79 N.C. 235 | N.C. | 1878
(After stating the case as above) 1. Tbe statute provides that “ no deed of trust or mortgage for real or personal estate shall be valid at law to pass any property as against creditors or purchasers for a valuable consideration, from the donor, bargainor or mortgagor, but from the registration of such deed of trust or mortgage in the county where the land lieth.” Bat. Rev. ch. 35, § 12. How mort-. gages executed without the State, for lands lying within the State, shall be proved without the State before they can be duly registered, is prescribed by statute, Bat. Rev. ch. 85, §§ 7, 8, and it is sufficient to say the mortgage from Yernoy to Bond has not been probated as the law directs, and that upon such probate it was not entitled to registration. Until a deed is proved in the manner prescribed by the statute, the public register has'no authority to put it on his book ;' the probate is his warrant -aild his only warrant fordoing, so. Williams v. Griffin, 4 Jones 31; Burnett v. Thompson, 3 Jones 113; 11 Ire. 162; Carrier v. Hampton, 11 Ire. 307. Not having .been duly .proved,'the registration was ineffectual to pass, the-title as against creditors or purchasers. Robinson v. Willoughby, 70 N. C. 358; 2 Ire. Eq. 584; Busb. Eq. 283.
• 2. Does such a registration as this have the effect of notice to the world of the mortgage from'■Yernoy to Bond,'so as to .affect a subsequent purchaser
- The mortgage -from Yernoy-tothe plaintiffs' had the effect of passing the legal title, and-if the.registration of tire-mortgage to ■ Bond did not-impart notice'to the plaintiffs, they will hold the land discharged of any prior equity; Polk v. Gallant, 2 Dev. & Bat. Eq. 395; Winborn v. Gorrell, 3 Ire. Eq. 117. It is in cases-where-actual notice is so "clearly es
3. The defendant insists that the instrument reconveying the land from Yernoy to Bond by its registration, though it may be defectively registered, had the effect of creating an equity in Bond, the vendor, which followed the deed and attached to the legal estate transmitted to the plaintiffs,, and will be protected and enforced, and for this position he cites Derr v. Dellinger, 75 N. C., 300. That was not the case of a mortgage, and it stands altogether upon different, grounds. Derr purchased and acquired the legal title-with express notice of an outstanding bond for title to-another party who had contracted to. purchase the same; land. A contract to sell land is not required to be registered and take effect only from registration like a mortgage, but like a deed when registered it relates back to the date of the contract. Bat. Rev. ch. 35, § 24. Derr therefore having had notice of the bond for title took the legal estate subject to the prior equity. Had he purchased without notice the: Court clearly intimate that the equitable estate would have-been annihiliated. We are not called upon to say how that would be. Derr purchased with, while the plaintiffs purchased without notice.
4, The defendant again insists that the plaintiffs had notice by Us pendens, in that, they purchased during the pendency of an action by Bond against Yernoy to foreclose: the mortgage upon the land now in controversy. The principle of lis pendens is that the specific property must be so pointed .out by the proceedings as. to warn the whole world ■ that they meddle with it at their peril, and the pendency of such suit, duly prosecuted is notice to a purchaser so as . to bind his. interest. Adams Eq. 157,. and-notes. As tho
" ' Erbm the-time of filing-only shall the pendency of the action be constructive notice to a purchaser or incum-brancer of the property affected .thereby ; and every person whose conveyance or incumbrance is subsequently executed : or recorded, shall be deemed a' subsequent purchaser or incumbrancer, and shall be bound by all proceedings taken after the filing of such notice to the same extent as if he were’ made a party to the action.
■ This statute is in substance a oppy of 2 Victoria, which 'has received a construction by the English Courts. It is there held that no Us lindens, of which a purchaser has not express notice, will how bind him unless it be duly registered. Before that statute, a purchaser pendente lite, though
It would seem that the purpose of our statute was to assimilate the law of Us pendens to the registration laws and the docketing of judgments, and to produce consistency and certainty in the doctrine of constructive notice. There is certainly a great incongruity in the law where the pendency -of an action binds a party dealing with the property, though he have no actual notice of the suit, while the same party is unaffected by express notice of an unregistered mortgage, or one defectively registered. While therefore I am of opinion that the policy of the statute would be the better carried out by following the English and New York construction, and holding that lis pendens is constructive notice only where the notice has been duly registered in every county where the benefit of it is claimed, a different construction has been put upon C. C. P., § 90, by two recent decisions of this Court, from which I do not fell at liberty to dissent. Badger v. Daniel, 77 N. C., 251; Rollins v. Henry, 78 N. C., 342.
It is there held that when the action is pending in the county where the property is situate, it has the force and •effect of lis pendens, and dispenses with the statute re•quirement, or rather, that the statute does not apply to such case. It remains to be seen then whether the defendant has placed himself in the condition to claim the
5. It is further insisted that the mortgage from Vernoy to the plaintiffs was executed to secure advancements to be thereafter made, and is therefore inoperative by reason of our registration laws, the object of these laws being to give notoriety, as veil to the extent as to the existence of mortgages and deeds of trust. This question has been raised twice-in our Reports, but left [undecided. See DeCourcy v. Barr, Busb. Eq., 181, and Small v. Small, 74 N. C., 16. The mortgage is in the form of an agricultural lien upon the crop to-be made to secure advances for making it; and then, as a further security for repayment at the time stipulated, of the sum to be advanced, not exceeding sixteen hundred dollars, the mortgage upon the land was executed. Upon this contract'the plaintiffs advanced the sum agreed on, over one-thousand dollars of which is yet unpaid, and can be collected only by resorting to the mortgage: It is settled that a mortgagee is a purchaser for valuable consideration, and whether the consideration is adequate or not, will not affect
6. The case', so far as the plaintiffs are the actors, is the. ordinary one of purchasers for valuable consideration without notice, who, having obtained’the legal estate at the time of their purchase, are entitled to priority according t® the maxim, “ where equities are equal the law shall prevail.” But from the character of the defence, the action is more like one wherein the defendant is the actor, and seeks to set aside the legal title of the plaintiffs, or to have them declared trustees for his benefit. To succeed in this, however, it was incumbent upon him to do two things, — first, to allege and show that the plaintiffs purchased and acquired the legal title with notice of his equity; and second, to show on his part an actual 'purchase for value, fully completed by payment of the purchase money. He has done neither. His equity is derived through Bond, his vendor, whose unrecorded mortgage we have seen does not operate as notice. His purchase is not fully complete, for he has not paid the purchase money; and having bought under a decree of Court, that tribunal will not require him to pay the purchase
There is error; judgment reversed, and judgment here according to the ease agreed, for the plaintiffs.
Error.
Per CuRiAM. Judgment reversed.