Fisher v. Borden

69 S.E. 636, 111 Va. 535, 1910 Va. LEXIS 81
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 30, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 69 S.E. 636 (Fisher v. Borden) 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
Fisher v. Borden, 69 S.E. 636, 111 Va. 535, 1910 Va. LEXIS 81 (Va. 1910).

Opinion

Cardwell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

On the 21st day of December, 1892, Joseph D. Herrick, being the owner in fee of an undivided one-fourth interest in a certain tract of land in Princess Anne county, Virginia, conveyed the same to Wm. K. Woodhouse, trustee, for the purpose of securing W. H. Borden the payment of two bonds, the one for $200 and the other for $400, which deed was not recorded until March 5, 1894. In the meantime the same grantor had executed to the same trustee another deed conveying the same property interest to secure to James C. Herrick the payment of a bond for $300, 'which deed was dated May 4, 1893, and recorded August 28, 1893; that is to say, the Herrick deed, though subsequent in date and execution to the Borden deed, preceded it in recordation by about six months.

In January, 1904, James C. Herrick assigned said bond of $300, “and all benefits of the deed of trust securing the same,” [537]*537to John T. Fisher, which assignment was duly noted on the margin of the deed book where the deed of trust was recorded. In March, 1907, the bond of $300 then held and owned by Fisher being still unpaid, the trustee, Woodhouse, by his direction, sold under the Herrick deed, and at the sale Fisher became the purchaser of the one-fourth property interest conveyed at the price of $300, the amount of the principal of Fisher’s claim, and he received on the day of sale a deed from the trustee for the property sold, which deed he immediately recorded. Prior to this sale Fisher had acquired the other undivided three-fourths interests in said tract of land, one of them from the said James C. Herrick, and after receiving from Woodhouse, trustee, the said deed for the other one-fourth interest, Fisher gave several deeds of trust upon his interest in the land so acquired to secure the payment of certain debts owing by him, as mentioned in those deeds. In August, 1907, said W. H. Borden instituted this suit in equity against Fisher and the trustee and beneficiary in each of the said trust deeds executed by him, the object of which suit was to have the Herrick deed of trust and the assignment thereof to Fisher, and the several deeds of trust' upon the same property subsequently executed by him, declared void as to the plaintiff, W. H. Borden, upon the ground that, while the plaintiff’s deed of trust was recorded on a subsequent date-to that on which the Herrick deed assigned to Fisher was recorded, Fisher’s assignor, James C. Herrick, had actual notice of the prior lien of the Borden deed when he took an assignment of the bond intended to be secured by the Herrick deed, and was, therefore, not a purchaser without notice of that fact.

To this bill Fisher and James C. Herrick alone made answer, the bill being taken for confessed as to the other defendants, and upon the hearing of the cause upon the bill, the answers filed and depositions taken for both the plaintiff and the defendants, the court ruled that under the proof [538]*538as established by the depositions and the application of the law thereto, Fisher and the other defendants claiming under him could not be regarded as purchasers without notice, and were, therefore, not entitled to protection as against the plaintiff', Borden: and from the decree carrying this.ruling into effect Fisher obtained this appeal.

In the written opinion of the judge, made a part of the record, the decree complained of here is rested upon several grounds, but in our view of the case it is only necessary for us to consider the question, whether or not the appellant was a purchaser for value of the debt secured by the Herrick deed, without notice of the prior lien of the Borden deed. In other words, did he know at the time he took the assignment of the debt-, or could he have known by inquiry suggested to him by facts and circumstances within his knowledge, that his assignor, James C. Herrick, took the Herrick deed with notice of the existence of the Borden deed ?

That Herrick knew of the Borden deed when he took the Herrick deed, is too clearly proven to admit of serious controversy, in fact it is not so controverted, the insistence of the appellant being that he was a purchaser without notice, when he took the assignment from Herrick, that- his assignor was not a purchaser for value and without notice; that is, appellant stands as an innocent purchaser unless he knew that James G. Herrick “took his deed of trust with knowledge of the Borden deed of trust.”

The debt assigned to appellant was a bond — a common law evidence of a debt — and it is not questioned that Wm. K. Woodhouse, named as the trustee in the Herrick deed securing the bond, is one and the same person named as the trustee in the Borden' deed. But the learned counsel for the appellant says that while it has been held (in fact settled by a number of decisions of this court, as well as of others), that the knowledge of a trustee will be imputed to the beneficiary named in the deed of trust, yet' this court has [539]*539never gone so far as to hold that such knowledge is imputable to an innocent assignee for value of the bond secured. Granting that the distinction sought to be drawn by counsel between the status of the original creditor secured and that of his assignee of the bond secured is sound (which it is not necessary for us here to decide), the distinction will not avail appellant, for, as we view the evidence, it proves as eonclusTvely as the nature of the case would admit that he was not “an innocent purchaser for value of the bond secured.”

Conceding that a plaintiff in a cause, as a general rule, must prove his case, jmt the facts and circumstances may be such as to vary the rule and shift the burden of proof from the party assailing a transaction to the one defending it. 6 Enc. Dig. Va. & W. Va. Rep., 505, and cases cited.

Assuming, however, for the argument’s sake, that the burden of proof remained upon the appellee, Borden, throughout this case, let us inquire whether or not the evidence is sufficient to entitle him to the relief his bill asked.

The fact of notice to appellant, before he took the assignment of the bond secured by the Herrick deed, that his assignor, James C. Herrick, knew of the prior deed held by appellee, Borden, before the Herrick deed was taken, may be inferred from circumstances as well as proved by direct evi-. dence. Farley v. Bateman, 40 W. Va. 540, 22 S. E. 72; Cranes Nest Coal Co. v. Va. Iron Co., 102 Va. 862, 54 S. E. 884, and cases there cited.

It is true that in the last named case and in those cited, while the rule is fully sustained, the qualification that the proof must be such as to affect the conscience of the purchaser, and must be so strong and clear as to fix upon him the imputation of bad faith, is also recognized; but it will be seen that under the facts proven in this case the qualification affixed to the rule will not avail appellant. The opinion of the learned judge below rightly viewed the evidence as showing the fact that appellant “had knowledge of both [540]*540the Borden and the Herrick deeds, and that there was a question of priority between them.” He had acquired three undivided interests in the land and desired the remaining fourth; he had, before consummating his purchase of the Herrick bond, gone to A. E. Kellam, who as clerk of Princess Anne county admitted to record both deeds, and employed him to look into the facts for him and advise him whether he should purchase the Herrick bond or not.

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Bluebook (online)
69 S.E. 636, 111 Va. 535, 1910 Va. LEXIS 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fisher-v-borden-va-1910.