McMurtrie v. Riddell

9 Colo. 497
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedDecember 15, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 9 Colo. 497 (McMurtrie v. Riddell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McMurtrie v. Riddell, 9 Colo. 497 (Colo. 1886).

Opinion

Beck, C. J.

The main point in controversy is whether or not the facts of this case entitle the plaintiff below, Riddell, to the protection afforded by our statute to a bona fide purchaser of real estate at a sheriff’s sale on execution. There is no controversy about the facts. Those not set out in the pleadings were agreed upon before the court below, and are preserved in the bill of exceptions. The question is, was the plaintiff a bona fide purchaser of the lots in controversy, within the spirit and meaning of that term as employed in section 215, p. ITS, Gen. St.? This section provides that “all deeds, conveyances, agreements in writing of or affecting title to real estate, or any interest therein, and powers of attorney for the conveyance of any real estate, or any interest therein, may be recorded in the office of the recorder of the county wherein such real estate is situate, and from and after filing thereof for record in such, office, and not before, such deeds, bonds and agreements in writing shall take effect as to subsequent bona- fide purchasers, and incumbrancers by mortgage, judgment, or otherwise, not having notice thereof.”

' 1 On the part of plaintiff in error it is contended that the judgment never became a lien upon the .lots, and for that reason the sale on execution conveyed no title to the purchaser. We think this view of the statute is entirely too narrow to effect the intention of its framers. The [501]*501statute was not enacted for the benefit of lienholders and the owners of incumbrances upon real estate- only, but for all bona fide purchasers as well. Its plain meaning and intent is that no prior unrecorded conveyance or contract, affecting the title to land, shall take effect as to any subsequent bona fide purchaser without notice, or as to any one who in good faith, and without notice of a prior unrecorded deed or other instrument, acquires a lien or incumbrance on the same tract of land. It is not material, in order that a ■ purchaser shall be entitled to the protection of this statute, that he shall be a-judgment creditor, or that the land purchased shall be sold at sheriff’s sale on execution. A simple contract creditor or purchaser may be equally within its terms. If a judgment creditor shall record a transcript of his judgment as soon as the same is entered up, he will immediately acquire a lien upon all his debtor’s real estate situate within such county, and all that he may subsequently acquire during the existence of the lien, and which may not be exempt from execution. No subsequent transfer or incumbrance thereof by the debtor can prejudice the rights of such creditor.

In the case at bar this precaution was not taken. The judgment, therefore, did not become a statutory lien upon the real estate in question. But the deed from Wightman to McMurtrie not being recorded prior to the sheriff’s sale, and Riddell having purchased the lots thereat without notice of this unrecorded conveyance, he occupies the position of a subsequent bona fide purchaser without notice.

A labored effort has been made to demonstrate that a judgment creditor who purchases property at sheriff’s sale under his own judgment, and who pays no new consideration; but whose bid is-merely credited upon the execution, is not a bona-fide purchaser within the meaning of this statute. This is not an open question in this state, whatever diversity of judicial opinion may exist else[502]*502where. The contrary rule was announced by this court in Knox v. McFarran, 4 Colo. 586, 596. That was an action of ejectment wherein two creditors of the same debtor were parties. They had both taken in payment of their respective demands the same town lot: Knox by a voluntary conveyance, and McFarran by a judicial sale. McGovney, the debtor, held a title bond for the lot in controversy, executed by one Rose, the owner in fee, and which bond McGovney assigned to Knox, as cashier of the First National Bank of Colorado Springs, in payment of a debt due from him to the bank. This assignment was made December 10, 1875, and on January 6, 1876, Rose executed a deed to Knox, as trustee for the bank, wrhich was duly recorded. McFarran recovered a judgment against McGovney in the district court of El Paso county for the amount of his claim, $550, December 16, 1875. He filed an abstract of his judgment in the recorder’s office of said county, December 27, 1875, and ca.used an execution to be levied upon the lot in controversy, February 7, 1876. In pursuance of this levy the lot was sold by the sheriff, March 16, 3876, McFarran becoming the purchaser, his bid of $545 being credited upon the execution. A sheriff’s deed was executed to him in pursuance of this sale, February 12, 1877, wfiich was recorded June 8, 1877. One of the questions presented in the ejectment case was the sufficiency of the consideration to support the assignment of the title bond to Knox, and the deed subsequently executed to him. Mr. Justice Elbert, in announcing the opinion of the court, stated the rule to be as follows: “Although there is a conflict of authority on the question, we regard it as the better doctrine that one who takes property in payment or security of a pre-existing debt is to be regarded as a purchaser for a valuable consideration.” Upon a reversal of this cause, McFarran filed a bill in equity in the court below to enjoin the ejectment proceedings; alleging that he could not make his defense therein, and setting up ad[503]*503ditional facts by which it was made to appear that McGovney was in possession of the lot in controversy and was the owner thereof on the 27th day of December, 1875, under a contract for a deed from Rose, when the abstract of McFarran’s said judgment was filed for record; that said McFarran had then no information, by record or otherwise, that McGovney had transferred or parted with his interest in said property, the assignment of the title bond not having been placed on record. This bill being demurred to, and judgment having been given on the demurrer, this court held, on appeal from said judgment (5 Colo. 217), that these additional facts changed the equities; that the assignment of the contract to Knox not having been recorded, it did not take effect as against a subsequent bona fide purchaser without notice, McFarran being held to be such a- purchaser at the execution sale.

It is unnecessary, therefore, for us to review the conflicting authorities on this question. The rule in this state is that a pre-existing indebtedness is a sufficient consideration to support a purchase of real estate, either at private or judicial sale, and the person so purchasing-will be regarded as a bona fide purchaser. Such transactions, however, .are subject to the same tests as to good faith and regularity generally as are other contracts and sales.

In the present case Riddell purchased the lots at sheriff’s sale, November 15, 1880. It is conceded that the sheriff issued to Riddell, at the time of the sale, a certificate of purchase; alsodhat a copy thereof was recorded as required by statute, which would be within ten days from the day of sale. All the statutory conditions were complied with, requisite and necessary to vest title in the purchaser at said sale, subject only to the right of redemption provided by law. The quitclaim deed from Wightman to McMurtrie not having been recorded, and the plaintiff having no knowledge of its existence at the [504]*504time of his purchase, it had not then taken effect as to him.

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Bluebook (online)
9 Colo. 497, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcmurtrie-v-riddell-colo-1886.