69 S.E. 268 | N.C. | 1910
Rankin Lewey died about 1889, leaving a widow and five children, and a tract of 55 acres of land. In 1904 the defendant County Board of Education bought 3
The chairman of the county board, at the instance of said board and of the mother of said Alvatine, went to New Jersey, and induced her to come to North Carolina. She alleged that the plaintiff had procured her to execute the deed by misrepresentation, and tendered him back the entire amount which he had paid her. She thereupon made a deed to her mother for her one-fifth interest in said 55-acre tract, and her mother, for a consideration, executed a deed to the County Board of Education for said interest in the 3
The plaintiff relies solely upon the fact that the defendants had notice of his prior unacknowledged and unregistered deed. The proposition is too well settled against him to admit of debate. No notice, however full and formal, can supply notice by registration, as required by Revisal, 980.Tremaine v. Williams,
In the absence of fraud, actual notice of a prior unregistered deed or mortgage executed since 1 December, 1885, can not affect the rights of subsequent purchasers whose deed or mortgage is duly recorded. Wood v.Tinsley,
To hold that notice of a prior unregistered conveyance is fraud on the part of the grantee in the second conveyance would be contrary to the language and the intent of chapter 147, Laws 1885, now Revisal, 980. It would defeat the entire object of that law.
Austin v. Staten,
The other assignments of error do not require discussion, and are practically disposed of by what we have already said.
No error.
Cited: Shingle Mills v. Lumber Co.,