Lonsdale Co. v. Moies

15 F. Cas. 860, 1 Brunn. Coll. Cas. 655
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 15, 1857
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 15 F. Cas. 860 (Lonsdale Co. v. Moies) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lonsdale Co. v. Moies, 15 F. Cas. 860, 1 Brunn. Coll. Cas. 655 (circtdri 1857).

Opinion

CURTIS, Circuit Justice.

This.is a suit in equity, wherein the complainants assert their title to certain water rights, and pray that their title may be quieted as against the respondent, and especially as against a suit at law instituted by him, and now pending in this court. Both parties claim title under one Simon Whipple; the complainants through certain conveyances alleged to have been made by him, and the respondent through a conveyance made by Simmons and wife, in her right as the daughter and heir of Simon Whipple, after his decease, to Charles Moies, and by him to the respondent. Among the deeds alleged to have been made by Simon Whipple, an.d under which the complainant claims, is one in the following words and figures:

“To All People to Whom These Presents shall Come. I, Simon Whipple, of Smith-field, in the county of Providence, state of Rhode Island, send greeting. Know ye that I, the said Simon, for and- in consideration of one dollar, in hand before the ensealing hereof, well and truly paid by Wilbur Kelly, of North Providence, state and county aforesaid. the receipt whereof I hereby acknowl[861]*861edge, and am therewith fully satisfied and paid, and thereof do acquit and discharge him, the said Kelly, his heirs and assigns forever, hy these presents. Have given, granted, sold, conveyed, confirmed, and by these presents do give, grant, convey, and confirm unto him, the said Kelly, his heirs and assigns forever, all my right, title, and interest in and to the waters of the Blackstone River, with the further right and privilege to him, the said Kelly, his heirs and assigns forever, to take, divert, convey, and use the said waters on, over, through, or by my land, through the Blackstone Canal, wherein situated, for any purpose whatever. To have and to hold the said granted and bargained premises, with all the privilege thereunto belonging, or appertaining to him, the said Kelly, his heirs and assigns forever; and I, the said Simon, do covenant with the said Kelly, that I am lawfully seized and possessed of the same, and have full right and power to convey the same; and that the said Kelly, his heirs and assigns, shall and may, from time to time, and all times hereafter, by virtue of these presents. lawfully hold the said water and the use thereof. Provided, however, the said Simon reserves to himself, his heirs and assigns forever, the right of taking and drawing water, either from the mill pond by a trench, or through the Blackstone Canal banks, conformable to their agreement made with me the 10th day of March, 1826, whenever the water is running to waste over said dam or flashboards thereof, for the purpose of watering my intervale land south of said Kelly’s factory, on the west side of the Blackstone river. In testimony whereof, I have set my hand and seal, this 31st day of March, A. D. 1826. Simon Whipple. (Seal.) In presence of (Memod. through the Blackstone Canal, first interlined.) (Signed.) Sa-lah S. Whipple. (Signed.) Martha Hull.

“Providence, sc. — At Smithfield, August 30, 1S2G, at 8 o'clock p. m., the within deed was then received, and is recorded in the registry of deeds for said town, in Book No. 1G, and page 337.

“Town Clerk’s Office, Smithfield, December 2, 1S45. I hereby certify that the afore-going deed is recorded in Smithfield registry of deeds, in Book N’o. 15, page 337. Witness, (Signed.) Orin Wright, Town Clerk.”

If this deed was executed by Simon Whipple, and is valid and operative as against the respondent, to convey all Whipple’s rights to water which are now in controversy, and the complainants have acquired those rights from Wilber Kelly,, they have the better title, and are entitled to such relief- as a court of equity deems appropriate to the case. The execution of the deed by Simon Whipple is denied. One of the subscribing witnesses is shown to be deceased. The other, the daughter of the grantor, and the person under whom the respondent claims, testifies to the genuineness of her own signature, and that she placed it there as a witness; but what is somewhat strange, says she does not know her father’s handwriting, and cannot say whether or not he executed the deed. But when this exhibit was produced at the hearing, and when for the first time it became necessary for the complainants to prove it (Gres. Eq. Ev. 188), the deed was more than thirty years old, and coming from the proper custody, and especially when accompanied by proof of enjoyment in conformity with it, was admissible in evidence without proof of its execution. A fortiori it is admissible after the memory of one of the subscribing witnesses has been exhausted, and the other is shown to be dead, and the relation of the living witness to the grantor, and the genuineness of her own signature, and the fact of her attestation, strongly tend to repel any idea of fraud or mistake, and to prove the execution of the deed by the grantor, and there is no evidence tending to create a doubt or suspicion concerning its genuineness. It is denied that the deed is operative as against the respondent, because, though recorded, it was not acknowledged. The statute of Rhode Island provides that “all bargains, sales, and other conveyances whatsoever, of any lands, etc., shall be void, unless they shall be acknowledged and recorded as above said; provided always, that the same between parties and their heirs shall nevertheless be valid and binding.” It is a settled rule, both in England and America, that a court of equity will not suffer a subsequent grantee, by a registered deed, to hold an estate conveyed by a prior unregistered deed, of which he had notice at the time of his purchase. An attempt thus to acquire a title known to have been conveyed to another is an attempt to commit a fraud; and upon the ground of fraud equity interposes, and restrains the second grantee from availing himself of his covinous contrivance. And this without regard to the particular terms of the registry acts, whose purpose is fully answered when purchasers are protected from secret liens and conveyances. 4 Kent, Comm. 171; 1 Story, Eq. § 397. In Landes v. Brant, 10 How. [51 U. S.] 348, it was decided that open and notorious occupation by the first purchaser, when the second deed was taken, is in itself sufficient to warrant a jury or court in finding that the second purchaser had evidence before him of a character to put him on inquiry as to what title the possession was held under; and that the subsequent purchaser was bound by that title, aside from all other evidence than such possession and holding. Whatever diversities may exist in the decisions made elsewhere, this is binding on me, sitting in this court. I do not understand that the supreme court of Rhode Island, in Harris v. Arnold, 1 R. I. 125, have decided otherwise. It is there held that [862]*862possession is not, under all circumstances, ■conclusive evidence of notice. So I understand the law to be. See Jones v. Smith, 1 Hare, 43, 1 Phil. Ch. 244. Knowledge of possession by a third person may be accompanied by such circumstances, as, taken all together, do not evince what Mr. Vice Chancellor Wigram terms a fraudulent turning away from a knowledge of the facts which the res gestae would suggest to a prudent mind. Each case must be examined by the light of all the surrounding circumstances. which have a tendency either to prompt or check those inquiries to which it is the natural effect of notorious adverse possession to give rise.

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Bluebook (online)
15 F. Cas. 860, 1 Brunn. Coll. Cas. 655, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lonsdale-co-v-moies-circtdri-1857.