Boody v. Davis

20 N.H. 140
CourtSuperior Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJuly 15, 1849
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 20 N.H. 140 (Boody v. Davis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boody v. Davis, 20 N.H. 140 (N.H. Super. Ct. 1849).

Opinion

Wilcox, J.

The evidence was competent to show a delivery of the deed. It was duly executed and acknowledged, and was sent to the office of the register of deeds to be recorded. This was all done by the tenant, and it was his intent that the title and the deed should pass to the grantees. The demandants have assented to the delivery.- They have received the deed, have brought their action upon it, and upon the trial have produced the deed in court.

Possession held by the grantee of a deed duly executed, is alone competent evidence of a delivery, for things shall be presumed legally and properly in their present state, unless the contrary be shown. 1 Cow. Phil. 1284 ; Canning v. Pinkham, 1 N. H. 353 ; Buffum v. Green, 5 N. H. 71.

Indeed, when a deed is delivered to a third party, with an intent on the part of the grantor that it shall take effect for the benefit of the grantee, the assent of the latter is presumed, and the deed takes effect from the act of delivery ; Towson v. Tickell, 3 B. & Ald. 36; Peavey v. Tilton, Strafford county, July term, 1846 ; so that there is no occasion to resort to presumptions to enable us to conclude that the deed has come into the hands of the demandants by means of a regular delivery by the tenant. There has been a regular delivery of the deed by the [143]*143tenant to the recording officer, with the intent that it should pass to the grantees, and should in fact enure for their benefit from that moment. It was, in short, delivered to that officer for their benefit. Their assent to it, which is a legal presumption at that moment, has been established as a fact, by their subsequent acts that have been adverted to.

But the defence, upon which the tenant relies more fully is founded upon .the statute of July 8, 1829, N. H. Laws 448. This statute pi'ovides that “ no title or estate in fee simple, &c., shall be defeated or incumbered by any agreement whatever, unless such agreement or writing of defeasance shall be inserted in the condition of such conveyance, and become a part thereof, stating the sum or sums of money to be secured, or other thing or things to be performed.”

The condition of the mortgage in controversy is, that if the tenant, his heirs, &c., “shall pay unto the Savings Bank, in Dover, known by the name of the Strafford Savings Bank, or the president and directors, their heirs and assigns, the full one half part of a note, signed by David Davis, John Chadwick, Solomon Hayes and Joseph Boody, and keep the said Boody and Hayes, harmless from the one full half part, and John Chadwick is in for the other half, then the foregoing deed is to be void,” &c.

The note produced is dated January 30, 1836, and is payable to the Strafford Savings Bank, in Dover, or their order, for $1,000, payable on demand, with interest after six months, and is signed by all the persons named in the condition of the mortgage as signers, and by Dudley Pike in addition.

The condition of the deed, therefore, does not specify the date of the note, nor its amount, nor to whom payable, unless by implication, and omits the name of one of the signers.

[144]*144If this ease comes within the statute of 1829, and the condition of the deed does not sufficiently set forth the thing to be done, then, by the express provision of the statute, the result is that the demandants’ title to the land conveyed is absolute. The statute enacts that no title in fee simple shall be incumbered or defeated by any agreement, unless inserted in the condition, &c. The deed is sufficient in all its parts to pass a fee( simple to the demandants, and that estate cannot be defeated at all, unless there is something in this condition that is sufficient to defeat it. The demandants are therefore entitled to recover, unless they have in their declaration counted specially upon a mortgage; and in that case, by amending their declaration and counting generally upon their own seizin in fee simple, they would be entitled to recover at all events, and the tenant would be without any remedy at law.

This is not the result that the tenant desires. He asks that the deed itself may be held void, because the condition is not sufficiently certain, and is not what'he supposes the statute to require; whereas the statute provides, not that the deed should be void, but that it should be absolute in the supposed case of an insufficient condition. The statute provides that the condition should be void and the conveyance absolute.

In Bassett v. Bassett, 10 N. H. 64, it was decided that a deed containing a proviso, that “ if the grantor should comply with the condition of a certain bond, executed by him to the grantee at the same time, then the deed to be void,” is valid as a mortgage, notwithstanding that the sum to be paid, or the matters to be performed, are not particularly set forth in the deed itself. In that case the date of the bond and the parties to it were correctly set forth; and so far that case differs from the one before us. The fact that the deed and bond were executed at the same time, was referred to as a ground upon which it might be [145]*145held that the case was not within the statute. But the main ground of that decision was, that it appeared upon the face of the deed that it was intended to be conditional and not absolute, and the statute did not require the condition to be more particularly set forth.

It is indeed true in such a case, that although the record informs the purchaser that the conveyance is attended .with a condition, yet the particulars of that condition can be determined only by reference to a private paper in the possession of the party, which he is not bound to produce. But it Avas never expected that every thing affecting the operation and extent of a deed should appear upon the record. A deed refers to a pine tree as a monument; yet that pine tree cannot be shown by the record, and its identity is liable to become a matter of controversy and doubt, and must always be the subject of extraneous proof. So where a conveyance is made of all the lands in the occupation of A. B., or of A. B’s home farm; and indeed if the condition of a mortgage were to specify with the utmost degree of minuteness the thing to be done, yet what at any particular time has been performed, and what remains to be performed, are matters material to a purchaser, but resting ever in the private knowledge of the parties alone. A creditor, attaching an equity of redemption, may require the mortgagee to render an account under oath of the amount due him, (Rev. Stat. 368) and if a purchaser who is put upon inquiry by the record, chooses to purchase without seeing the papers referred to, and Avithout other reliable information, it is his own folly.

It is true, there must be in the deed a certain description, and one of such a character as to enable a person upon the evidence to determine what was intended. But that description need not embrace every particular; and although it may in some respects be erroneous, yet if the description.be sufficient, after rejecting the erroneous part, such erroneous part maybe rejected, when the facts shown aliunde require it, and effect given to the residue.

[146]*146Thus, in Johns v. Church, 12 Pick. 560, a note was described in a mortgage as being for $286, but the note produced was for $256, corresponding in other respects with the description in the mortgage.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 N.H. 140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boody-v-davis-nhsuperct-1849.