50 Conn. 113 | Conn. | 1882
TMs case has been argued before us as if it necessarily involved the question whether a deed given with covenants of warranty before the grantor acquires title to the land conveyed, is to prevail over a deed given, after the
But there are two points in the present ease, either of which we thixilc delivers it from the control of that question, and which will enable us to decide it upon its special facts.
1. It does not appear that the defendant was a purchaser for value. The judgment below was for the plaintiffs, and as the defendant has brought the proceeding in error, it is necessary that this fact should appear, expressly or by necessary implication, upon the record. All that is found is that “the greater portion” of the defendant’s claim accrued’after the deed was given to the plaixitiffs. It is clear therefore that, so far as the portion which accrued before is concerned, the defendaxit was not a purchaser for value, and that so far there is no error in the judgment. Row what is fouxrd with regard to the remainder of the defendant’s claim ? He sets up in the answer, and this part of his answer is found true, “that on the 5th day of December, 1874, said Cutting owed him $2,483, as evidenced by his promissory note for that axnount, dated at Ashley Falls, Massachusetts, December 1st, 1874 ”; and that “ on said 5th day of Decexnber, 1874, the said Cutting, to secure said note, xnortgaged to him ” the land in question. By turning to the deed, a copy of which is annexed to the finding, it appears that the mortgage to the defendant was executed at Salisbury in this state, the presumption being that it was sent to the defendant in the state of Massachusetts after it was recorded, and that he was not present at its executioxi; this point however not being important. Here then, in the defendaxit’s statement of his own case, the most that is
- 2. We think that upon the facts found the defendant was fairly put upon inquiry as to the plaintiffs’ mortgage, and does not stand before the court as a bond fide purchaser without notice. It is true that he avers in his answer “that the mortgage was taken by him in good faith and without any knowledge or notice on his part that there was any incumbrance on said land in favor of the Salisbury Savings Society or any other person; ” and that the committee has found this part of his answer true. But without such actual knowledge the facts may be such as to have made it his duty to inquire after such prior mortgage, and sufficient to charge him in law with notice of what on such inquiry he would have found. Let us see what these facts are. The defendant was the father-in-law of Cutting, the mortgagor, and while from this relation and his residence in the vicinity he would be likely to be better informed than most men with regard to his property and business, it appears that he was in fact, during all the time covered by these transactions, making him advances or loans of money, having, as we have seen, advanced him a considerable part of the $2,488 for which he finally took his note, before the plaintiffs took their mortgage. It is hardly possible that his pecuniary
But there is a further fact in this connection that deserves notice. The mortgage to the defendant refers for fuller particulars about the property to the probate records, giving the volume and page. These records, at the place referred to, show a petition of Cutting, dated July 16th, 1874, stating the contract of Coffing, (who had owned the property and who had since died,) dated January 8th, 1872, for the conveyance of the lot in question to him for the consideration of $200, and praying that Coffing’s administrators might be directed to give Mm a deed of the premises. The defendant may properly be held chargeable with notice of all that appears upon this record. He therefore knew that three years before his own mortgage was taken Cutting had a contract for a conveyance of the land in question, and consequently an equitable title; and that this equitable title he might have conveyed or incumbered. Indeed under
Upon all the facts of the case we can not regard the defendant as a purchaser either for value or without notice of the title of the plaintiffs.
"We do not find any error in the judgment complained of.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Note. The question which the court leaves undecided in the foregoing case—whether a deed given with covenants of title before the grantor has acquired any title to the laud conveyed, is to prevail over a later deed given, after the grantor has acquired title, to a purchaser who takes it in good faith and with no knowledge of the previous deed and for value—is of great interest to the profession and importance to the public. As the Chief Justice well remarks, if the later deed is sustained it violates the well settled principles of estoppel; if the prior one, the entire spirit of our registry system.
The weight of authority is in favor of the prior deed. There is a question made as to the precise mode in which that deed operates in drawing to itself the title, whether it be by the covenants which it contains and which estop the grantor and his privies in estate, or by the warranty operating as a bar to the later title; but the authorities generally treat the case as one of estoppel, and give the estoppel its usual force not only against the grantor but against his privies in estate.
The prevailing doctrine on the subject is thus summarized by Mr. Wash-burn in his work on Real Property, (hook 3, ch. 2, sec. 6, art. 50):—“ So where one conveys land with warranty, but without title, and afterwards acquires one, his first deed works an estoppel, and passes an estate to the grantee the instant the grantor acquires his title. And such title would enure to the benefit of the first grantee by estoppel, to the exclusion of a second grantee, to whom the grantor shall execute a deed after having acquired a title; though it has been insisted that such a construction does violence to the spirit of the system of registration of deeds, which ordina
That the doctrine here laid down is in direct conflict with the entire spirit of our registry system can hardly be questioned. It is the policy of the law that all conveyances of title to land shall appear upon the public records, and in such a place and manner that a searcher of titles would readily find his way to them. Now it would not be claimed for a moment that the most expert searcher is in fault for not discovering the record of a conveyance made by a person who had no title. The rule clearly is, and must be, that the searcher is expected to look only to the chain of title, beginning in the case of each particular grantor only with the conveyance to him, and inquiring for any later conveyance made or incumbrance created by him. This is all that could be required of the utmost diligence, for it is not merely the immediate grantor who may have given a aeed to some party before he acquired title, but any prior grantor may have done it, and its effect on the chain of title would be equally fatal, unless an adverse possession of fifteen years had established the title. There may have been twenty conveyances during that period, and any one of the grantors may have created an estoppel, while the grantee under the estoppel may have been in such a condition, from coverture, or infancy, or other cause, that an adverse possession may not have been able to settle the title within the ordinary period. It of course can not be required of a searcher of titles that he carry his investigation so far as to make sure that no such untraceable and really secret estoppel shall be anywhere lying in ambush to entrap the title.
In Calder v. Chapman, 52 Penn. St., 359, the question was whether, when the records showed an absolute conveyance to Calder from Chapman, it was necessary, in searching Calder’s title, to go back of the conveyance of Chapman to him, so as to take in any possible conveyance made by Calder before he acquired title. The court say (p. 362):—“ In searching for incumbrances or conveyances, the search against Calder would begin with his title from Chapman, and the search beyond would be against Chapman and those through whom he claimed; and a search against Calder during the same period would be considered an utter absurdity.” In Wood v. Farmere, 7 Watts, 385, Gibson, C. J., says:—“By the English principles of notice a purchaser is presumed to have known nothing which lay out of the course of his title; and I see nothing in our registry acts by which he is presumed to have known anything which lay not in it or was not connected with it.” And in M’ Lanahan v. Reeside, 9 Watts, 510, the same learned judge says that a creditor in search of a clew to the title, would not be bound to take notice of a conveyance not lying in the channel of the title, though actually recorded. In Loan & Trust Co. v. Maltby, 8 Paige, 361, it is said that a purchaser “ is not required to search for mortgages upon the premises purchased, as against his grantor, previous to the time such grantor obtained his title thereto.” And we have seen that
It may therefore be taken for granted that the registration system does not require the later grantee to search the records for any possible conveyance made by the grantor or any of his grantors before he or some of them acquired title, and that he is therefore in no fault for not knowing of the existence of the prior conveyance. The record of that conveyance can operate against his title only in a technical way, and upon ground which is utterly unsupported by equity or reason. That ground is this:—¡By the estoppel the defendant is not permitted to deny that the mortgagor had a title when he made the first conveyance. He stands therefore, so far as the defendant’s rights are concerned, as if he had a title at that time. If he had had a title when he made that conveyance, that conveyance would not have been good against the later grantee unless it was recorded, or he had actual notice of it. But it was recorded; so that the prior grantee’s title became complete try reason of his record, when that record was one that the later grantee was not bound to look for, and could not have found upon any reasonable amount of search. The prior grantee’s entire title, both by estoppel and by the record of this deed, rests upon mere fiction— a mere theory. To sustain his claim of title practical justice must be sacrificed to a mere artificial rule that has no foundation in reason. But law was intended to be a practical thing, the perfection of reason, doing justice among men and protecting substantial rights; breaking through, so far as possible, all mere matters of form for the sake of the substance.
The law has no policy which it cherishes more than the one that favors and upholds our registry system; and it would seem as if, in a conflict of that system with a mere theory, the whole current of professional opinion would be in favor of sustaining that system at the sacrifice of the theory. Indeed the theory was established as a part of the common law before the registry system was known, and therefore without reference to it. That system as the later established and as an outgrowth of the progress of society and the product of riper experience, should prevail over everything, no matter how embedded in the ancient law, that would defeat or embarrass its operation.
This view is strongly supported by occasional decisions, by dissenting opinions, and by the remarks of highly respectable commentators, in their consideration of this question. Thus Mr. Have, in his notes to Smith’s Leading Cases, (3 Smith Lead. Cases, 7th Am. Ed., 692, side p. 626.) protests vigorously against the prevailing doctrine, though basing his opinion in part on what he regards as its “ inconsistency with the principles of the common law on which it assumes to be founded.” But with regard to its conflict with the system of registration, he speaks as follows:—“But the strongest argument against permitting the conclusion of the covenants or recitals in a deed to extend beyond the person of the grantor to an estate which he does not hold at the time, is that it necessarily tends to give a vendee, who has been careless enough to buy what the vendor does not have to sell, a preference over subsequent purchasers who have expended
But, independently of the view we have been considering, there is another principle which, it would seem, can be properly applied to the case and which would bring us to the same result. It is a weil-settled rule that
But this is upon the supposition that the prior grantee is not in fault. Much more should he bear the loss where he has been clearly guilty of negligence. If he took his deed without knowledge of the want of title in his grantor, he would seem to have been guilty of gross carelessness in not examining the public records. If he knew he had no title and was willing to take his chance for his acquiring one, the case becomes almost one of fraud upon a person who purchases in good faith and for value after a title has been acquired. It would seem to violate every principle of equity to allow a party guilty of either to prevail over the innocent and diligent later purchaser.
In Prince v. Case, 10 Conn., 381, Wixmams, C. J. in giving the opinion of the court, says:—“The policy of our law is that titles to real estate shall appear upon record, so that all may in this way be informed where the legal estate is. But were this new mode of conveyance to prevail, [the acquisition of an interest in land by means of a mere license to build upon it] incumbrances might frequently he found to exist against which no vigilance could guard, no diligence protect. Our records would be fallacious guides; and when we had gained all the information they could give we should remain in doubt as to the title. It is much better to leave those who had ventured to rely upon the word or honor of another to resort to that word or honor for redress [or in this case to the covenant for title] than to suffer a person who had resorted to the official register to be defeated by secret claims of this kind. The law can not prefer the claims of those who take no care of themselves to those who have faithfully used all legal diligence. If a loss is to be sustained it is more reasonable that he who has neglected the means the law put into his power should suffer, rather than he who has used those means.”
If a deed made when the grantor has no title is to he sustained by a mere [estoppel against a bom fide purchaser, who takes his title after the grantor [has acquired one, and with no knowledge, and really no means of knowledge, of the prior deed, it will be putting a premium upon negligence, and allowing an innocent party to suffer for the gross carelessness of another.