Stoddard v. Rotton

5 Bosw. 378
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedNovember 26, 1859
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 5 Bosw. 378 (Stoddard v. Rotton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stoddard v. Rotton, 5 Bosw. 378 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1859).

Opinion

By the Court—Hoffman, J.

The first and main question is, what was the effect of the omission of Crane to record the defeasance given to him by Willis ?

Both parties eláirn under Crane, who, it is admitted, was seised in fee after June 27, 1850, subject to the mortgage of $4,700 given by Brown’to Stuyvesant.

The deed of Crane to Willis of September 27th, 1852, and the defeasance of the same date made by him, constituted, as between those immediate parties, a mortgage, or conditional sale. (1 R. S., 756, §53; James v. Johnson, 6 John. Ch. R., 417.) So long as bona fide purchasers under either party did not intervene, their rights would" be governed by the deed and defeasance, whether either were recorded or not.

But Willis records Crane’s deed to him on the 2d of October, 1852, in the book of deeds; and Crane omits to record the defeasance at all, or to have" it acknowledged or proven.

ThenWillis conveys to the plaintiff, for valuable consideration, on the 25th of August, 1854. This deed was recorded September 2d, 1854. The Referee finds that the plaintiff was a purchaser for value, and had no notice of the memorandum, of defeasance, until some time after his deed was recorded and the consideration paid. This finding is "supported by the evidence. Crane subsequently conveys to the grantor of the defendant, aiid the latter is in possession.

The provisions of the statute which bear upon the present question are the 2d and 3d sections of the act “ of recording [383]*383conveyance,” &c. (1 R. S., 756.) By the second section, “ different sets of books are to be provided by the clerks of the several counties for the recording of deeds and mortgages; in one of which sets all conveyances, absolute in their terms and not intended as mortgages, or as securities in the nature of mortgages, shall be recorded; and, in the other set, such mortgages and securities shall be recorded."

The 3d section provides “ that every deed conveying real estate which, by any other instrument in writing, shall appear to have been intended only as a security in the nature of a mortgage, though it be an absolute conveyance in terms, shall be considered as a mortgage; and the person for whose benefit such deed shall be made shall not derive any advantage from the recording thereof unless every writing operating as a defeasance of the same, or explanatory of its being designed to have the effect only of a mortgage or conditional deed, be also recorded therewith and at the same time.”

Under this provision, Willis, for whose benefit the deed was made, could not derive any advantage from the record thereof, unaccompanied with the record of the defeasance. If, for example, Crane had afterwards conveyed or mortgaged the property to a bona fide grantee, Willis might have been set aside in favor of that grantee, (notwithstanding the record of the deed to him,) upon discovering the defeasance. The record, per se, would not protect Willis; although actual notice of the deed, with actual notice of the defeasance, would, I presume, do so, so as to give him the rights of a mortgagee.

These points seem settled under the former registering acts by the cases of Dey v. Dunham, (2 John. Ch. R., 188; 15 Johns. R., 555;) White v. Moore, (1 Paige, 551;) James v. Johnson. (6 Johns. Ch. R., 417; 2 Cow., 247.)

But a bona fide purchaser from Willis finds this deed on record, recorded in the proper book, as an absolute conveyance. He knows nothing to contradict the import of the deed and record, viz.: that Willis was the owner in fee.

It is not contended that Willis could have set up any right against his own grantee. How could Crane do so on his own behalf? He takes the defeasance without acknowledgment, con[384]*384.ceals -it,. arid thus enables Willis to exhibit himself on- the deed ' and the yecord, as absolute owner.

....How'can Crane’s subsequent grantee be in a better situation? He finds an absolute deed from Crane to Willis on record, and an absolute deed from Willis to the plaintiff. He is chargeable with notice, unless, as the counsel of the plaintiff observes, the effect of the statute is, to annul the record for every purpose; to make the case the same as if there had been no record at all. '

This, we apprehend, cannot be concluded, and we think the case of Mills v. Comstock (5 John. Ch. R., 214,) is sufficient to cover and decide the present question. The purposes and scope of the statute are answered, when it is held, that Willis could not support his title against a bona fide grantee of Crane, by virtue merely of his recorded deed, and that Crane could not defeat a bona fide recorded grantee of Willis by any subsequent grant of his own.

2. It is urged that the possession of Burke, (who was in possession from June, 1850, to June, 1856,) was the possession of Crane, and that when Willis conveyed to the plaintiff Stoddard in 1854, this possession charged the plaintiff with knowledge of Crane’s legal position under the defeasance, and there was therefore an adverse possession in Crane which defeated Willis’ deed to the plaintiff. (2 R. S., 739, § 147.)

Several answers may be given: a purchaser may be treated as chargeable with notice of the nature of the title of one in actual possession of the land, but we apprehend the rule has never been carried further. If Burke’s title would not defeat him, he need not go further. Burke’s possession was not under any title which can affect the plaintiff. And the defendant claims under Burke by deed two years after the plaintiff’s title accrued, by the deed to him.

Again, to hold that the plaintiff was affected in 1854, by a virtual constructive possession of Crane, with notice of Crane being mortgagee in possession, would be to enable Crane fraudulently to defeat the bona fide grantee of his recorded bona fide grantee.

Again, in no proper sense within the statute referred to, avoiding a grant, when the lands are held under a title adverse to that of the grantor, can the possession of a mortgagee be deemed ad[385]*385verse to that of Ms mortgagor. Crane’s possession ccMlltliSiv® been no more than this, if he had been in actual possesstqij^

3. Two other points of the defendant • may be considered’.^'' together, viz., the fifth point of those signed by Mr. Langdell, and the first of those of Mr. Burke, adopted by him. It is contended that the Referee erred in holding that the defendant was accountable in this action, as mortgagee in possession, for the rents and profits of the premises, and that the plaintiff was entitled to recover upon paying to the defendant the balance found due upon said mortgage. The effect of this decision was to convert an action of ejectment into a bill in equity to redeem. The second proposition is, that the defendant was assignee of an unpaid mortgage, in possession when the action was brought, and cannot be dispossessed by ejectment.

A statement of the course of the pleadings is necessary to understand these points.

The complaint and answer, as originally served, are set out in full in the statement of the case.

[The opinion here states the application made by the defendant to amend his answer, and the proceedings then had in respect to the amendment of that, and also of the complaint, and then proceeds as folloVs:]

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Bluebook (online)
5 Bosw. 378, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stoddard-v-rotton-nysuperctnyc-1859.