Britton's Appeal

45 Pa. 172, 1863 Pa. LEXIS 138
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 14, 1863
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 45 Pa. 172 (Britton's Appeal) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Britton's Appeal, 45 Pa. 172, 1863 Pa. LEXIS 138 (Pa. 1863).

Opinion

Tbe opinion of the court was delivered,

by

STRONG, J.

The appellant is the holder of a mortgage upon the real estate, the proceeds of the sale of which are now in court for distribution. The mortgage was given on the 29th of September 1852, and was for original purchase-money. It was not recorded until September 5th 1858. After it had been given, Thomas H. Wentz recovered a judgment against the mortgagor, which was signed on the 17th day of September 1856; another judgment was recovered against the mortgagor on the 17th of February 1857, by Bean & Wentz, of which firm Thomas H. Wentz is a member. A third judgment was recovered on the 22d of December 1857, against the same defendant, by Wells Tomlinson. There are still other judgments o-n the record, but they have no interest, in any possible event, in the questions now presented for decision. They need not, therefore, be particularly mentioned. The real estate bound by the mortgage and judgments was sold on the 5th of November 1860, by virtue of an execution issued upon the judgment of Bean & Wentz, and the question now litigated is whether the mortgage of Mrs. Britton has priority over the judgments in the distribution of the fund raised by the sheriff’s sale. It is an established fact that Thomas H. Wentz had actual knowledge of the mortgage to Mrs. Britton, not only when the judgments were entered, but before the debts were contracted for which the judgments were given. Does such knowledge supply the want of an earlier record of the mortgage ? It is conceded that distribution must be made among lien-creditors. At the time when the sheriff’s sale was made, both the mortgagee and the judgment-creditors had liens, but, as among themselves, which must be preferred ?

In the distribution of the proceeds of sheriff’s sales, the court from which the execution issued is empowered to determine disputes “according to law and equity:” Act of 16th June 1836, § 86, P. L. 777. We are therefore to consider not merely the legal rights, but the equities of the litigants. Regarding it as a mere lien, the mortgage of Mrs. Britton would be postponed to the judgments of Wentz and Bean & Wentz, for it was not recorded until after their liens had attached, but it is also to be considered whether there are not equities between the parties that should make a difference, and whether the mortgage is to be treated as only a lien.

Through the whole history of recording acts, they have been regarded, both in this state and in England, where they originated, as designed to furnish protection against those frauds which, without them, would easily be perpetrated by secret conveyances. They are, in effect, statutes of frauds, and they have [174]*174therefore ever been so construed as to prevent their being used as instruments of covin. None of them are more positive and explicit than was the Statute of 29 Charles 2, the English Statute of Frauds and Perjuries, or our own re-enactment of it, the Act of March 21st 1772; yet both in England and in this state, the words of that statute have always been controlled by its spirit, and courts of equity have uniformly sustained parol sales, when it has been necessary to prevent a fraud. It is upon a similar principle that those courts have ever construed the recording acts. One who purchases or attempts to acquire title to lands, though for a valuable consideration, with knowledge that another has acquired a prior right, either legal or equitable, is treated as acting maid fide, and is not allowed to reap any advantage from the acts, for he is not one whom they were designed to protect. Thus the Statute of 27 Henry 8, for the enrolment of bargains and sales, enacted that no lands should pass from one to another, whereby any estate of inheritance or freehold should be made or take effect in any person or persons, or any use thereof to be made, by reason of any bargain and sale, except the said bargain and sale be enrolled in one of the king’s courts, &c., within six months after the date of the writings ; and that no use thereof should pass from the one to the other. It would be difficult to conceive of language which could in plainer terms deny all effect to an unenrolled deed of bargain and sale; yet Lord Chancellor Hardwicke said, in Le Neve v. Le Neve, Ambler 436, the construction of that statute had always been, that if a subsequent bargainee has notice of a prior purchase, he is equally affected by that notice, as if the prior purchase had been a conveyance by feoffment and livery. The Statute of 27 Henry 8 is doubtless the pattern of the eighth section of our Act of 1715. Earlier attempts at registration acts had been set aside by the crown in council, and it was only when the Provincial Assembly conformed to the example set in the British Parliament, that their legislation was allowed to stand. So the Statute of 7 Anne, c. 20 (from which our Act of 1775 was taken), enacted that a memorial of all deeds and conveyances which should be made and executed after a specified date, and of all wills and devises whereby any lands in the county of Middlesex might be in any way affected, either in law or equity, might be registered as therein directed, and that every such deed or conveyance should be adjudged fraudulent and void against any subsequent purchaser or mortgagee for a valuable consideration, unless registered as directed, before the registry of the memorial of the subsequent deed. No language can be stronger — none of our recording acts are more explicit. Yet it is settled in England, that if a second purchaser by a regis[175]*175tered deed bad notice, when he purchased, of a prior purchase under an unregistered deed, he is postponed to it.

So our Act of 1715 enacted that no deed or mortgage, or defeasible deed in the nature of mortgages, thereafter to be made, should be good or sufficient to convey any freehold of inheritance, or to grant any estate therein for life or years, unless such deed be acknowledged or proved, and recorded within six months after the date thereof, where such lands lie, as thereinbefore directed for other deeds. Such was, in substance, the eighth section, early held applicable only to mortgages. Notwithstanding its letter, it was from the first construed, as the British statutes had been, to apply only to such unrecorded mortgages as are unknown to a subsequent purchaser. In other words, it was held to be for the benefit of those only who, without it, would be defrauded by a mortgage of which they had no notice. Thus in Levintz v. Will, 1 Dall. 430, where the contest was between the holder of an unrecorded mortgage and the mortgagor, the instrument was held valid, and the judgment was supported by the consideration that the intent of- the act was to prevent honest purchasers or mortgagees of real estate from being deceived by prior secret conveyances or encumbrances. Chief Justice McKean said: “ The legislature did not mean, nor have they in fact enacted, that express personal notice, when given, should have no effect. Neither could they entertain an idea of defeating fair and honest bargains which do not injure other persons.” In Stroud v. Lockhart, 4 Dall. 153, an unrecorded mortgage was held to be good against a subsequent purchaser from the mortgagor, with knowledge of the existence of the mortgage. The same doctrine was maintained in Jaques v. Weeks, 7 Watts 261, when Judge Kennedy said that he was not aware of even a dictum that would militate against it until, 1821; then Semple v. Burd, 7 S. & R. 286, was decided, wherein it was ruled that an unrecorded mortgage is not a lien as against subsequent judgment-creditors.

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Bluebook (online)
45 Pa. 172, 1863 Pa. LEXIS 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brittons-appeal-pa-1863.