Salisbury Savings Society v. Cutting

50 Conn. 113, 1882 WL 2066
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMay 15, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 50 Conn. 113 (Salisbury Savings Society v. Cutting) 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
Salisbury Savings Society v. Cutting, 50 Conn. 113, 1882 WL 2066 (Colo. 1882).

Opinion

Park, C. J.

TMs case has been argued before us as if it necessarily involved the question whether a deed given with covenants of warranty before the grantor acquires title to the land conveyed, is to prevail over a deed given, after the [119]*119title is acquired by the grantox*, to a purchaser who takes it in good faith and with no knowledge of the previous deed and for value. If we were called upon to decide this question we should regard it as one of very serious difficulty, inasmuch as in sustaining the later deed we should have to dexiy the controlling application to the case of the well settled principles of estoppel, while in sustaining the prior deed we should have to violate the entire spirit of our registry systexn, which it is the policy, and we may say in every other case the unyielding policy, of the law to sustain.

But there are two points in the present ease, either of which we thixilc delivers it from the control of that question, and which will enable us to decide it upon its special facts.

1. It does not appear that the defendant was a purchaser for value. The judgment below was for the plaintiffs, and as the defendant has brought the proceeding in error, it is necessary that this fact should appear, expressly or by necessary implication, upon the record. All that is found is that “the greater portion” of the defendant’s claim accrued’after the deed was given to the plaixitiffs. It is clear therefore that, so far as the portion which accrued before is concerned, the defendaxit was not a purchaser for value, and that so far there is no error in the judgment. Row what is fouxrd with regard to the remainder of the defendant’s claim ? He sets up in the answer, and this part of his answer is found true, “that on the 5th day of December, 1874, said Cutting owed him $2,483, as evidenced by his promissory note for that axnount, dated at Ashley Falls, Massachusetts, December 1st, 1874 ”; and that “ on said 5th day of Decexnber, 1874, the said Cutting, to secure said note, xnortgaged to him ” the land in question. By turning to the deed, a copy of which is annexed to the finding, it appears that the mortgage to the defendant was executed at Salisbury in this state, the presumption being that it was sent to the defendant in the state of Massachusetts after it was recorded, and that he was not present at its executioxi; this point however not being important. Here then, in the defendaxit’s statement of his own case, the most that is [120]*120averred is, that on the first day of December, 1874, the mortgagor gave him a note for the mortgage debt—but it does not appear that the debt had not all accrued before the note was given. The fact that a considerable part of it had accrued three years before makes it very probable that the rest accrued by occasional loans or advances, and that at the time the note was given no additional advance was made. At any rate it is clear that we can not assume, for the purpose of finding error in the record, that any money was then advanced, when no such fact appears, either upon the finding or upon the defendant’s answer. If, as we must infer, the defendant was not a purchaser for value, it is very clear, upon well settled principles, that he can not prevail in equity over the plaintiffs, who advanced the whole amount of their mortgage debt when they took their mortgage.

- 2. We think that upon the facts found the defendant was fairly put upon inquiry as to the plaintiffs’ mortgage, and does not stand before the court as a bond fide purchaser without notice. It is true that he avers in his answer “that the mortgage was taken by him in good faith and without any knowledge or notice on his part that there was any incumbrance on said land in favor of the Salisbury Savings Society or any other person; ” and that the committee has found this part of his answer true. But without such actual knowledge the facts may be such as to have made it his duty to inquire after such prior mortgage, and sufficient to charge him in law with notice of what on such inquiry he would have found. Let us see what these facts are. The defendant was the father-in-law of Cutting, the mortgagor, and while from this relation and his residence in the vicinity he would be likely to be better informed than most men with regard to his property and business, it appears that he was in fact, during all the time covered by these transactions, making him advances or loans of money, having, as we have seen, advanced him a considerable part of the $2,488 for which he finally took his note, before the plaintiffs took their mortgage. It is hardly possible that his pecuniary [121]*121interest in Cutting’s prosperity should not have led him to inform himself, with his special opportunity as well as reason for asking the information of Cutting, as to the property transactions of the latter. He would thus have known of his contracting for the purchase of the lot in question, and of its small value, found to be only $200 at the time of the purchase ; of Cutting’s entering into possession, an indication of itself of his having acquired some kind of right; of his erection of a building thereon, which was found to be of the value of fourteen hundred dollars; of his having no means of his own for such an outlay and of the money necessarily having been procured as a loan; and it may be inferred from all the facts that he must have known that if he had procured such a loan it must have been on some security, and almost necessarily upon the property. How when, in these circumstances, he took his mortgage, as it is found, without making any inquiry of Cutting as to any prior incumbrance, it seems almost like an intentional avoidance of an inquiry, and as if he desired to take his chance for the securing of his accumulating debt on the property, taking what he could get and holding what he could hold.

But there is a further fact in this connection that deserves notice. The mortgage to the defendant refers for fuller particulars about the property to the probate records, giving the volume and page. These records, at the place referred to, show a petition of Cutting, dated July 16th, 1874, stating the contract of Coffing, (who had owned the property and who had since died,) dated January 8th, 1872, for the conveyance of the lot in question to him for the consideration of $200, and praying that Coffing’s administrators might be directed to give Mm a deed of the premises. The defendant may properly be held chargeable with notice of all that appears upon this record. He therefore knew that three years before his own mortgage was taken Cutting had a contract for a conveyance of the land in question, and consequently an equitable title; and that this equitable title he might have conveyed or incumbered. Indeed under [122]*122a statute which, had then been in force many years, Cutting could have had his contract recorded and thus his equitable title made secure. It was the defendant’s duty to search the records and make sure that this equitable title, which for aught he knew had thus been put on record, had not been conveyed away or incumbered, and was especially his duty to make inquiry with regard to the matter of his son-in-law, who presumably would not have deceived him, especially in view of the fact that the latter had, immediately after taking the contract, entered into possession and expended fourteen hundred dollars in the erection of a building on the lot.

Upon all the facts of the case we can not regard the defendant as a purchaser either for value or without notice of the title of the plaintiffs.

"We do not find any error in the judgment complained of.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
50 Conn. 113, 1882 WL 2066, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/salisbury-savings-society-v-cutting-conn-1882.