Campbell & Co. v. Nonpareil F. B. & K. Co.

75 Va. 291, 1881 Va. LEXIS 13
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedFebruary 17, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 75 Va. 291 (Campbell & Co. v. Nonpareil F. B. & K. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Campbell & Co. v. Nonpareil F. B. & K. Co., 75 Va. 291, 1881 Va. LEXIS 13 (Va. 1881).

Opinion

Staples, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellees claim title to the property in controversy under a deed of trust executed by the Nonpareil Fire-Brick and Kaolin Company, for the benefit of its creditors, on the 29th of July, 1869. This deed was admitted to record in the clerk’s office of the county court of Henrico, on the 7th of August, 1869. It was also recorded in the clerk’s office of the chancery court for the city of Richmond, on the 30th of November, 1876. Before this latter recordation, on the 3d of April, 1876, the appellants recovered judgment against the Nonpareil Company, which was duly docketed in the clerk’s office of the proper court. It is conceded that the land which is the subject of this controversy, is situated within a mile of the corporate limits of the city of Richmond. It is further conceded that, under the decisions of this court in Blackford et als. v. Hurst, 26 Gratt. 203, and Burgess v. Belvin, 32 Gratt. 633, a deed for property thus located must, under former laws, have been recorded in the chancery court of Richmond, and not in the county court of Henrico, to give it effect against creditors and purchasers. Inasmuch, therefore, as the deed of trust executed by the Nonpareil Company was not so recorded until after the judgment against that company was rendered, the land is subject to the lien of the judgment, unless there be something in the present case to take it out of the influence of those decisions and of the statutes of registration. The learned counsel for the appellee maintains that as the property embraced in the deed of trust was sold by the trustee, and the trust completely executed and performed by a conveyance to the purchaser, which was duly recorded [294]*294before the judgment was recovered, the lien of the judgment does not affect the title acquired under a sale from the trustee, although the deed of trust may not have been properly recorded.

The authority relied on in support of this proposition is an opinion of Judge Baldwin, concurred in by Judge Daniel, in Glazebrook’s Adm’r v. Ragland, 8 Gratt. 332, 344, in which this language is used: “It is true that the terms of the statute, and its spirit too, embrace unrecorded deeds of trust and mortgages while they continue encumbrances— while they remain executory—but not after they have ceased to be encumbrances, and after they have been executed and extinguished by a sale or foreclosure, and a conveyance of the title to the purchaser.”

The other two judges who sat in the case—Judges Allen and Moncure—did not agree with Judge Baldwin. Judge Moncure delivered a written opinion, which was concurred in by Judge Allen. It is proper to state that Judge Lomax, in the first volume of his Digest, p. 374, quotes, without endorsing or approving, the observations of Judge Baldwin, and he cites the same cases referred to by Judge Moncure in support of his opinion. These cases do not sustain the doctrine announced by Judge Baldwin. They, however, affirm the following proposition: When a suit is brought in a court of equity for the execution of a trust deed, a decree is rendered for the sale of the property, and a sale and conveyance made to the purchaser under the sanction of the court, the title of the purchaser is good against the judgment creditor of the grantor, although the deed of trust has never been recorded. If this doctrine can be sustained at all, it is upon the ground that all the parties interested in the property are before the court, and the purchaser holds not under the deed of trust, but under the decree, which is his muniment of title.

In tracing that title, he need not go bach to the deed of [295]*295trust, but only to the proceedings and decree in equity under which he claims. I do not see with what propriety this doctrine can be invoked to show that an unrecorded deed of trust is valid against a judgment lien, where the sale and conveyance are made by the trustee himself, and not under the decree of a court. In such case the purchaser must trace his title through the unrecorded deed of trust. He must stand or fall by that title; and. if the deed be invalid, he is without support. Under our statute all deeds of trust and mortgages are utterly void as to creditors and purchasers without notice, unless properly recorded. As to such creditors and purchasers, the title is to be regarded as remaining in the grantor. Ho distinction is made between deeds of trust executed and deeds of trust merely executory. Both the letter and the policy of the recording acts are opposed to any such distinction. The object of these acts is to give notice to all the world, not merely of encumbrance upon, but also of the successive alienations of the property. A person disposed to deal with a particular piece of property would, of course, look to the records to ascertain the precise condition of the title. If, upon examination, he traces no encumbrances or alienation, he would have the right to suppose that none existed, and he might safely act upon this presumption. Will it be pretended that this presumption loses any of its force because an advérsary claimant of the property derived title from a deed by a trustee rather than a deed by the owner himself ?

In the case of McClure v. Thistle’s Ex’or, 2 Gratt. 182, a deed was made by the debtor, the purchase money paid, and the purchaser placed in possession; but the deed was never recorded until after a judgment was obtained against the debtor. It was held by this court that the land in the hands of the purchaser was liable to the lien of the judgment. It is difficult to see any just distinction between that case and this. There, as here, the contract was com[296]*296pletely executed by the conveyance to the purchaser, and the title of the owner completely divested before the judgment was recovered. There, as here, the original grantor had nothing upon which the judgment could operate, except that the plain provisions of the statute declared the unrecorded deed utterly void as to creditors.

The only exception to the operation of the recording acts, at least the only one now remembered, is found in the case of a valid parol contract, which is not required to be recorded, and, indeed, cannot be. In such case the purchaser, if his deed is declared void for the want of recordation merely, stands upon his pre-existing equitable right acquired before the execution of the deed. The grounds upon which this doctrine rests are stated fully in the opinions of this court in Withers v. Carter, 4 Gratt. 407, and Floyd v. Harding, Trustee, 28 Gratt. 401. They have, however, no application to the matter under discussion here. For these reasons, I think the lien of the appellants’ judgment is not at all affected by the sale and conveyance of the property under the trust deed, from which the appellees derived title.

The next question to be considered is, whether the defective recordation of the trust deed has been cured by statute. The act of January 26th, 1877, is relied on for that purpose. In order to understand the operation and effect of that act, we must look to the act of March, 1867, found in (Acts of 1866-7, p. 34) the revised Code of 1873, p. 897, § 5. By this latter act it was provided that deeds in respect to property situate within a mile of the corporation limits of a city should be recorded in the hustings or corporation court of such city.

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Bluebook (online)
75 Va. 291, 1881 Va. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/campbell-co-v-nonpareil-f-b-k-co-va-1881.