Marshall v. Fisk

6 Mass. 24
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1809
StatusPublished
Cited by59 cases

This text of 6 Mass. 24 (Marshall v. Fisk) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marshall v. Fisk, 6 Mass. 24 (Mass. 1809).

Opinion

Parsons, C. J.

Two objections have been made to the direction of the judge, before whom this cause was tried ; — that the deed from Adams to Spaulding and Foster, not having been acknowledged nor recorded, no estate passed by it; and if any estate passed, it must have been by way of use, which was determined by the cancelling of the deed by the grantor on its redelivery to him.

The first objection was endeavored to be supported by the fourth section of the statute of 1783, c. 37, § 4. By this section it is enacted “ that all conveyances of land signed and sealed by the grantor, having right to convey, acknowledged by him before a justice of the peace, and recorded in the registry of the county where the land lies, shall be valid to pass the same, without any other act or ceremony in the law whatever ; and that no convey- [ *30 ] anee *of a freehold in, or lease for a longer term than seven years of any land, shall be good and effectual in the .aw to hold such land against any person but the grantor and his heirs, unless the deed of conveyance be acknowledged and recorded as aforesaid.”

Hence it has been argued, that the defendant’s title by execu tian depending on Adams’s deed to the debtors, he cannot be in a better situation than those debtors ; and that their deed from Adams uot being recorded, although they might hold the land against him, [25]*25yet they cannot hold it against Prescott, who is a purchaser under Adams.

The effect of this argument must depend on the construction of our statute of enrolments, above referred to. -A conveyance by deed of feoffment at common law must be followed by the ceremony of livery of seisin, as an act of notoriety to the freeholders of the county. To give more effectual public notice of the sale of land by deed, our statute requires the deed to be recorded ; and, as evidence to the register that the conveyance, as the deed of the party, is entitled to be registered, a justice of the peace generally must certify the acknowledgment of the grantor.

But the notice by the registry is not in all cases indispensable, where it appears, or may be presumed, that the second purchaser had knowledge of the prior conveyance.

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6 Mass. 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marshall-v-fisk-mass-1809.