Cramer v. Roderick

98 A. 42, 128 Md. 422, 1916 Md. LEXIS 88
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 28, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 98 A. 42 (Cramer v. Roderick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cramer v. Roderick, 98 A. 42, 128 Md. 422, 1916 Md. LEXIS 88 (Md. 1916).

Opinion

Constable, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal involves the interpretation of some of the Registry Acts.

The main facts are undisputed. The appellees as the owners of a lot of land, with improvements thereon, in the City of Frederick, filed a bill seeking to restrain the appellants from proceeding further to execute a writ of fieri facias against their said property, for the purpose of collecting a judgment recovered by the appellants, George L. Cramer, Frederick W. Cramer1 and William. L. Cramer, trading as George L. Cramer & Sons, against one Samuel L. Lilly. The judgment was obtained on February 15th, 1913, upon a judgment note given by the said Lilly for the balance of $365.00 on loans of money beginning July 14th, 1911. At the time of the original loan, Lilly was assessed, on the assessment books of Frederick County, with two lots of land in Frederick City; one a lot with improvements at $3,430.00, the other, unimproved, at $100.00. This latter lot was- conveyed by Lilly and wife to Milton F. Outsail and wife on the 7th day of May, 1910, and by Outsail and wife to the appellees on the 30th day of November, 1912. By inad *424 vertence, but admittedly without any fraudulent intent, neither of the deeds was recorded until the 25th day of September, 1913; in each case more than six months after their date, and subsequently to the obtention of the said judgment. The appellees, in August, 1913, began the erection of dwelling houses on their vacant lot, and completed the same at a cost of $3,500.00 in March, 1914. The appellants never learned that Lilly had sold the lots- until after the deeds were recorded in September, 1913. On the 19th day of June, 1914, the writ of ft. fa. was issued on said judgment, and the sheriff levied upon all the right, title, claim, interest and estate, both at law and in equity of the said Samuel L. Lilly, in and to the said lot and advertised the said real estate for sale.

After a hearing the Court held that the judgment was no lien upon the lot in question, and made permanent the preliminary injunction previously granted.

The question involved is, what is the effect of a deed of conveyance recorded more than six months after its date, as against creditors who become such between the date of the deed and -the date of its recording, without notice of such deed.

The contention of the appellants is, that since the deed from Lilly and wife was not recorded until after six months from its date, and they had become creditors of Lilly between the date of the deed and its recording, without notice, the deed as to them was null and void.

Whatever the rights of the appellants may be, they are statutory, and,' therefore, we will examine the statutory law of recording, and its effect as relating to this question.

By Chapter 14, section 2 of the Acts of 1766, all deeds of conveyance were required to be recorded within six months from their date. Code, Art. 21, sec. 13. Before 1785, Courts of Chancery had power, by virtue of their general equitable jurisdiction, to compel the execution of defectively executed contracts, but by the Act of 1785, Chapter 72, it *425 was provided by section 11, that where any deed had not been recorded agreeably to law, without any fraudulent intent or design upon the part of the party claiming under such deed the Chancellor should have power, after due process* to order that such deed should he recorded; and such deed .was to have the same effect and consequences as if it had been recorded within the time fixed by law; provided, among other things, that such deed, so recorded, should not affect the ■creditors of the party making it, who might trust such party after the date of the deed. Code, Art. 16, sec. 34.

By the Act of 1831, Chapter 304, the necessity of applying to the Courts to authorize the recording of deeds after ■the expiration of the- time fixed by law, was removed from all deeds, except those conveyances hv way of mortgage* and they remained, to the present time, subject to the provisions ■of Article 16, section 34. Code, Art. 21, sec. 19. And by the same Act, in addition to allowing deeds* except deeds by way of mortgage, to be recorded by the mere wish of the grantee after the expiration of six months after their date, it was attempted to fix the status of such recorded deeds as to creditors of the grantors, before the recording and without notice. That part of the Act is now codified as Code, Art. 21, see. 21, and is as follows: “But as against all creditors who have become so before the recording of such deed or conveyance, and without notice of the existence thereof, such deed or conveyance shall have validity and effect only as a ■contract for the conveyance or assurance of the estate, interest or use, purported by such deed or conveyance to he conveyed or assured.”

This, language is quite different from that dealing, with the same situation in the earlier Act, by which the permission of the Court had to he first obtained for late recording and which now, of course, is only resorted to in the case of deeds by way of mortgage where there hás been neglect to record in time.

.In the case of deeds of mortgage recorded under the provision of Article 16, section 34, the deeds are inoperative as *426 against creditors of the grantors, who have become such between the date of the deed and its recording, because the-statute by plain and unequivocal language has made it so. But as against creditors of the grantors in deeds not by way of mortgage, the Act, in allowing them to be recorded at the will of the grantee, has gone further, and, by new language-has changed the effect such recording shall have, by using language, the legal effect of which is recognized universally..

What is the meaning of the words “such deed or conveyance shall have validity and effect only as a contract for the-conveyance or assurance of the estate, interest or use, purported by such deed or conveyance to be conveyed or assured” ?

In the deed from Lilly and wife of May 7th, 1910, they purported to convey a fee simple estate to Outsail and wife; By the statute as against creditors the conveyance is not made inoperative but it is expressly provided that it shall' have validity and effect only as a contract for the conveyance of the estate purported to be conveyed. If then the deed has not been recorded with the time fixed, it must be treated as a contract to convey. But it has repeatedly been held, that by entering into a contract of sale of property, the equitable title immediately passes from the vendor to the vendee and leaves the vendor possessed only of the bare legal title. In Marvin v. Brewer, 30 Md. 247, it was said by this Court, that, when the contract to convey was signed, “there was an executed contract by-which the equitable estate and interest in the land passed to Brewer (the vendee) from its date.”

And in Brewer v. Herbert, 30 Md.

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Bluebook (online)
98 A. 42, 128 Md. 422, 1916 Md. LEXIS 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cramer-v-roderick-md-1916.