Newman v. Chapman

2 Va. 93
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedDecember 6, 1823
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Va. 93 (Newman v. Chapman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Newman v. Chapman, 2 Va. 93 (Va. 1823).

Opinion

Judge Green,

delivered the following • opinion:

The object of the statute requiring mortgages to be recorded, and declaring that, if not recorded as the statute prescribes, they shall be void as to creditors and subsequent purchasers, was to prevent, by affording the means of ascertaining the existence of the incumbrance, the frauds which might otherwise be practised by the mortgagor and mortgagee, on creditors and subsequent purchasers, by concealing it. If a purchaser has actual notice otherwise, of the existence of the mortgage, he is not only not prejudiced by the failure to record it, but is himself guilty of a fraud in attempting to avail himself of the letter of the statute, to the prejudice of another who has a just claim against the property. The statute, indeed, vests in the subsequent purchaser, in that case, the legal title; yet, although the legal title of the mortgagee is divested by the subsequent conveyance, his equitable right to subject the property to the payment of the debt, remains; not only because the mortgage is good between the parties; but, even if void as a conveyance between the parties, it would still be evidence of an agreement between them, and a Court of Equity will give effect to the equity of the mortgagee, by holding the subsequent purchaser to be a trustee. Upon these principles, the Court of Chancery in England has always relieved a prior purchaser, whose deed has not been registered, against a subsequent purchaser with notice.

I had at one time great doubts, whether the principle of those decisions did not apply to the case of a lis pendens. Lord Hardwicke, in the leading case of Le Neve v. Le Neve, 3 Atk. 646, declared, that the statutes of registry in England (which, as to the matter under consideration, are the same in effect as our statute,) only vested the legal title in the subsequent purchaser, and left the case “open to all equityand, in that case, he relieved against a sub[101]*101sequent purchaser, upon constructive, and not actual notice, the notice being to an agent of the purchaser. A lis pendens has always been spoken of in the English Court of Chancery, as a constructive notice to all the world; as all men are bound and presumed to take notice of the proceedings of a Court of Justice. If these propositions were universally true, it would seem to follow, that a lite pendente purchaser was a purchaser with notice, and would take the property subject to the claims of the plaintiff in the suit, as the defendant held it. In all questions of fact, the existence of the matter in question may be proved by direct evidence, or by the proof of other facts, from which it may justly be inferred, that the fact in question does exist. A fact thus proved by circumstantial evidence, is taken to exist for all purposes, as if it were proved by direct evidence. I cannot, therefore, feel the force of the observation frequently thrown out in modern cases, that a notice to affect a subsequent purchaser, after an unregistered deed, must be. actual, and such as to affect his conscience, and not' constructive. A notice, proved by circumstances to exist, affects the conscience of the party as much as if proved by direct evidence. In all other cases, a purchaser of a legal estate, with notice of a subsisting equity, is bound by constructive, as well as by actual, notice; and that, because his conscience is affected, and he is guilty of a fraud. Without fraud on his part, his legal title ought to prevail. I see no reason why a difference should be made, between the case of a purchaser after an unregistered deed, and a purchaser of a legal title, subject to any other equity, as to the proof of the notice which ought to be held to bind them. This distinction between an actual and constructive notice, in the case of a purchaser after an unregistered deed, seems to have proceeded from a doubt, whether the relief given in the early cases upon that subject, had not been in opposition to the spirit and policy, as well as the letter, of the statutes of registry.

[102]*102The rule, as to the effect of a lis pendens, is founded upon £[ie necessity of such a rule, to give effect to the proceedings of Courts of Justice. Without it, the adminislra*-i°n °f justice might, in all cases, be frustrated by successive alienations of the property, which was the object of litigation, pending the suit, so that every judgment and decree would be rendered abortive, where the recovery of specific property was the object. This necessity is so obvious, that there was no occasion to resort to the presumption, that the purchaser really had, or by enquiry might have had, notice of the pendency of the suit, to justify the existence of the rule. In fact, it applied in cases in which there was a physical impossibility that the purchaser could know, with any possible diligence on his part, of the existence of the suit, unless all contracts were made in the office from which the writ issued, and on the last moment of the day. For, at common law, the writ was pending from the first moment of the day on which it was issued and bore teste; and a purchaser, on or after that day, held the property subject to the execution upon the judgment in that suit as the defendant would have held it, if no alienation had been made. The Court of Chancery adopted the rule, in analogy to the common law; but, relaxed, in some degree, the severity of the common law. For, no lis pendens existed until the service of the subpoena and bill filed; but, it existed from the service of the subpoena, although the bill were not filed until long after; so that a purchaser, after service of the subpoena and before the bill was filed, would, after the filing of the bill, be deemed to be a lite pendente purchaser, and as such, be bound by the proceedings in the suit, although the subpoena gave him no information as to the subject of the suit. A subpoena might be served the very day on which it was sued out, and there is an instance in the English books of a purchaser who purchased on the day that the subpoena was served, without actual notice, and who lost his purchase by force of this rule of law. This principle, however necessary, was harsh [103]*103in its effects upon bona fide purchasers, and was confined in its operation to the extent of the policy on which it was founded; that is, to the giving full effect to the judgment or decree which might be rendered in the suit depending at. the time of the purchase. As a proof of this, if the suit was not prosecuted with effect, as if a suit at law was discontinued, or the plaintiff suffered a non-suit, or if a suit in Chancery was dismissed for want of prosecution, or for any other cause not upon the merits, or if at law or in Chancery a suit abated; although, in all these cases, the plaintiff, or his proper representative might bring a new suit for the same cause, he must make the one who purchased pending the former suit, a party; and, in this new suit, such purchaser would not be at all affected by the pendency of the former suit, at the time of his purchase. In the case of an abatement, however, the original suit might be continued in Chancery, by revivor, or at law, in real actions, abated by the death of a party, b j journies accounts, and the purchaser still bo bound by the final judgment or decree.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 Va. 93, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newman-v-chapman-va-1823.