Rosenbluth v. DeForest & Hotchkiss Co.

81 A. 955, 85 Conn. 40, 1911 Conn. LEXIS 97
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedDecember 19, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 81 A. 955 (Rosenbluth v. DeForest & Hotchkiss Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rosenbluth v. DeForest & Hotchkiss Co., 81 A. 955, 85 Conn. 40, 1911 Conn. LEXIS 97 (Colo. 1911).

Opinion

Prentice, J.

The plaintiff, as trustee in bankruptcy, seeks from the Superior Court such equitable relief as will annul, and make as though they never were, two conveyances of real estate executed by his bankrupt to the defendant, one recorded and the other unrecorded, and give to him, as such trustee, the title to such real estate, unaffected by such conveyances, which title by reason thereof now appears upon the land records to be in the defendant. The complaint as finally amended contains, in support of its prayers, certain allegations which assert the invalidity, as against the plaintiff, of the conveyances in question, by reason of noncompliance therein, or in connection therewith, with the requirements of the law of this State. It also contains others which make an appeal to those sections of the Bankruptcy Act which deal with preferences.

These two classes of averments relate to entirely separable and independent.matters. If the first posi *45 tion is well founded it is sufficient for the plaintiff’s purpose, and the second is wholly superfluous. It is a necessary condition precedent to a preference, that there has been a transfer of property by the bankrupt whereby a creditor is enabled to obtain a greater percentage of his debt than other creditors of .the same class. Bankruptcy Act, § 60a, 32 IT.' S. Stat. at Large, p. 799, § 13. If, therefore, the conveyances in question were originally, and remained, a nullity as against the grantor’s trustee in bankruptcy, there was no transfer within this definition, and all those questions in the case which center about the charge that the bankrupt was guilty of an attempted preference would be altogether immaterial. Our first question, therefore, naturally relates to the legal effect, as against the plaintiff, to be given to the two conveyances.

Section 70a of the Bankruptcy Act provides that a trustee of the estate of a bankrupt, upon his appointment and qualification, shall be vested by operation of law with the title of the bankrupt, as of the date he was adjudged to be a bankrupt, to all property not exempt which prior to the filing of the petition he could by any means have transferred or which might have been levied upon and sold under judicial process against him. 30 U. S. Stat. at Large, p. 566. Whether or not property, prior to the fifing of the petition, could have been levied upon and sold under judicial process against the bankrupt, is a matter to be determined by the local law. Thompson v. Fairbanks, 196 U. S. 516, 523, 25 Sup. Ct. Rep. 306. The question to be decided thus becomes resolved into one as to whether under the law of this State a creditor of the bankrupt, armed with a judgment and execution, could, immediately before the filing of the petition in bankruptcy, have appropriated, in satisfaction of the judgment, the real estate interest of the bankrupt which the two deeds purported to convey *46 to the defendant, or whether these deeds, or one of them, were at that moment effective to prevent such an appropriation.

The quitclaim, which is the second in the order of time of the deeds, may be dismissed summarily. Having been withheld from record, it clearly would not, as a conveyance, have stood in the way of the creditor. General Statutes, § 4036. It is the warranty deed of January 4th, 1908, or, more strictly speaking, that deed taken in connection with the events of December 3d, 1908, which presents the questions calling for discussion.

The defendant concedes that this later deed, although absolute in form, must be treated as a mortgage. Williams v. Chadwick, 74 Conn. 252, 255, 50 Atl. 720; French v. Burns, 35 Conn. 359, 363. While, as between! the parties, good as a mortgage, it was not valid as against creditors of the grantor. Ives v. Stone, 51 Conn. 446; Merwin v. Richardson, 52 id. 223, 237. Clearly this was the situation after the deed was recorded down to December 3d, 1908, at least. On that date the parties to the deed and unrecorded agreement had such further transactions that their actual status in relation to the property became conformed to their apparent status as disclosed by the recorded instrument, and their rights, as between themselves, such as the record announced them to be. It then, for the first time, came to speak the truth. The defendant claims that from that moment it became a valid conveyance as to all persons who had not acquired a lien upon the property during the interval when it did not do so. It makes a further and secondary claim that this transaction of December 3d, 1908, which was within, four months of the adjudication in bankruptcy, did not constitute a transfer as of that date within the meaning of the Bankruptcy Act, but related back to *47 the original transfer, and simply rescued it from its infirmity. This secondary claim has no pertinence except as bearing upon the matter of preference, and, therefore, we have no concern with it in our present inquiry. We have for its purpose only to learn whether or not, the instrument on record having come to state the precise present position of the parties as between themselves, it thereupon acquired validity for the future as against all the world.

We think that it did not. “It has ever been the policy of our laws, to make every man’s title to his real estate, as far as practicable, appear of record.” Beach v. Osborne, 74 Conn. 405, 411, 50 Atl. 1019, 1118; Bush v. Golden, 17 Conn. 594, 601. To this policy we have given a rigid adherence, and in pursuance of it we have repeatedly held that a mortgage to be valid as against creditors must “disclose, with as much certainty as the nature of the case will admit of, the real state of the incumbrance upon the property.” Hart v. Chalker, 14 Conn. 77, 79; Ives v. Stone, 51 id. 446, 456. The reasons underlying this policy are stated at length in the last-named case, and need not be repeated. It would be a distinct relaxation of the strict application which has always been made of that policy, if we were now to hold that a deed, which, although absolute on its face, was, when made, a mortgage, by reason of the secret agreement of the parties, and thus a mortgage which not only did not disclose the real state of the incumbrance, but professed to be a conveyance which divested the grantor of all interest in the property, might be converted back again into what it was in form, and made valid as to everybody according to its tenor, through the operation of another secret agreement. That would be to hold that a deed might have its real character dependent upon the private agreement of the parties entered into after its delivery and record, *48 and without any record indication to the world that a changed condition had arisen. A recorded instrument might thus have one effect one instant, and another the next, according as the parties chose to deal with the situation, and land records come to speak in uncertain and uninforming language, when certainty and information are the ends sought.

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Bluebook (online)
81 A. 955, 85 Conn. 40, 1911 Conn. LEXIS 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rosenbluth-v-deforest-hotchkiss-co-conn-1911.