Morton v. Robards

34 Ky. 258, 4 Dana 258, 1836 Ky. LEXIS 66
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJune 16, 1836
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 34 Ky. 258 (Morton v. Robards) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morton v. Robards, 34 Ky. 258, 4 Dana 258, 1836 Ky. LEXIS 66 (Ky. Ct. App. 1836).

Opinion

Judge Ewing

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

On ^le 13 th of day of October, 1788, Joseph Lewis executed his bond, to Lewis Robards, in which he acknowledged, that said Robards was equally interested with him in upwards of thirty thousand acres of land warrants, that were in his name, and covenanted to convey to him the one half of the land acquired, by virtue of said warrants, after deducting the one half given to the locator.

In pursuance of this covenant Lewis, on the 2d day •of March, 1825, after the death of said Robards, conveyed to his heirs, the defendants in error, four thousand •acres—part of a tract of 9728, in Ohio county, acquired by virtue of a part of said warrants. Said deed was acknowledged before the clerk of the Nelson County Court, by said Lewis, and certified by him for record in the county of Ohio, and transmitted to an attorney of the county, to be lodged in the office for record. The attorney, from some information received, apprehending that there was some mistake in some of the calls, failed to lodge it for record, but held it up, with a view to have the supposed mistake corrected, until after the time for recording had expired.

On the 27th day of April, 1826, an execution of fieri facias was placed in the hands of the sheriff of Ohio county, in favor of Richard Morton, against said Lewis, founded on a decree of the Ohio Circuit Court, for two hundred and ten dollars damages, on the dissolution of an injunction, and costs, obtained at the October term, 1825; and said execution was levied on all the interest, right and title of said Joseph Lewis, in and to said tract of nine thousand seven hundred and twenty-eight acres, and the. same was sold, and Isaac Morton, the son of [259]*259said Richard, became the purchaser, at thirty-three dollars, and received the sheriff’s deed for the same, dated the 4th day of September, 1826.

The bill. Reference to for-court°upo°n the effect of noqj^ £pon° the of ““ „nder execution; and now beid,. able title to land the legal title ac-chaser unde/ex-. ecution who had befor^hts. purchase; but his. purchase might,. perhaps, relate lacj^to the time even to the time-'y1’®1 a lien °*° the land accrued* by. force of theqq^cftToncerl ning conveyances relates to the-legal title only, leaving equities untouched.-!—Intakes from the.holder of an unrecorded.! deedhis legal priority, and leaves him without- any. advantage over the general creditor; huts tb.e omission, to .record the deed, does not. impair the grantee’s equity.. And—

Robard’s heirs had two tenants living on said land, claiming under them—one from November, 1822, the other from before the sheriff’s sale until after the said sale; and said Isaac Morton, who seems to have acted as agent for his father in the management of said execution, was advised, of said deed, gn the_ day; of] sale, before the land was sold, by the attorney who had it in his possession.

Robard’s heirs filed their bill in Chancery against said Morton, charging notice, and relying upon their superior equity, and praying that Morton might be compelled to yield up to them the legal title; and obtained a decree therefor, in the Circuit Court: from which Morton has, appealed to this Court.

There- has been some oscillation in the decisions of this Court; on the question involved in this record., In the case of Helm vs. Logan's heirs, 4 Bibb, 78, the Court decided, “that a purchaser under execution- is not “ affected by his notice of a mortgage, which was not. re- “ corded, and therefore void as.to creditors.”

In the case of Campbell &c. vs. Moseby, Lit. Sel. Cases, 358, a majority of the Court decided, that the equity of the holder of a bond for a conveyance, was paramount and superior to the title'of a purchaser under execution, with notice, and broadly asserted, the opinion, that the equity of the purchaser by unrecorded, deed, was superior to, and would prevail in a contest with the general creditor; or a subsequent purchaser under execution with notice.

And in the case of Graham vs. Samuel, [1 Dana, 166] a majoi'ity of the Court sustained the-principle,, settled in the case of Helm vs. Logan, and overruled the opinion expressed in the case of Campbell vs. Moseby.

Upon a full review of those- decisions, and comparison of them with the- English,decisions upon their regis[260]*260try acts, we are inclined to the opinion expressed in the case of Campbell and Moseby.

An unrecorded dence^^a^ur" ¿base for a vaintion, and^evidenceofanequieqúaUo^'bond for a title.

It seems to have been the intention of the Legislature, our a°t? to regulate the legal conveyance only, and to leave untouched the equity of the parties. The act concerns ^Rga^ conveyances only, and undertakes to rcgulate them, and provide the manner and mode of their con-summati°n> The title of the act is “an act to reduce into one the several j^cts or parts of acts for regulating conveyances;” and the language, of the. act is: ‘.‘That “ no estate of inheritance or freehold, or for a term of “ more than five years, in lands or tenements, shall be ‘‘ conveyed from one to another, unless the conveyance “ be declared by writing sealed and delivered, nor shall “ such conveyance be good against a purchaser for a valuable consideration, without notice, or any creditor, unless the same be acknowledged &c, within eight “ months, and lodged for record &c.”

The conveyance or legal title, may not be good, and yet the equity of the holder unimpeachable. The legal title under the above statute is not good, unless there be a seal to the deed, yet no one could doubt, that a deed without a seal would confer upon the holder a specific equity, which might be enforced in a Court of Chancery.

So a bond for a conveyance is not good as a legal title, yet valid as an equity. If it were the object of the Legislature to forfeit the equity, as well as the legal title, for the benefit of purchasers and creditors, it could not well have escaped their observation, that it was necessary to provide for the recording of secret bonds for a title, and for the forfeiture of the equity of the holder, in case of a failure: yet no provision is made with respect to bonds. We cannot conceive—whether we look at the language of the act, or the evil existing and intended to be remedied—that it was the object of the Legislature to affect the equity of the holder in the one case or the other. It would be strange to contend that, the equity of the holder of a bond is good, yet if he attempted to consummate his legal title, but failed, that he forfeits that equity, which he unquestionably would have held under his bond, in case no attempt had been made. We [261]*261therefore conclude, that the statute only takes from the holder of an unrecorded deed his legal priority, or annuls his legal advantage over the general creditor, but leaves him to contest with him his prior equity. And as a bond is evidence of a specific equity, so a deed, though it is made to lose its legal priority, by not being placed on the record in time, yet is evidence of a purchase for a valuable consideration: therefore evidence of an equity of as high a grade as a bond.

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Bluebook (online)
34 Ky. 258, 4 Dana 258, 1836 Ky. LEXIS 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morton-v-robards-kyctapp-1836.