Boynton v. Haggart

120 F. 819, 57 C.C.A. 301, 1903 U.S. App. LEXIS 4543
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 16, 1903
DocketNos. 1,679, 1,770
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 120 F. 819 (Boynton v. Haggart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boynton v. Haggart, 120 F. 819, 57 C.C.A. 301, 1903 U.S. App. LEXIS 4543 (8th Cir. 1903).

Opinion

SANBORN, Circuit Judge.

These appeals present controversies between three sets of claimants to the title to certain timber lands in the state of Arkansas. Rucetta B. Boynton and her associates, the complainants below, are the devisees under the will of C. O. Boynton, deceased, who brought this suit against James Haggart and William McMasters, hereafter called the “defendants,” to quiet in himself the title to about 20,000 acres of land which he bought of the Citizens’ Bank of Rouisiana in the year 1883. R. D. Rozell and his associates, the heirs of A. B. Rozell, deceased, intervened in this suit, and claimed the title to a portion of these lands. There was a hearing and a decree for the defendants, which the complainants and the interveners challenge by separate appeals.

The principal question which the appeal of the complainants presents is whether or not an innocent purchaser under a deed of all the right, title, and interest in the lands owned by his grantor in a certain state, without a more definite description, may successfully hold the lands which his grantor appeared by the registry to own when he made this deed as against a claimant under a prior unrecorded conveyance of the same lands by the same grantor. The question arises in this Way: From 1873 until October 26, 1883, the records of the counties in which these lands were situated disclosed a complete chain of title to them from D. C. Cross, the grantee of the state of Arkansas, to the Citizens’ Bank of Rouisiana. On May 3, 1880, however, a decree had been rendered in one of the courts of the state of Arkansas in a suit between the executor, the executrix, and the devisees of the will of Jeptha Fowlkes, complainants, and the Citizens’ Bank of Rouisiana, defendant, to the effect that the heirs of Jeptha Fowlkes were the owners of this land, and that the bank had no title or interest in it. One of the statutes of the state of Arkansas required those in whose favor such a decree was rendered to register it in the recorder’s office of the county in which the lands it affected were situated within one year after its rendition, and provided that, “if such decree be not recorded within such time, it shall be void as to all subsequent purchasers without notice.” Gould’s Digest of the Raws of Arkansas, p. 637, § 35. This decree was not recorded until November 4, 1884. Meanwhile, and in the year 1883, W. R. Culbertson, the agent and associate of C. O. Boynton, without any notice of this decree, purchased the lands in controversy in this suit from the Citizens’ Bank of Rouisiana, paid that bank $13,000 therefor, and took and recorded a quitclaim deed from it to himself of “all and singular its right, title, interest, and claim of whatever nature, legal and equitable, in and to all the lands, lots, and parcels of land and any and all interests in the same belonging to and owned by [822]*822said Citizens’ Bank of Louisiana, in the state of Arkansas, at the date of this conveyance (except its lands and interests in Chicot county in said state); the said lands and interests herein conveyed being situated and lying -within the counties of Clay, Crittenden, Craighead, Cross, Greene, Mississippi, Poinsett, and Woodruff, in the said state of Arkansas; and this conveyance to operate and be as absolute full and complete as if the said lands and interests aforesaid were herein specifically described.” Before making this purchase, Culbertson procured a list of these lands, and an abstract of the recorded title to them, from which it appeared that the bank had a perfect record title to them, subject only to a tax title, which Culbertson bought at the same time that he purchased the lands from the bank. He secured his deed from the bank on September 26, 1883, and recorded it on October 26, 1883. C. O. Boynton, his principal, furnished the money to make this purchase, and on October 23, 1883, Culbertson conveyed the lands in controversy in this suit to Boynton by means of a warranty deed which describes them by government subdivisions, and this deed was recorded on October 29, 1883. Culbertson appears to have been interested with Boynton in the purchase of the lands, but what his interest was does not appear. The title of the complainants rests upon the purchase from the bank and the conveyance to Boynton while he was ignorant of the existence of the decree. The defendants have succeeded to the title of the heirs of Fowlkes under their decree against the bank of May 3, 1880, and the question is whether that title -or that of the devisees of Boynton should prevail.

Counsel for the defendants argue that the deed from the bank to Culbertson conveyed only the lands which the bank owned .at the date of the deed, and that, as the title to the lands here in question had been devested from the bank before the deed to Culbertson was made by the decree of May 3, 1880, and as the bank did not in fact own any right, title, or interest in the lands when it made this deed, the deed conveyed nothing, and the purchasers took nothing thereby. In support of this contention they cite Brown v. Jackson, 3 Wheat. 449, 4 L. Ed. 432. That was the first of a long line of decisions rendered by the Supreme Court in which it held that the grantee in a quitclaim deed could not become a bona fide purchaser under the registry statutes because the prior deed had conveyed all that the grantor had, and the form of the quitclaim deed was notice of that fact to its grantee. Oliver v. Piatt, 3 How. 333, 11 L. Ed. 622; Van Rensselaer v. Kearney, 11 How. 297, 13 L. Ed. 703; May v. Le Claire, 11 Wall. 217, 20 L. Ed. 50; Villa v. Rodriguez, 12 Wall. 323, 20 L. Ed. 406; Dickerson v. Colgrove, 100 U. S. 578, 25 L. Ed. 618; Baker v. Humphrey, 101 U. S. 494, 25 L. Ed. 1065; Hanrick v. Patrick, 119 U. S. 156, 7 Sup. Ct. 147, 30 L. Ed. 396. Counsel for the interveners cite the cases of Adams v. Cuddy, 13 Pick. 460, 25 Am. Dec. 330; Jamaica Corporation v. Chandler, 9 Allen, 159, 169; Chaffin v. Chaffin, 4 Gray, 280; Fitzgerald v. Libby, 142 Mass. 235, 7 N. E. 917; and Eaton v. Trowbridge, 38 Mich. 454, in support of the position of the defendants. But these decisions fail to give any adequate effect or force to the estoppel of the registry [823]*823statutes, and are in accord with the early holdings of the Supreme Court regarding the effect of a quitclaim deed. The riper experience and more thoughtful consideration of later years have exploded the fallacy upon which the earlier decisions of the Supreme Court rested, and have led that court to adopt the rule which has now become firmly established both upon reason and authority that the innocent purchaser under a quitclaim deed may acquire the title under the registry statutes as against the holder of a prior unrecorded deed from the same grantor notwithstanding the fact that the latter had no title, and had nothing to convey when he executed his second deed. Moelle v. Sherwood, 148 U. S. 21, 29, 30, 13 Sup. Ct. 426, 37 L. Ed. 350; United States v. California, etc., Land Co., 148 U. S. 31, 47, 48, 13 Sup. Ct. 458, 37 L. Ed. 354; Prentice v. Duluth Forwarding Co., 58 Fed. 437, 447, 7 C. C. A. 293, 303; Memphis Land & Timber Co. v. Ford, 58 Fed. 452, 7 C. C. A. 304.

No reason is perceived whythe case at bar should not be governed by this just and salutary rule. Registry statutes are legislative extensions of the doctrine of estoppel.

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Bluebook (online)
120 F. 819, 57 C.C.A. 301, 1903 U.S. App. LEXIS 4543, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boynton-v-haggart-ca8-1903.