Olcott v. Bynum

84 U.S. 44, 21 L. Ed. 570, 17 Wall. 44, 1872 U.S. LEXIS 1311
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 18, 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by93 cases

This text of 84 U.S. 44 (Olcott v. Bynum) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Olcott v. Bynum, 84 U.S. 44, 21 L. Ed. 570, 17 Wall. 44, 1872 U.S. LEXIS 1311 (1873).

Opinion

Mr. Justice SWAYNE

delivered the opinion of the court.

The object and prayer of the bill in this case are to redeem certain premises therein described, consisting of upwards of 14,000 acres of land, sold by the defendants Bynum’ and Grier to the defendant Sloan, under a mortgage containing a power of sale. The mortgage was executed by the defendant Hovey, and'bears date the 1st day of January, 1859. Bynum and Grier, as trustees for the High Shoals Manufacturing Company7, were the mortgagees. The mortgage recites that Hovey had executed to Bynum and Grier a penal bond in the sum of $80,000 to secure the paymient of $40,000 in three instalments of $13,838.83 each, the first payable on the 1st day of January, 1860, the seeoud o‘ix. the 1st of July7, 1860, and the third on the 1st of January, 1861, all with interest from the 1st of January, 1859. It Avas conditioned that, in default of payment of either of the instalments or the interest thereon, or of any part of either when due, it should be lawful for the mortgagees to sell at public auction all the mortgaged premises, and to make and deliver to the purchaser a deed in fee simple, and out of the moneys arising from the sale to retain the amount of the principal and interest Avhich should then be due on the bond, together Avitli the costs and charges of advertising and selling, rendering the overplus, if any, to the mortgagor, his heirs, or assigns; “Avhich sale so to be made,” it was provided, “ shall forever’ be a perpetual bar, both in law and equity,’against the mortgagor, his heirs and assigns, and all other persons claiming or to claim'the premises, or any part thereof, by, from, or under him, them, or either of them.”

*57 Default having been made in the payment of the first instalment, due January 1st, 1860, the mortgagees advertised the premises to be sold on the ensuing 28th of April, and then sold them for the sum of $43,500 to Sloan, to be held by him in trust for the High Shoals Manufacturing Company, the cestui que trust of the mortgagees.

At the time of the sale and conveyance to Hovey a down payment was made consisting of $6157 in cash, and a receipt to Bynum by Ebeu S. Stephenson for certain dividends to which Stephenson was entitled, which, added to the cash, made an aggregate of $7853.33. The bond and mortgage ■were given to secure the residue of the purchase-money. The bill charges that this payment was made by Olcott and Stephenson jointly; that Hovey was a man of no means, and that he bought and took the title as the agent of the complainant and Stephenson, wholly in trust for them, and that on -the 8th day of January, 1860, eight days after the title was conveyed to him, he conveyed to them all his interest in the property, and that on the 18th day of December, 1867, Stephenson conveyed all his interest to the complainant. These allegations, so far as they relate to the" agency of Hovey, are clearly proved by the testimony of Hovey himself and of the complainant, and there is nothing in the record which tends in any degree to contradict them. Sufficient evidence was produced in the court below of the execution of the deed from Stephenson to the complainant. The evidence offered as to the deed from Hovey to th'e complainaut and Stephenson consisted of proof of theToss of the original and a certified copy from the proper register’s office in North Carolina of a copy which had been registered there.

It was held by the court below that this evidence was incompetent to establish the existence of the lost deed, and that the complainant had therefore failed to show any connection with the property in question. Upon the ground of this objection-the bill was dismissed.

, "Whether this ruling was correct is an inquiry which meets us at the threshold of our examination of the ease. It is *58 one to be determined by the lex loci rei slice. It is to be considered solely in the light of the statutes and adjudications of North Carolina. This court must hold and administer the law upon the subject as if it were sitting as a local court of that State. In the revised code of 1854 we find the following language. It is a re-enactment of the provision of the act of 1715 on the same subject: “No conveyance for land shall be good and available in law unless the same shall be acknowledged by the grantor, or proved on oath by one or more witnesses in the manner hereinafter directed, and registered in thq county where the laud shall be, within two years after the date of said deed, and all deeds so executed and registered shall be valid and pass estates-in land without livery of seizin, attornment, or other ceremony whatever.”* * Sections three, four, and five of chapter 87, and section two of chapter 21, provide for the execution in other States of deeds for lands in North Carolina and their registration in the proper county; but we have found no provision authorizing the registration of a copy. In Patton and Erwin’s Lessee v. Reily, in the Supreme Court of Tennessee, an original unregistered deed was offered in evidence. It was objected to upon the ground of the want of registration. . The court said: “ Registration was intended to stand in the place of livery of seizin. ' By the common law no estate could pass without livery of seizin, and the same may be said of its substitute.’ Lands as conveyed by this deed, would not pass the estate at common law, and if it will pass,, it must be by act of assembly. The act of 1715 requires the deed to be registered before a legal estate is vested in the grantee. To create a title under this act of assembly, the party claiming the benefit of it'must have complied with its requisitions. One of them is that the deed shall be registered. This deed cannot be read in evidence.” The plaintiffs were nonsuited. Patton and Erwin’s Lessee v. Brown is to the same effect.' Such is the settled law of North Carolina upon the subject. § *59 The original deed from Hovey to Olcott and Stephenson never having been registered, and the registration of the copy being unauthorized, it follows that the certified copy of the registered copy was a nullity, and could give no legal right to the grantees which the Circuit Court could recognize. We hold, therefore, that the ruling upon this subject was correct. Obviously, a proceeding in equity had specially for that purpose, and bringing the proper parties before c.ourt, is the appropriate remedy for the complainant to establish the lost deed and give it efficacy, and in no other way can this be done. *

It has been insisted, in behalf of the complainant, that there was a resulting trust in favor of the complainánt and Stephenson, arising from the circumstances of the transaction at the time of the conveyance to Hovey.

Where the purchase-money-is all paid by one, and the property is conveyed to another, there is a resulting trust in favor of the party paying, uuless there be something which takes the case out of the operation of the general rule.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
84 U.S. 44, 21 L. Ed. 570, 17 Wall. 44, 1872 U.S. LEXIS 1311, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/olcott-v-bynum-scotus-1873.