Lord v. Doyle

15 F. Cas. 880, 1 Cliff. 453

This text of 15 F. Cas. 880 (Lord v. Doyle) 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
Lord v. Doyle, 15 F. Cas. 880, 1 Cliff. 453 (circtdri 1860).

Opinion

CLIFFORD. Circuit Justice.

Relief is sought against the respondent corporation and William W. Bishop solely upon the ground that they had actual knowledge of the complainants' mortgages; and that is the principal question in the case. Separate answers are filed by the contesting respondents, and it is very clear that the questions presented in the case of the respondent corporation are altogether different from those presented in the case of the other contesting party. Knowledge, whether actual, implied, or constructive, is explicitly and un-qualifiedly denied by both in language as direct and unequivocal as could well be chosen, and in that respect the questions arising under the respective answers are the same; but it should be remembered that the third part claimed by the respondent corporation is the same third part as that embraced in the deed to Walter W. Updike, which was not recorded. Before this suit was brought, the said Walter W. Updike had commenced a suit in equity against Louis J. Doyle, William W. Bishop, Charles Jackson, and the same corporation respondents in the supreme court of the state. The prayer of the bill of complainant in that suit, among other things, was, that the aforesaid deed to the said respondent corporation might be declared void, and that the priority of his title to that third part of the said estate might be established. Respondents were duly served with process, and appeared, answered, and took proofs; and upon final hearing it was ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the corporation respondents and William W. Bishop had actual notice of the before-mentioned deed to Walter W. Updike, and that the deed to the corporation now under consideration was void, and of no effect as to the complainant in that suit. A supplemental bill of complaint was thereupon filed in this court setting up that decree. Parties made respondents therein appeared, and answers and replications were duly filed, and proofs taken, and final hearing had; and I am of the opinion that the decree is final and conclusive between the parties, and that the immediate and direct effect of the decree is to establish the title to that third part of the estate in the said Walter W. Updike, both as against William W. Bishop and the respondent corporation. The contesting respondents in this case, therefore, have no title whatever to that third part of the said estate. Stopping there, however, it may be questionable whether any decree could be made in favor of the complainants; but they go further, and introduce the deposition of Walter W. Updike, duly taken in this case, and he testifies that he saw the two mortgages of the complainants prior to the 1st of September, 1856, and that he had actual knowledge of the considerations therein expressed. Taken together, the decree of the supreme court of this state, and the uncon-tradicted testimony of Walter W. Updike, establish the right of the complainants to a decree in their favor in this case, so far as that third part of the estate is concerned. The controversy between William W. Bishop and the complainants as to the other two-thirds parts of the said estate remains to be considered. Answer of this respondent admits that the proposal and acceptance in writing, as exhibited in the record, were made and executed, and that one third of the said estate was, pursuant thereto, on the 27th of September, 1856, conveyed to him by deed of that date, as alleged in the bill of complaint. He also admits that there was a proposition for a copartnership, and that the articles of copartnership were duly executed as alleged; but he absolutely denies that, by any one or all of these instruments, he ever in any manner became liable to the complainants or to any other person for the debts due from his grantor to the complainants. or that he had, at the time he took said deed, any notice or knowledge whatever of the before-mentioned mortgages of the complainants. Admission is also made by him that the same grantor, on the 21st of October, 1856, mortgaged to him another third part of the estate to secure a loan amounting, with interest, to the sum of sixteen thousand two hundred dollars, but he avers that the same was made in good faith and for a valuable consideration, and without any knowledge or notice in any way of the pretended claim of the complainants, or of the alleged mortgages held by them on the said estate. Regarding the aforesaid deed and mortgage as standing substantially upon the same ground, so far as respects the evidence of notice, they will be considered together. Said mortgage deeds to the complainants were executed to secure certain acceptances and advances made by them at the request and for the benefit of the mortgagor; and it appears that the mortgagees agreed with the mortgagor, at the time of the execution of [882]*882the mortgages, that they should not be recorded. They made that agreement at the request of the mortgagor, and in consideration thereof the mortgagor procured Walter W. Updike to give the complainants a written guaranty “to hold them harmless of all loss, cost, and expenses which may in any way accrue to them, their heirs, and assigns, by reason of their not recording said deeds of mortgage.” Reference is made to the guaranty, as showing that the omission to record the mortgages in this case was not an oversight, or the result of accident, forgetfulness, or inadvertence, but that the respective transactions were intended to be kept secret, as is evident from the very term's of the written guaranty. Respondents contend that such an agreement is a fraud upon the registry law, and that the complainants, having accepted a written guaranty against loss for keeping the mortgages secret, are bound to look to their guarantor for redress, and that they cannot invoke the aid of a court of equity in their behalf in any matter pertaining to that agreement. Courts of equity might well refuse to enforce such an agreement, or to afford a party thereto any relief, who alleged that it had been broken; but it can hardly be admitted that proof that.a complainant has entered into such an agreement in respect to an unrecorded deed, is a good defence on the part of the respondent. who has taken a subsequent deed of the same premises, with actual knowledge that the premises had been previously conveyed to another in good faith. Parties making such an agreement, it may well be held, are entitled to no favor as against a subsequent purchaser for a valuable consideration; but it would be an encouragement to fraud to hold that the wrongful act of one party to a suit is a justification for another wrongful act on the part of the other party, of equal magnitude and immorality. Frauds are forbidden in equity, and when committed they cannot be set off one against another, but each separate transaction must stand or fall by itself. Actual notice is alleged in this case, and the party alleging it must prove it to the reasonable satisfaction of the court. Such a notice of a prior unrecorded deed, in order to be available to the party setting it up, must be so clearly proved as to make it fraudulent in the second purchaser to take and register a conveyance in prejudice to the known title of another: and in weighing the evidence upon that subject, the circumstance that an agreement to keep the mortgages secret was made must necessarily be taken into’ the account, as diminishing the probability of the theory that the transaction became public. McMechan v. Griffing, 3 Pick. 149; Jackson v. Sharp, 9 Johns. 163; Rogers v. Jones, 8 N. H. 264; Harris v. Arnold, 1 R. I. 125; Landes v. Brant, 10 How. [51 U. S.] 348; Marshall v. Baltimore & O. R. Co., 16 How. [57 U. S.] 314; Foot v. Emerson, 10 Vt. 344; Pendleton v. Fay, 2 Paige, 202; Gray v. Hook, 4 Comst. [4 N. Y.] 449; Porter v. Cole, 4 Me. 20; Jackson v. Van Valkenburgh, 8 Cow.

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Related

Porter v. Cole
4 Me. 20 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1826)
Jackson ex dem. Hyer v. Van Valkenburgh
8 Cow. 260 (New York Supreme Court, 1828)
Jackson ex dem. Bonnell v. Sharp
9 Johns. 163 (New York Supreme Court, 1812)
Pendleton v. Fay
2 Paige Ch. 202 (New York Court of Chancery, 1830)
Foote & Stone v. Emerson
10 Vt. 338 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1838)

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Bluebook (online)
15 F. Cas. 880, 1 Cliff. 453, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lord-v-doyle-circtdri-1860.