises, particularly described. The demandant obtained judgment' in that action, execution was levied on all the right, title and interest which Mary A. Nally had in said real estate at the time of the attachment; and Piantadori was the purchaser at the execution sale on April 27, 1918., Later he brought this writ of entry against Edwin L. Stone, Mary A. Nally and Annie E. Nally. The tenant Stone filed a disclaimer. In the Land Court judgment was entered for the demandant; and the case is here on the appeal of the other tenants.

At the time of the attachment from which the demandant derives his rights, the record title to the property in question was in said Stone, and had been since September, 1915. Counsel for Piantadori ascertained from Stone that he had conveyed the locus to Mary A. Nally. The date of this deed does not appear; but a deed was executed at the same time conveying the premises from said Mary A. to said Annie E. Nally. These deeds were not recorded until March 30, 1918.

It would seem that the special attachment in question was made in accordance with the provisions of R. L. c. 167, § 63, on the assumption that the title was retained in Stone with the intent and for the purpose of fraudulently securing the property from attachment by a creditor of Mary A. Nally. That contention is now disposed of by the decision of the judge of the Land Court: " I do not find that the title to the demanded premises was retained in said Stone either for the purpose of fraudulently securing the *161land from attachment, or for the purpose of delaying, defeating or defrauding creditors.”

According to the interpretation of the Land Court, the attachment, levy and sale as authorized and actually made were all made directly on the land of the debtor under the authority of the first part of R. L. c. 178, § 1. See Cunningham v. Bright, 228 Mass. 385. Assuming this interpretation of the “special” attachment to be correct, the difficulty with the judge’s conclusion is that the locus was not “the land of [[the] debtor,” Mary A. Nally. Neither on the face of the records nor in fact did she have anything to attach. Cowley v. McLaughlin, 141 Mass. 181. The property was actually owned by Annie E. Nally. It is true that by virtue of R. L. c. 127, § 4, a creditor of Stone, without actual notice of the unrecorded deeds, could have attached the land as Stone’s property. Woodward v. Sartwell, 129 Mass. 210. See Coffin v. Ray, 1 Met. 212. And the demandant’s actual notice of the unrecorded deed to Mary A. Nally would have precluded him from acquiring title by attachment on a claim against Stone the record owner. His ignorance of the unrecorded deed to Annie E. Nally does not entitle him by virtue of this statute to take her property in payment of his claim against Mary A. Nally, who then had no title to hr attachable interest in the property, on the face of the records or otherwise. She had been a mere conduit to pass the title; and whatever interest she acquired by the deed from Stone she had parted with by her deed to Annie E. Nally, who purchased the property without fraud and for full value prior to the attachment in question. The purpose of R. L. c. 127, § 4, was to give the sanction of enactment to the rule already adopted by judicial decisions. Dole v. Thurlow, 12 Met. 157, 164. And as was said in Lawrence v. Stratton, 6 Cush. 163, 167, where the history of this statute is traced, . . the sole or at least the main object of the registration of, deeds was to give constructive notice of such conveyances to purchasers and creditors, having a purpose to acquire title to an estate by conveyance or attachment; and, therefore, if a purchaser or creditor should attempt to acquire title to the estate by purchase or attachment, having actual notice of the prior deed, unrecorded, it would be a fraud upon the holder of such prior deed, to attempt to defeat it, by setting up his junior recorded deed; which the law would not allow, and so such notice was held to be an exception to the statute.”

*162The present case cannot be distinguished from Haynes v. Jones, 5 Met. 292. As the ruling of the Land Court in favor of the demandant was wrong, the appeal must be sustained, and judgment entered for the tenants.

So ordered.

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