McCusker v. McEvey

9 R.I. 528
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedOctober 6, 1870
StatusPublished

This text of 9 R.I. 528 (McCusker v. McEvey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCusker v. McEvey, 9 R.I. 528 (R.I. 1870).

Opinion

*532 Bxirfee, J.

This is an action of trespass and ejectment, in which the plaintiff and defendant both derive title, through intermediate grantees, from one George Weeden. In May, 1845, Weeden, having then no title, conveyed the land in dispute to the plaintiff’s predecessor, and afterwards, in November, 1845, acquired title to the same. In 1847, he conveyed to the predecessor of the defendant. The conveyances through which the plaintiff claims contain full covenants of title and warranty, and all the deeds on both sides were recorded in the order of their respective dates.

The plaintiff contends that the title acquired by Weeden in November, 1845, enured to the benefit of the prior grantee and his assigns, and entitles him to recover of the defendant.

At common law, where a person having no title, conveyed by feoffment, fine, recovery, or lease by indenture, and after-wards acquired title, it was held that the after-acquired title would feed the estoppel created by the conveyance, and convert the same to an interest in the grantee, so as to conclude the grantor and all persons claiming under, him. In this country, where the common law modes of conveyance have never prevailed to any considerable extent, the same rule has been applied to conveyances with warranty under the statute of uses, the warranty being deemed to have the same efficacy, by way of estoppel, as a feoffment, fine, recovery, or lease by indenture. The American cases are very fully collected in 2 Smith’s Lead. Cas. (6th ed.) 723, et seq., and in the ninth chapter of Rawle on Covenants. The doctrine of these cases, or of the major part of them, however, has been impugned by the American annotator of Smith’s Leading Cases, and by Mr. Rawle, as based on a misconception of the English authorities and as erroneous in principle, — the warranty being, in their view, effectual only by way of estoppel or rebutter against the warrantor and his heirs, but inoperative on the after-acquired estate, — and also, as inconsistent, where applied to the prejudice of a Iona fide purchaser for value without notice, with the spirit and purpose of the recording acts of the several states. The argument in support of these views is certainly very strong, if not theoretically unanswera *533 ble ; but the doctrine impugned _ has been so often and so fully-recognized in the courts, and repeated in the text-books, that we feel bound, out of regard for the security of titles, Jo follow the precedents. The argument derived from the recording acts was particularly urged in White v. Patten, 24 Pick. 324, and in Jarvis v. Aikens, 25 Vt. 635, and in both cases disregarded; and it may be remarked that the doctrine, however much it may be at variance with the spirit, does not violate the letter of the recording acts. And see Baxter v. Bradbury, 20 Maine, 260 ; Mack v. Willard, 13 N. H. 389 ; Dudley v. Caldwell, 19 Conn. 218, 226; Mickles v. Townsend, 18 N. Y. 575 ; 128; Somes v. Skinner, 3 Pick. 52 ; The Bank of Utica v. Mersereau, 3 Barb. Ch. 528 ; Greenl. Cruise, vol. iv. p. 160, note ; Kent, vol. iv. p. 98 (side page) and notes. We think the rule, notwithstanding some adverse and some doubting decisions, has-been too uniformly recognized by the American courts to be now repudiated or modified'without the authority of a statute, and we are free to say, we think a statute is called for in view of this state of the law, in order to carry into full effect the policy of our recording act, and to prevent its operating, in cases of this kind, as a snare rather than as a protection to purchasers.

This view of the law furnishes an answer to the defendant’s first point, to wit.: that the plaintiff can recover only on the strength of his own title, not on the weakness of his adversary’s. Trevivan v. Lawrence, 1 Salk. 276; Palmer v. Ekins, 2 Ld. Raym. 1550, 1554.

The defendant contends that the plaintiff, by admitting in the agreed statement that Weeden had no title when he conveyed to the plaintiff’s predecessor, has lost his right to insist upon the estoppel.

Comyn says : “ A man shall not be estopped when the truth appears by the same record.” Com. Dig. Estoppel, E. 2. And again, If the jury find the truth of the fact, the court will give judgment accordingly without regard to the estoppel” Com. Dig. Estoppel, E. 10. In Wheelock v. Henshaw, 19 Pick. 311, 815, the court, citing Comyn, says: “ The same principle applies where the parties agree to submit a case to the decision *534 of the court upon certain facts agreed ; ” and refused, in that case, to allow the plaintiff the benefit of an estoppel against his own admission of the truth. The rule, however, is not without its qualifications ; and Comyn says, “ Where an estoppel binds the estate and converts it to an interest, the court will adjudge accordingly ; as if A. leases land to B. for six years, in which he has nothing, and then purchases a lease of the same for twenty-one years, and afterwards leases to C. for ten years, and all this is found by verdict, the court will adjudge the lease to B. good, though it was so only by conclusion.” And so, also, the law is expressly decided in Bawlyn’s case, 4 Co. 52 ; and in Weale v. Lower, Pol. 54, which latter case overrules Iseham v. Morrice, Cro. Car. 109, in which a different view obtained. In Weale v. Lower, in answer to this objection made on the authority of Iseham v. Morrice, it was said, “ that the law is so in cases of obligations, covenants, or personal contracts, which cannot be turned into an estate, but in other cases where the estate is bound by the conclusion and converted into an interest, although the jury find the matter at large, yet the court shall judge according to law that the estate is good by reason of the estoppel.” This case, as well as Bawlyn’s case, was decided after mature consideration, and is of high authority. And see Webb v. Austen, 8 Scott, N. R. 419 ; 2 Wms Saunders, 418 c ; McLaughland v. Wood, 1 Rol. Abr. 474; and Bacon’s Abr. Leases, O. cited in 8 Scott, N. R. 444, 445 ; Doe v. Oliver, 5 M. & R. 202. Indeed, the rule that the estoppel will not avail where the truth appears, would not seem to be so inflexible that it may not be disregarded, even where no estate is subsequently acquired, if justice requires. Cuthbertson v. Irving, 4 H. & N. 620, 742 ; 2 Smith’s Lead. Cas. (6th ed.) 712.

In Wheelock v. Henshaw, 19 Pick. 341, where the estoppel was disallowed because the facts were admitted, no estate was acquired to feed the estoppel after the making of the deed relied on as creating the same. In the later case of White v. Patten,

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Related

Mickles v. . Townsend
18 N.Y. 575 (New York Court of Appeals, 1859)
Bank of Utica v. Mersereau
3 Barb. Ch. 528 (New York Court of Chancery, 1848)
Jarvis v. Aikens
25 Vt. 635 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1853)
Dudley v. Cadwell
19 Conn. 218 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1848)

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Bluebook (online)
9 R.I. 528, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccusker-v-mcevey-ri-1870.