Ellis v. White

3 Haw. 205
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1870
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 3 Haw. 205 (Ellis v. White) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ellis v. White, 3 Haw. 205 (haw 1870).

Opinion

Hartwell, J.:

We will not consider whether the unrecorded mortgage is good against others than the second mortgagee, who are not parties to this suit, and can not be concluded thereby; the decision in this case decides only the mutual rights of the parties.

The question arises under the following Sections of the Civil Code:

“ Section. 1262. All deeds, leases for a term of more than one year, or other conveyances of real estate within this Kingdom, shall be recorded in the office of the Registrar of Conveyances, and every such conveyance not so recorded shall be void as against any subsequent purchaser in good faith and for a valuable consideration, not having actual notice of such conveyance of the same real' estate, or apportion thereof whose conveyance shall be first duly recorded.”
Section 1263. All mortgages of chattel property, indentures of apprenticeship, articles of marriage settlement, powers of attorney for the transfer of real estate within this kingdom, and agreements of adoption shall, in order to their validity, be recorded in the office of the Registrar of Conveyances, in default of which, no such instrument shall be binding to the detriment of third parties, or conclusive upon their rights and interests.”

The notice was sufficiently explicit, in giving the name of the first mortgagee and the amount of the debt first sought to be secured, to put the second mortgagee on his inquiry as to the date at which the first note was payable. In view of [209]*209the statutes, is actual notice, in the absence of delivery, equivalent to registry ?

The French law allow'S creditors and purchasers to hold, even if they had notice of, an unrecorded mortgage. “Le defaut de transcription ne pourra etre suplee ni regarde comme couvert par la connaissance que les creanciers, ou les tiers acquereurs, pourraient avoir eue de la disposition par d’autres voies que celle de la transcription.” Code Napoleon, No. 1071. The English equity rule made actual knowledge of a previous mortgage deed of real estate equivalent to. registry. The statute of Anne required the registry of deeds of land, -“otherwise every such conveyance shall be void against any subsequent purchaser for a- valuable consideration.” The ground on which the English Courts held that actual notice was good, was, thgt the statute “ only intended to give such notice of former incumbrances to purchasers that they might not be defrauded,” and that one having notice, “purchases with an ill conscience.” Cheval vs. Nichols, 1 Str., 664. This construction of registry acts has been made by many of the courts of the United States, although the statutes have now generally made the express exception. 4 Kent’s Comm., 192.

In Sawyer vs. Eastwood, 19 Wend., 515, an action of trover for a horse, Nelson, Ch. J., held that clear notice of a prior claim is considered, per se, evidence of mala fides, that by the statute, the unrecorded security was only void against subsequent purchasers in good faith, and that “ a purchaser with notice can not claim to be a purchaser in good faith within these acts.” The cases cited in that decision are, however, cases of conveyances of land. In Gregory vs. Thomas, 20 Wend., 17, which was trover for a coach and harness, the defendant was a prior mortgagee, the record of whose mortgage was not renewed according to the statute. The Court held that the plaintiff’s full knowledge of the defendant’s claim precluded him from standing as a bona fide [210]*210mortgagee, and that the prior mortgage was good. But the terms of the New York statute do not allow us to regard these decisions as covering the present case under our statutes, which contain no such limitations concerning bona Me purchasers.

By the California statutes, no chattel mortgage is valid without recording, unless by delivery. Gen. Laws, §501. The California Digest refers to several decisions of the Courts of that State, going the full length of the above New York decisions, but fails to inform us whether those decisions were upon chattel or real estate mortgages. The laws of that State make an unrecorded real estate mortgage void only as against subsequent purchasers in good faith. "We do not know how the laws stood at the date of the decisions last referred to. It is to*be regretted that we have thus fax-failed to obtain a complete set of the Repox-ts of the Supreme Court of a State with which we are so closely connected in trade.

In Maine, the statute is explicit, that “no mortgage of personal propex-ty shall be valid against any other persons than the parties thereto,” without registry or delivery. Rev. St., p. 558. In Sawyer vs. Pernell, 19 Maine, 167, a mortgage of stock was held not to have been fully recorded, but notice of the mortgage was given to the attaching creditor by the mortgagor. The Court held that the notice given was insufficient, implying that actual notice, if full, would suffice.

In Stowe vs. Meserve, 13 New Hampshire, 50, the Court, (Parker, C. J.) say, “a similar exception (against subsequent creditors with notice) has been held to exist in relation to mortgages of personal px-opex-ty, and for the same reason,” but go on to say, “what would be the effect of actual knowledge of the existence of a deed, communicated to a creditor who has procured his process, and is about to levy upon the property, it is not necessary now to determine. In this, no such [211]*211knowledge appears.” The same learned Justice had said in Smith vs. Moore, 11 New Hampshire, 64, that “we may be required to hold, that notice will have the effect of a record in mortgages of personal property.” Five years later, in Low vs. Pettengill, 12 New Hampshire, 339, the same Court (Upham, J.) in the case of a chattel mortgage, refer to “ the exception, which has been long established, of actual notice which supersedes the necessity of a record,” but merely held that the notice given by handing the mortgage to the clerk to be recorded, was insufficient.

Hilliard, in his treatise on the law of mortgages (vol. 2, p. 253,) says, that on this point “ different doctrines have prevailed in the several States, in some of them a distinction being made, with regard to notice, between mortgages of personal property, and those of real estate, which have uniformly been held valid, without recording, against parties with actual notice.”

But an examinatian of all the authorities, accessible to us, has failed to show a single case, under a peremptory .statute, where actual notice has been held to take the place of the record of a chattel mortgage as against a subsequent recorded mortgage. The New Hampshire decisions do not go to that length. In Massachusetts the statute is, that no chattel mortgage shall be valid without recording or delivering, Rev. St., 473. In Denny vs. Lincoln, 13 Met., the Court, (Shaw, C. J.) said that rules for the transfer of real and personal property presented such marked differences, “that it is not safe to rely upon the analogy between them,” and that they “were inclined to the opinion that an attachment, would hold good against the unrecorded mortgage, although the attaching creditor had notice of it, if it were necessary now to decide that question.” But Travis vs. Bishop, Ib. 304, settled that notice was insufficient without delivering or registration.

Although we decline to ^adjudicate upon the rights of the

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Bluebook (online)
3 Haw. 205, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ellis-v-white-haw-1870.