Taylor v. Harrison

47 Tex. 454
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by79 cases

This text of 47 Tex. 454 (Taylor v. Harrison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taylor v. Harrison, 47 Tex. 454 (Tex. 1877).

Opinion

Moore, Associate Justice.

It is the evident purpose of the registration laws to protect creditors and purchasers against fraud and imposition by vendors and their prior creditors, as well as to protect and secure the latter against fraudulent combinations and contrivances between the owners of real estate and third parties, after incumbering or parting with their title or interest in it. The first of these objects is intended to be effected by requiring that all bargains, sales, and other conveyances whatsoever, of any lands, tenements", and hereditaments, whether made for passing, any estate of [457]*457freehold or inheritance, or for a term of years; and all deeds of settlement upon marriage, whether land, money, or other personal things, shall be settled, or covenanted to be left or paid, at the death of the party, or otherwise; and all deeds of trust and mortgages, though valid and binding as between the parties and their heirs, and as to all subsequent purchasers with notice thereof, or without consideration, shall, nevertheless, be void as to all creditors and subsequent purchasers for valuable consideration without notice, unless duly acknowledged or proved, and lodged with the clerk, to be recorded, as required by'law. The record is accomplished by making such instruments, when duly proven and recorded as provided by the statute, operate as constructive notice to creditors and subsequent purchasers, of such facts as they would have learned from the record, if examined. But purchasers and creditors are only charged by construction with notice of the facts actually exhibited by the record, and not with such as might have been ascertained by such inquiries as an examination of the record might have induced a prudent man to make. Hence, it is a w^ell-established rule, that the registration of deeds or instruments, required by law to be recorded, will not operate as constructive notice, unless thehave been acknowledged or proved, as prescribed by law. (Work v. Harper, 24 Miss., 517; White v. Denman, 1 Ohio St., 110; Bishop v. Schneider, 46 Mo., 472.) And while it is a conclusion of law which cannot be disputed, that subsequent purchasers and creditors are charged with notice of all the facts shown or exhibited by the record, it has never been held that they were bound or affected by a record which does not give notice of a valid conveyance of the property in question, but merely gives information which, if in fact communicated to such creditor or purchaser, might have been reasonably sufficient to put him upon inquiry, though had such inquiry been made, the existence of a prior incumbrance, not properly recorded, might have been ascertained. It is therefore held, that a deed not properly acknowledged [458]*458or proved for record, although in fact duly executed, will not operate as liotiee of such deed; and though it may have been duly proved or acknowledged for record, if, in some material respect, it has been improperly recorded, the same result follows from such omission, and the record will only give notice of the existence of such an instrument as that exhibited by it. (Terrell v. Andrew County, 44 Mo., 309; Beekman v. Frost, 18 John, 544; Sanger v. Craigue, 10 Vt., 555; Jennings v. Wood, 20 Ohio, 266; 2 Wash. on Real Prop., 139.)

And unless there is such a record as the statute prescribes, it certainly does not furnish notice to parties subsequently dealing with the vendor of the former incumbrance or conveyance. At the time the deed under which the plaintiff claimed the land in controversy in this case was registered, the statute required that the acknowledgment or proof of the execution of the instrument to be recorded, should be certified by the officer before whom it is taken or made upon such instrument, and that such certificate should become a part of the record. The deed which has given rise to this, as registered, does not purport to have upon it this certificate. And though a certificate, as prescribed by the statue, was, in fact, indorsed upon the deed, this essential portion of its proper registration was entirely omitted. The deed, therefore, was not properly recorded, and creditors and subsequent purchasers are not chargeable walk notice of it, by reason of such defective record.

But appellee insists, that although the deed from the original grantee of the land, under which he deraigns his title, may not have been properly recorded, still appellant is in no way benefited by reason of such defect, 1st, because he derives his title under a subsequent sale of the land by the administrator of the original grantee, who had sold it, previous to his death, to appellee’s vendor, and consequently had no title to or interest in the land which could descend to or vest in his heirs, or that could be administered upon or sold by his [459]*459administrator for the payment of his debts; and, 2d, if this is not a sufficient answer to appellant’s claim, appellee further maintains, that as the deed from the administrator, under which appellant deraigns his title, is merely a quit claim, he will be held to have purchased with notice of the prior unrecorded deed. (Rodgers v. Burchard, 34 Tex., 453.)

In response to the first of these objections, it will suffice to say, that we see no reason why a purchaser from the heirs or representatives of the vendor, if he purchases and pays for the land, without actual or constructive notice of the previous sale, is not as fully within the spirit and equity of the statute as a second purchaser from the vendor himself. And so it has been heretofore held by this court, (Love v. Berry, 22 Tex., 378,) in accord, as we think, with the general current of decisions elsewhere upon the subject. (See Youngblood v. Vastine, 46 Mo., 239, reviewing the cases, and overruling the case of McCamant v. Patterson, 29 Mo., 110, cited in Rodgers v. Burchard, 34 Tex., 453.)

Preference is not given to the second vendee, or to a purchaser under execution, because there is any title or interest in the land remaining in the vendor, after he has once sold and conveyed it, but simply because it is a rale of public policy, prescribed by statute, for the protection of innocent parties against fraud.

Creditors, as has been frequently held, are as clearly protected by the statutes upon this subject as purchasers. And certainly we can see no reason for holding that they lose the preference given them over the negligent purchaser who fails to have his deed recorded,- because the creditor is forced to go into the Probate instead of the District Court to collect his debt, or because the land is sold by the administrator, instead of the sheriff.

The second objection urged by appellee, if applicable to the case, is, we think, a much more embarrassing question.

In the case of Rodgers v. Burchard, 34 Tex., 453, it was said by the court that an absolute deed, though unregistered, [460]*460passes the entire title of the grantor, and leaves nothing to descend to his heirs; and that a subsequent purchaser from such heirs acquires nothing. That though a subsequent deed, made on a valuable consideration, and without notice of a prior unregistered conveyance, takes precedence of the unregistered deed, yet this principle only prevails when both parties claim under the same grantor, and not where one of them claims from the heir and the other from the administrator; and there are, no doubt, respectable authorities supporting this view of the subject.

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Bluebook (online)
47 Tex. 454, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-harrison-tex-1877.