Jackson ex dem. Lansing v. Chamberlain

8 Wend. 620
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1832
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 8 Wend. 620 (Jackson ex dem. Lansing v. Chamberlain) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jackson ex dem. Lansing v. Chamberlain, 8 Wend. 620 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1832).

Opinion

By the Court, Savage, C. J.

Both parties claim title under Edwards. The important questions, therefore, are 1st, whether the deed from Edwards to the lessor was sufficiently proved; and if so, 2d, whether the lessor acquired title under it as against a subsequent bona fide purchaser.

The proof was sufficient; the plaintiff shewed the absence of one witness positively, and proved his hand writing, and the hand writing of the grantor; he also proved prima facie [624]*624the death or probable absence from the state of the other witness_ Inquiry was made in the place of her former residence, and within 14 miles of her last known residence. This evidence would have been more satisfactory had inquiries been _ . _ , , , , , • . made in Cooperstown, the last place where the witness to the deed was heard of; but as her former acquaintances, only 14 miles distant, had not heard of her for 30 years, and as the family in which she lived had left the state many years ago, a reasonable presumption is raised of her death or absence This is enough where the other proof of the execution of the deed is as full as in this case. The evidence here, accounting for the second witness, is much stronger than it was in Jackson v. Burton, 11 Johns. R. 64. There the witness produced in court did not know the subscribing witness, nor had he made any inquiry for him. The witness in court had lived in New-York, where the deed was supposed to have been executed. The court held the testimony sufficient to let the proof go to the jury; the absence of the other witness being satisfactorily accounted for, and his hand writing proved. In that case it was remarked by Kent, Ch. J.: “ The rules and practice of the courts leave this point with some latitude of discretion.” And in Jackson v. Cady, 9 Cowen, 149, it is said that proof that the witness could not be found or heard of, upon diligent search and inquiry, would be-evidence of his death or absence. I think enough was shewn in this case to prove the deed, especially as nothing was shewn on the other side contradicting the plaintiff’s evidence.

I do not think the plaintiff was entitled to read the deed in evidence as an ancient deed; there had been no possession under it, nor were there any circumstances shewn relating to the deed, except those concerning its execution. When the lot was fir^t occupied does not appear ; probably not till recently, as the defendant acquired his title in 1819.

It was not necessary that the deed in question should have been deposited under the statutes of 1794. The principal, if not the only object of those statutes was the detection of frauds and forgeries. 20 Johns. R. 659. 6 Cowen, 146. 1 Wendell, 489. Edwards, the grantee from the surveyor-general, was not the soldier who merited the lot, nor the grantee of the sol[625]*625dier, but the grantee of the state. The conveyances of the survey fifty acres sold by the surveyor-general, are not within the reason of the depositing acts, nor within the letter, as those parts of the lots can hardly be considered as granted “ to the officers and troops of this state,” for though nominally included in the patents to the soldier, they were liable to be sold for the expenses of surveying, and having been so sold, I apprehend were not within the mischiefs intended to be guarded against; nor was the deed from Edwards to the lessor required to be deposited any more than the deed from the surveyor-general. At the date of this deed, June 1st, 1793, there was no law requiring a deed to be recorded to give it validity, and none of the recording acts have a retroactive operation. According to this view of the case, the title to the premises in question vested in the lessor at the date of the deed from Edwards to him; of course a judgment subsequently obtained could create no lien upon this property. The judgment in favor of Burr against Edwards was docketed in 1802, and can have no possible effect upon property conveyed in due form of law, nine years before.

I agree with the defendant’s counsel, that if the deed from Edwards to the lessor was void, the defendant shewed a good title under the judgment; for Edwards having title from the surveyor-general, that title must remain in him until it is legally divested, and if it were in him when the judgment was docketed it passed to the defendant; and even if the title had passed from him in a manner" conclusive against him as in favor of his grantee, as by an unrecorded deed, where the statutes require a record to conclude subsequent incumbrancers or bona fide purchasers, still if such record be necessary as against such purchasers and incumbrancers, an unrecorded deed is unavailing against them; so in this case, had it been necessary by statute, in 1793, that every deed should be recorded to give it efficacy against subsequent bona fide purchasers or incumbrancers, then, under the circumstances of this case, there would have existed an interest in Edwards, upon which Burr’s judgment would have been a lien; and though our statute does not save the rights of judgment creditors, and the judgment alone is unavailing as an incumbrance against an unre[626]*626corded deed, yet when that judgment is enforced and a sale is made upon excution, and the sheriff’s deed is first recorded, the purchaser becomes a bona fide purchaser, and in that character is entitled to the property in preference to the grantee in the unrecorded deed. Such is my understanding, of the law and such is the current of authority, as I read the cases. In Jackson v. Dubois, 4 Johns. R. 216, the lessor was a purchaser under a judgment which was docketed intermediate the execution and the registry of the defendant’s mortgage; the plaintiff was non-suited, but it was conceded by the learned judge who delivered the opinion of the court, that had the lessor completed his title under the judgment, by having his deed perfected before the registry, he must have recovered. The language of the statute being, that no mortgage, nor any deed, conveyance or writing in the nature of a mortgage, shall defeat or prejudice the title or interest of any bona fide purchaser, unless the same shall have been duly registered. The case of Jackson v. Terry, 13 Johnson. R. 471, decides that a sheriff’s deed must be recorded in the same manner as any other deed; and there a purchaser from the judgment debtor, subsequent to the sheriff’s sale on the judgment, prevailed because the deed from the sheriff was not recorded. In Jackson v. Town, 4 Cowen, 599, the lessor of the plaintiff the purchaser under the judgment, failed because no title was shewn in the judgment debtor, from whom the defendant purchased. The defendant’s deed was before the judgment, but was not recorded. But the defendant in that case did not prevail upon the strength of that conveyance, but upon the fact that the plaintiff'failed to shew title in Eleanor Town,thejudgment debtor. It is true that in one part of the opinion in that case, Mr. Justice Woodworth seems to intimate that if it be admitted that Eleanor Town had seisin of the premises, then she parted with all her right and title, and the deed is valid, if not fraudulent and void against creditors and subsequent purchasers. He then undertakes to shew that there was no fraud, and af-' ter citing the cases in 4 Johns. R. and 13 id. and recognizing them as sound law, he distinguishes the case he was discussing from them by saying: “ In each of those cases the defendant in the execution had an interest liable to be sold.”

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Bluebook (online)
8 Wend. 620, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jackson-ex-dem-lansing-v-chamberlain-nysupct-1832.