Ives v. Stone

51 Conn. 446, 1884 Conn. LEXIS 57
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedFebruary 8, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 51 Conn. 446 (Ives v. Stone) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ives v. Stone, 51 Conn. 446, 1884 Conn. LEXIS 57 (Colo. 1884).

Opinion

Carpenter, J.

This is a suit to foreclose a mortgage. The mortgage consisted of an absolute deed, and a defeasance in writing signed by the grantor, describing the debt intended to be secured by the deed, and providing for a re-conveyance of the property upon the payment of the debt. The deed was recorded; the defeasance was not. Rubenia [455]*455McGilvray, a creditor and one of the defendants, attached the property as the property of the grantors. She was made a defendant in the foreclosure suit and demurred to the complainant for the following reasons: “because, upon the facts therein set out, the deed of the said Sarah C. Stone to the said Hoadly B. Ives, being absolute upon its face, but in fact given and held as a mortgage, is void against this defendant’s attachment, and said attachment is a first lien upon that portion of said premises attempted to be foreclosed, which are subject to it.” The case is reserved for the advice of this court.

In Griswold v. Pettibone, 4 Conn., 158, this court, after reciting the statute requiring deeds and mortgages to be recorded, says: “ It is the object of this law to prevent fraud and give security and stability to title. It results, unquestionably, that the condition of a mortgage deed must give reasonable notice of the incumbrances on the land mortgaged. * * And what is not of less importance, the incumbrance on the property must be so defined as to prevent the substitution of everything which a fraudulent grantor may devise to shield himself from the demands of his creditors.”

In Stoughton v. Pasco, 5 Conn., 442, the court held that “ to render a mortgage valid as against strangers, it must give reasonable notice of the incumbrance on the land mortgaged.” The same point was decided in Shepard v. Shepard, 6 Conn., 37, and the principle thus enunciated was recognized in Crane v. Deming, 7 Conn., 387, Hubbard v. Savage, 8 Conn., 215, and Booth v. Barnum, 9 Conn., 286. These decisions fully justify the language of Williams, C. J., in North v. Belden, 13 Conn., 376, where he says: — “ Thus, it has been considered as settled, long since, that if an absolute deed is given with intent to secure a debt, such deed would be void as it respects bona, fide creditors, as it does not disclose the real nature of the transaction. It places the parties in a false position as it respects the public. It holds out the grantee as the real owner, when in fact the grantor is, or may be, the owner. It tends [456]*456to lull the creditors of both parties (as the case may be) into false security, and to conceal from them the real condition of their debtors.” It is idle to speak of this as an obiter dictum. It was appropriate and pertinent language to use in the case then before the court. The question was whether a note described in a mortgage as an absolute debt, but which was in fact given to secure a contingent liability, should be postponed to a subsequent mortgage, and the court held that it should be, notwithstanding the. fact that the contingent liability was paid to the full amount of the note, because the mortgage did not disclose the real nature of the transaction. It is equally idle to say that the principle thus expressed rested upon the authority of the cases cited from the state of New York; for it is apparent that the decision is independent of those cases. Immediately after the language quoted above the court adds: “In the laws of New York the same principle is recognized. Dey v. Dunham, 2 Johns. Ch. Rep., 182; James v. Johnson et al., 6 id., 417. And although the terms of the statutes of that state may vary from ours, the same object is kept in view.”

In Hart v. Chalker, 14 Conn., 77, the court says: — “ Our recording system, in its spirit, requires that the record should disclose, with as much certainty as the nature of the case will admit of, the real state of the incumbrance upon the property. And all the authorities concur in this result, that reasonable notice of the incumbrance should be given by the record.”

This principle has been uniformly adhered to. Accordingly it has been held that if the debt is a contingent one it must not be described as an absolute liability. North v. Belden, (supra) ; Rood v. Welch, 28 Conn., 157; Stearns v. Porter, 46 Conn., 313.

The debt should be so described as that it will not be in ' the power of the parties, should they be fraudulently inclined, to bring within its protecting shield other debts. A mortgage should never be used as an instrument to conceal the debtor’s property. Hence it is not allowable -to describe the debt as larger than it actually is. If it does so it [457]*457operates as a fraud, for it covers up the debtor’s property and tends to deceive and mislead.

Now this transaction, the defeasance being unrecorded, is contrary to the spirit of all these decisions. The record, so far from disclosing the true state of the title, shows it to be an absolute deed instead of a mortgage; it represents the grantee as the owner of the property, whereas the grantor owns it subject to the grantee’s debt, and the equity of redemption is concealed and placed apparently beyond the reach of creditors, while a secret trust exists in favor of the grantor. So far from describing the debt with reasonable certainty, the record is entirely silent on the subject, and places it within the power of the parties, by collusion, if they are so disposed, to set up any claim and for any amount as a substitute for the one really intended to be secured.

If this transaction can be sustained as a valid mortgage against creditors, it will not only destroy all the benefits of the recording system as respects mortgages, but will enable the parties, by a change in the form of the mortgage, to convert the system itself into an instrument of fraud.

It is claimed that Miss McGilvray did not give credit to the grantor till more than a year after the deed was given, that her attachment was not made until after the plaintiff had taken possession of the property, that she did not make her loan on the credit of the property and was not misled to her injury, that if she had reason to believe that the deed Avas a mortgage she was guilty of laches in not inquiring, and that under the circumstances there Avas no constructive fraud. The question before us is not one of fraud, nor of due diligence; nor is it a question whether, in this particular instance, a party has been misled or deceived. It is a question of the construction of the registry law — Avhat does it require ? Is it necessary that the defeasance should be recorded ? The plaintiff claims that the deed, taken in con nection with the defeasance, is a mortgage, and is seeking to foreclose it as a mortgage, and Ave must so treat it. The deed only was recorded. The defeasance, whioh is the con[458]*458dition of the mortgage, is not on the record. In the cases referred to in which the question was whether the record disclosed the real nature of the transaction, the court did not inquire into the' bond fides of the parties, nor whether there was due diligence or fraud. In those cases and in this,’ the question is one of public policy, as much so as in cases under the statute of limitations or the statute of frauds. The question is, what does the statute require ? and has it been complied with ? ' If it has, his security is good against every one; if it has not, it must be postponed to creditors.

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Bluebook (online)
51 Conn. 446, 1884 Conn. LEXIS 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ives-v-stone-conn-1884.