Fenno v. Sayre

3 Ala. 458
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 15, 1842
StatusPublished
Cited by54 cases

This text of 3 Ala. 458 (Fenno v. Sayre) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fenno v. Sayre, 3 Ala. 458 (Ala. 1842).

Opinion

COLLIER, C. J.

It was no ground of demurrer to the bill-, that the promissory note which the mortgage from Paulling to the complainants was intended to secure, is not made an exhibit. The mortgage itself is exhibited, in which the note is described and this was sufficient to authorise its admission as evidence.

■ In respect to the omission in the bill to offer to refund to' Fenno, or the persons authorised to receive it, the money paid by him to Paulling, it may be remarked, that the complainants do not admit the liability of the lands in controversy to reimburse his advances; but the bill is framed upon the hypothesis that their mortgage is not only prior in point of time, but is a lien, paramount to the claim of each of the defendants. If the complainants are not entitled to all the relief they ask, or can only obtain a decree of foreclosure and sale sub modo, their bill should not have been dismissed on demurrer, especially as it- contains a prayer for such relief as is consistent with the case stated. It was entirely competent at the hearing, for the Chancellor to have ascertained the rights of the respective defendants, and to have directed by his decree, that the proceeds of the land subject to sale, should be applied to the-payment of [470]*470the claims of the litigants, according to their legal preference. The land then being liable to the payment of the incumbrances, whether they were complainants or defendants, it was’ not indispensable to the complainants right to go into equity, that they should assume a personal responsibility to a defendant whose lien was superior to their’s.

The allegation in the bill, that the complainants were proprietors of the note intended to be secured by Paulling, is quite sufficient. .It is entirely immaterial whether they hold, it under an indosement or not, if they are entitled, to the money which may be collected thereon, they were authorised to take a mortgage for its security, and may well maintain a bill for its foreclosure.

The equity of the bill, it seems to us, will not admit of serious question. It alleges the existence of a forfeited and unsatisfied mortgage.to secure a debt due to the complainants; states that other persons,, who are made defendants, set up claims to the premises, which it is insisted, are invalid; prays.that the adverse claims may be examined-, and the complainants mortgage foreclosed, &c. A mere statement of the case shows that the questions proposed to be litigáted, could only be settled in chancery. ,

. The interest acquired by Paulling, in virtue of his purchase from Glover, and payment of the. greater, part of the purchase money, might be transferred or mortgaged, so as to invest the mortgagee with all the right tq the land that Paulling had. But one claiming by purchase from a person who had nothing more than' a bond for title, will stand in the- same situation as his vendor did,.and.will be subject to the same equities in favor of the obligor or original vendor. The,want of'complete titles and the possession of the bond, though. its condition may not show whether full payment has been made, are enough to induce inquiry, and to prevent a divestiture of an equitable lien. We have not- had access to the case, of Frazier v. Center, 1 McC. Ch. Rep. 278, which has . been cited, to show, that the complainants mortgage is invalid in consequence of the imperfectness of the title of Paulling, but we apprehend it will be found to be strictly in harmony with the jaw, as we have stated it:

Subject to the lien of Glover for the payment of the purchase [471]*471money due him', the complainants mortgage, if duly recorded, would be an available security, so long as Paulling retained the actual possession of the premises. Possession is a fact, which should induce one; to inqui’ie whether the possessor-has title, arict if he has incumbered it. It gives to one-proposing to purchase, sufficient information, to enable him to examine ‘understandingly into the state of the title; and whether, the purchaser prosecutes the inquiry or not, he is chargeable with notice. Sugden on Vend. 542; Peters v. Goodrich, 3 Conn. Rep. 146; Jackson, ex dem. Merrick v. Post, 15 Wend. Rep. 588; Sterns v. Arden, 1 Johns. Ch. Rep. 260, Harris, et al. v. Carter’s administrators; et al. 3 Stewart’s Rep. 233. But whether the registration of the complainants mortgage, would operate as constructive' notice to a purchaser from Fenno, after the relinquishment of possession by Paulling, is a question, by no means free from difficulty: and its solution must depend upon, the construction of our registry acts. By the second section of the act of 1823, “to legalize registering and recording certain ' deeds of conveyances of land, in this State, and for other purposes,” it is enacted, that “any deed, or conveyance'of lands, tenements, or. hereditaments, lying and being-in -this: State, which shall be made and executed after the passage of- this act, shall be void, and of no effect against a subsequent bona fide purchaser, or a mortgage for avaluable consideration, not having notice thereof, unless such deed or conveyance shall be acknowledged, or proved- and certified, and lodged, within six calender months after the time of signing, sealing and delivering the same, with the clerk of the county court in the county in which the saidJands, tenements, or hereditaments are situated, to be recorded by the said clerk: Provided, nevertheless, that such deed or conveyance, shall as between the parties and their heirs be valid and operative.” ■ The first section of the act of 1828, “ concerning the registration of deeds and patents,” is as follows: “All deeds recorded within six months ffrom the date of their execution, shall have force and be valid and operative between the parties thereto, and subsequent purchasers and creditors, and-all deeds recorded after the expiration of six months, shall be valid and operative, from the date of their registration, as to creditors and subsequent purchasers : Provi[472]*472ded, that the same shall be valid at all times between the contracting parties.”

- Although the act of 1823, declares, that any deed or conveyance of lands, &c. shall be void against a subsequent bona fide purchaser or mortgagee, for a valuable consideration .without notice, unless the same shall be acknowledged or proved and recorded'pursuant to its provisions'; yet'it by no means follows that the registrations of every deed shall operate as-a constructive notice of its contents. The object of the registry' acts, was the-prevention of fraud; and in advancement of that end1 the letter has been often made to-yield to their spirit. Thus, although a deed is declared void,-unless it is duly registered, it has been always held, that notice is equivalent to registration, and that a purchaser or incumbrancér with notice, cannot' be permitted to allege -that a deed set up against him was not recorded. Sugden’s Vendors, 511, et post. And upon principle, it would seem that merely placing upon record, a deed from a person, not in possession, or who does not' appear from the records, to have had any connection with the title himself, will not operate as a notice to a subsequent purchaser. There would be nothing to direct a purchaser to such a deed, and he could only acquire a knowledge of its' contents by making a general examination of all deeds' that had been registered in the office. • The law certainly never contemplated that a purchaser should take upon himself such - a task, the performance of which in some 'counties would perhaps require a year of un-remitted labour.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Ala. 458, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fenno-v-sayre-ala-1842.