Austin v. Southern Home Building & Loan Ass'n

50 S.E. 382, 122 Ga. 439, 1905 Ga. LEXIS 237
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMarch 24, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by60 cases

This text of 50 S.E. 382 (Austin v. Southern Home Building & Loan Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Austin v. Southern Home Building & Loan Ass'n, 50 S.E. 382, 122 Ga. 439, 1905 Ga. LEXIS 237 (Ga. 1905).

Opinion

Cobb, J.

1. Possession of land is notice to the world of every right that the possessor has therein, legal or equitable. Possession of land being an incident, and a very important incident, of ownership, the law raises a presumption that he who is in possession is the owner, and actual and notorious possession of land is sufficient to put a prudent person on inquiry as to the rights of such possessor before such land is purchased from one not in possession, or otherwise made the subject of negotiation or contract with him. Possession is not only, notice of the rights of the possessor, but also of all facts that would be developed if inquiry were made of tho one in possession and a truthful response were made. There- ■ fore possession is notice of the rights of those under whom the possessor claims. This subject has been so thoroughly .and exhaustively dealt with by Mr. Justice Fish in the case of Walker v. Neil, 117 Ga. 745 (10), that we do not deem it necessary to do [445]*445more than call attention to the conclusion there reached and the absolutely sound reasoning set forth to support it. Applying these principles to this case, at the time the plaintiff made the loans of $1,000 and $400 to Austin, Field was in possession of the property under a contract of purchase from Mrs. Austin as the owner. If inquiry had been made of Field and a truthful response had been made, the plaintiff would have been informed that although the record title to the property was in Austin, Mrs. Austin was in equity and in 'truth the real owner of the property and was dealing with it as her own. No inquiry was made. The plaintiff was voluntarily ignorant, and therefore it was charged with notice of the fact that Field held under Mrs. Austin and of every fact which inquiry of Field and Mrs. Austin would have developed. Wade on Notice (2d ed.), § 279.

2-4. The plaintiff, the Southern Home Building and Loan Association, being charged, at the time of the loan of the money to Austin, with notice of Mrs. Austin’s equitable title, is in no position to assert any of the rights which would be accorded to a bona fide purchaser without notice, and therefore, as against it, Mrs. Austin has a right to assert her equitable ownership of the property. Can she assert this against the plaintiff’s usee,-the Equitable Loan and Security Company ? The Equitable Company was a purchaser, for value, of the debts due by Austin to the plaintiff, and of such an interest in the land covered by the security-deed as was necessary- to enforce the payment of the debt. At the time it paid out its money to purchase the claims against Austin, it had no actual notice of Mrs. Austin’s equitable ownership. Whether she can assert her equitable ownership against it depends upon whether her possession with her husband was sufficient to put the Equitable Company upon notice of her title, notwithstanding the record title in her husband and the fact that in the negotiations between it and him he was asserting ownership to the property. When husband and wife are in joint possession of land, there is a presumption that the possession is that of the husband. Civil Code, § 3931. One desiring to purchase land or acquire any interest therein is therefore pointed by this presumption to the husband as the person to whom inquiry should be made as to the actual state of the title; and if no inquiry is made, or nothing which is in effect an inquiry, the per[446]*446son attempting to acquire an interest in the land is charged with •notice of whatever facts would be developed by inquiry and truthful response by the husband. If, therefore, the Equitable Company had bought the claims against Austin without doing anything which would amount to an inquiry of him,— had been voluntarily ignorant notwithstanding the husband and wife were both 'in possession and the law pointed to the husband as the one to whom inquiry should be addressed, then it would have proceeded at its peril; and if it subsequently developed that the husband was really not the owner but the wife was, its rights would have been subordinated to those of the wife. See Walker v. Neil, 117 Ga. 747.

But the Equitable Company was not in this position. While it did not in terms address the inquiry to Austin, “ Are you the owner of this property ?” it did what was equivalent thereto, and received what was in effect a response that he was the owner. He came to'it and represented that the record title was in him. He in effect asserted by his application for a loan that he was the owner, and under such circumstances it was not necessary, in order to make complete the inquiry which the law required, that there should be a direct interrogatory addressed to him, “Are you in- reality the owner of this property ?” His conduct was such as to indicate that specific inquiry would have brought no other response than that given in effect by his application for a loan, based upon assertions by him that he was the true owner of the property. Possession of land is not conclusive upon the purchaser as to the rights of the possessor or those under whom he claims. The effect of it is to put him upon inquiry, and when it is shown that prior to the purchase from the holder of the record title he followed up the inquiry in good faith, and received no information which would impeach the apparent rights of the holder of the record title, the presumption arising from possession by another will be overcome. Wade on Notice, (2d ed.) § 274. Possession charges a prospective purchaser with' the duty of making inquiry. When he fulfils this duty, and inquiry when made and followed up in good faith results in nothing that would be an obstacle to a purchase by him, he has complied with his obligations to the law and to the owner of the property, and is entitled to claim whatever rights accrue to one who purchases [447]*447without notice after due inquiry of those from whom the law directs him to seek information. In Neal v. Perkerson, 61 Ga. 346 (4), there is a headnote which asserts that “ joint residence of husband and wife on realty does not give notice of any claim of interest in it by the wife.” This headnote was made by the reporter, and, as was shown by Mr. Justice Fish in Walker v. Neil, supra, was broader than the facts of the case authorized;, the ruling in that case being merely that where husband and wife are in possession, presumptively it is’ his possession. There is nothing in that decision in conflict with the proposition that, notwithstanding this presumption, the duty of a prospective purchaser is to go to the husband as the source of information in reference to the true title, or he proceeds at his peril, if the wife is really the owner. In that case the -.husband borrowed money upon the wife’s land, and it was held that the lender was protected against the secret equity of the wife. There was no other inquiry or response in reference to the title than would be involved in the application of the husband for the loan and the making of the loan on such application. In principle, the case is controlling here. The case of Clarke v. Beck, 72 Ga. 127, so far as it apparently lays down the rule that where the law requires inquiry, and inquiry is made, and results in false information upon the faith of which one acts, the party acting upon the false information is bound by the exact truth, notwithstanding his diligent efforts and failure to obtain the same, is in conflict in principle with the decision in Neal v.

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Bluebook (online)
50 S.E. 382, 122 Ga. 439, 1905 Ga. LEXIS 237, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/austin-v-southern-home-building-loan-assn-ga-1905.