3 Md. Ch. 381 | New York Court of Chancery | 1851
Although, for the reason stated to the counsel during the argument, I cannot now pass a final decree in this cause, I shall proceed, very briefly, to express my opinion upon some of the questions which have been discussed.
These questions are important, and, perhaps, not free from difficulty; and the conclusions to which, upon a careful consideration of them, I have arrived, have not been formed without considerable doubt and distrust.
■ The proceedings show, that in March, 1827, Christian Keener, David Keener, and Samuel Keener, purchased of Andrew Shriver, and others, a house and lot, on Market Street, in the City of Baltimore, for the sum of $10,000, for which they took a bond, conditioned for the conveyance thereof on payment of the purchase-money; that they did pay a part, and were put in possession, and subsequently sold the same to William H. Freeman, who took possession, and paid his vendors, the Keeners, on account thereof, the sum of $7,000, being the amount which they, the Keeners, had paid the Shrivers; the balance of the purchase-money, due the latter from the Keeners, being, by agreement, to be paid by Freeman.
In this state of .things, Freeman, being indebted to the Gene
It is maintained, first, on the part of the General Insurance Company, that inasmuch as Freeman, the mortgagor, had but an equitable interest in the promises, there was no necessity at all for the registration of the deed, and that, consequently, the United States Insurance Company are not entitled to be preferred, because their deed was placed first upon the records. In other words, the position is, that conveyances of equitable interests in lands, are not within the Registry Acts. If they arc, then, according to tlie express terms of the first section of the Act of 1825, ch. 203, the deed first recorded must he preferred ; unless, indeed, it can be shown, that when that deed was taken, the grantee had actual notice of the unregistered conveyance.
This question, with reference to the necessity of recording conveyances from parties holding equitable estates, arose in the case of the Ohio Life Insurance and Trust Company vs. Winn and Ross, 2 Md. Ch. Decisions, 25; and although it does not distinctly appear that it was made a point in the argument at the bar, it was expressly decided by the Court, and upon subsequent reflection, I am persuaded was correctly decided. It appears to me to be quite clear, that conveyances of such titles to real estate are within the wise and salutary policy of our Registration Acts; and that one of the great ends of those Acts, as declared in the preamble to that of 1766, ch. 14, would bo defeated, and creditors and purchasers exposed to many of the hazards, which it was the design of the legisla
It would, indeed, be strange, and as much to be regretted as strange, that an absolute deed from a party holding under a bond of conveyance, and who had paid the whole purchase-money, need not go upon the record for the information of creditors and purchasers, and yet a deed for any estate above seven years must be registered to be effectual. In the one case the whole beneficial interest would pass without registration, and consequently without notice to the public, whilst in the other, because the grantor happened to be clothed with the legal estate, if he attempts to convey an interest for any time more than seven years, his purpose will be frustrated, unless the deed is acknowledged and recorded as required by the statute.
I do not think that the argument which has been made, to prove that deeds or mortgages made by parties holding under bonds of conveyance are not within our Registry Acts, derives any strength from the Act of 1831, ch. 205, the 3d section of which authorizes bonds of conveyance or contracts to be recorded, and makes copies from the record evidence. That Act does not touch, nor was it intended to touch, conveyances of the title, either legal or equitable, and its object and effect is to authorize the registration of contracts to convey, and not conveyances, and therefore the right or the authority to record the latter, whether of the legal or equitable title, must depend upon the state of the law as it stood before. It is, therefore, as it seems to me, no argument against the right to enrol a conveyance of an equitable title, to say that there was no law which authorized the enrolment of the bond of conveyance
I conclude, therefore, without further reasoning upon the subject, that the Registry Acts do embrace the mortgages of the 16th of January and 29th of March, 1834, and that the preference is to be given to that which was first recorded, unless the mortgagee, at the time it was taken, had notice of the prior deed. It is a settled rule, says Chancellor Kent, in the 4th volume of his Commentaries, 169, “ that if a subsequent purchaser or mortgagee, whose deed is registered, had notice at the time of making his contract of the prior unregistered deed, he shall not avail himself of the priority of his registry to defeat it, and the prior unregistered deed is the same to Mm as if it had been registered.” The notice, however, must have been received or chargeable when the second mortgage was executed, for if a right had vested when the notice of the prior unregistered incumbrance was received, “the mortgagee has then a right to try his speed in attaining a priority of registry.” Ibid., 172.
The question then is, whether the United States Insurance Company, when they took the mortgage of the 27th of March, 1834, had notice in fact of the existonco of the prior incumbrance of the preceding January to the General Insurance Company, for if they had, then, as to them, it is the same as if it had been registered.
This doctrine of postponing registered to unregistered conveyances, upon the ground of notice, has sometimes been regretted by the Courts, and it is subject to the qualification that it shall prevail only in cases where the notice is so clearly proved, as to make it fraudulent in the purchaser to take and register a conveyance in prejudice to the known title of the other party holding the first conveyance ; Wyatt vs. Banvell, 19 Ves., 439. It is, says Sir William Grant, in that case,
I have read the evidence in this case with great attention, and do not think it furnishes that clear and convincing proof which the rule requires. Suspicion of notice is not sufficient. The inference of a fraudulent intent affecting the conscience, must be founded on strong and pregnant circumstances, in the absence of actual notice; 4 Kent, 172. There is, unquestionably, some confusion in the evidence of Mr. Freeman upon this question of notice; and when it is remembered that in the list of his property, which has been produced and proved to be in his own handwriting, this Market Street property is put down at $16,000, the inference is very strong,.that no notice was taken of the lien of the General Insurance Company, because, as he himself says, in his answer to the 11th cross-interrogatory, the lien of that Company covered the entire interest of the witness in the property. It is said there was another list, and I .take it for granted there was; but Mr. Freeman says, in answer to the 12th cross-interrogatory, that he does not know whether said lien was on the list or not, “ nor has he any belief on the subject, except as a matter of inference.” That Mr. Freeman furnished the list in which this piece of property is estimated at $16,000, which was the full value of his interest in it, throwing out of view altogether the lien of the General Insurance Company, as the basis of his application to the United States Insurance Company for a loan, there is, I think, no reasonable ground to doubt. Mr. Atkinson, the Secretary of the United States Insurance Company, says that he found the list among the papers of the Company, and that it corresponds with the entry in the day-book ; and that upon a careful search among their papers, he has not been able to find any other list. Now, if Mr. Freeman did.not intend that this piece of property should be taken as a valuable security, why did he put it in the list at all ? According to his answer to the 11th cross-interrogatory, the .lien of the General Insurance Company was equal to the full amount of his interest in the property. Why, then, did he
In the absence, then, of any other list, and without any proof that the lien in question w;as noted upon such other list (for Mr. Freeman expressly says ho does not know whether said lien was on it or not), and seeing that the list which has been produced was preserved by the United States Insurance Company, and furnished the basis of an entry in its books, there would seem to be very little doubt that it was regarded by the Company as a substantial and not a mere nominal security, which it would have been considered, if known to be encumbered by a previous mortgage to the full value of the interest of the mortgagor in it.
The ground taken in this case is, that Peter Neff, the President of the United States Insurance Company knew of the lien held by the General Insurance Company, and this knowledge, it is insisted, is binding on the corporation of which he was the President. But there is no proof bringing home to Mr. Neff specific knowledge of this lien. It rests entirely upon inferences drawn by Mr. Freeman from the fact, as appears by his answer to the 4th interrogatory in chief, that Neff had full knowdedge of all his real property, and transactions concerning the same. He says expressly that ho cannot say whether Neff had specific knowledge of the lien of the General Insurance Company, and by his answer to the 8th cross-interrogatory, it appears that the witness, Freeman, was largely engaged in business transactions, buying and selling, and that his property and his interest therein was continually and almost daily changing. Now, under these circumstances, and in view of the rapid and constant mutations which property in the hands of this gentlemen was liable to, when its condition one day furnished no ground for assuming what its situation might be the day after, it would seem improper, merely because an individual happened to be familiar with his
But assuming, for the sake of the argument, that Mr. Neff did know of this lien, the question still remains, whether his knowledge is the knowledge of the corporation, and binding upon it ?
There is not a particle of testimony that the mortgagor, Freeman, communicated the information to Neff in his official capacity and for the purpose of being disclosed to the directors of the Company of which he was the president. If Neff had knowledge of the lien at all, it was acquired in a general way, in conversations with Freeman about his affairs, and certainly with no direct view to this particular transaction, or for the purpose of being communicated to the Company over which he presided. This is most manifest from the whole scope and tenor of the evidence, and hence the legal question arises, whether knowledge picked up in this way by a director of a corporation in his private and not in his official capacity, with no view to the transaction in question, shall so far affect the corporation with notice as to invalidate that transaction upon the ground of fraud ?
It appears to me that the sound and safe rule on the subject is this, that notice given to a director of an incorporated institution privately, or which he acquires from rumor, or through channels open to all alike, and which he does not .communicate to his associates at the Board, will not bind the institution. But that if the notice is given to him officially, for the purpose of being communicated to the Board, although such notice should not be so communicated, the institution is bound by it.
This appears to me to be the reasonable doctrine, and to be maintained by the weight of authority, though, as remarked by Mr. Justice Story, in his treatise on Agency, it is not very easy to affirm what is the prevailing rule, since the authorities are not entirely agreed. Story on Agency, sec. 140 (a). The
The cases of the Bank of the United States vs. Davis, 2 Hill’s N. Y. Rep., 451, and of the North River Bank vs. Aymar, 3 Ibid., 262, do seem to recognise the distinction, and to prove that if any one of the directors who participates with the Board in the particular transaction has notice, it is sufficient to bind the corporation, although the other directors have no knowledge thereof. But, as before said, this distinction is condemned by Mr. Justice Story, who reviews all the authorities upon the subject, and appears to me replete with mischief and insecurity to all corporations. In commenting upon the cases, the author, at section 140 (e), speaks of the identical case now under consideration, and inquires, in a mode clearly showing his disapprobation of the doctrine, that notice to a director who acts in the transaction will bind the corporation, “ whether a mortgage made to a bank by one of its directors, or by a third person, would be affected by a prior unregistered incumbrance or other equities attaching to it, which were known at the time to such director?” And there would seem to be no doubt, from the way in Avhich the question is put, and the whole tenor and drift of the commentaries of the writer, that he was of opinion that the bank would not be affected by such notice.
I entirely concur with the Judges who have doubted the propriety of breaking in upon the policy of the Registry Acts, and shall refrain from doing so to a greater extent than required by the authorities. The cases go upon the ground of fraud in taking a deed or mortgage, and having it recorded, when the party knows of the existence of a prior deed or mortgage which has not been recorded*; but as fraud is not to be imputed upon slight grounds, the party who charges it against his adversary is required upon every principle to make it out by clear and satisfactory proofs.
Some stress was laid in the argument upon a report, which Mr. Freeman says was made by a committee of the Board of Directors of the United States Insurance Company, when he applied for the loan. But he expressly says, he does not know whether Mr. Neff communicated to that committee his knowledge of the lien of the General Insurance Company on the property in controversy. He states, however, that it was down on the list at a valuation of $16,000, but what valuation the committee put upon this particular piece of property, for the purpose of the mortgage, he does not know. They took the whole property, he says, at a valuation of $137,000, free of ground-rents, as a security for two mortgages, a previous transaction of $29,000 and that for $80,000, now in controversy.
Under all these circumstances, there is certainly no reason to believe that there is any other list, or that the Committee appointed by the Board knew of the existence of the lien of the General Insurance Company. If they had known of it, it is difficult to imagine a reason for not noticing it.
Something was said in the course of the argument at the bar, upon the subject of marshalling of the securities, and it may at some future stage of the cause become necessary and proper to apply that doctrine to this case. The general principle is a familiar one, that if one party has a lien on or interest in twm funds for a debt, and another party has a lien on or interest in only one of the funds for another debt, the latter
I do not, however, propose at this time to go into any inquiry as to the applicability of the doctrine to this case, nor do I'think it necessary to examine into or to express any opinion in regard to the consideration of the mortgage to the United States Insurance Company. All I mean to decide is, that assuming the consideration to be a valuable and fair one, that mortgage is to be preferred to the mortgage to the General Insurance Company.