Tucker v. Harris

13 Ga. 1
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 15, 1853
DocketNo. 1
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

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Bluebook
Tucker v. Harris, 13 Ga. 1 (Ga. 1853).

Opinion

By the Court.

Lumpkin J.

delivering the opinion.

As both plaintiff and defendant claim from Howell W. Jenkins, it is unnecessary to trace the title to the land in dispute back of him. Jenkins sold the lot in his life-time to John Burke, one of the defendants in ejectment, by deed bearing date the 9th of June, 1829, 'but not recorded until the 15th day of February, 1840. After the death of Jenkins, the lot was again sold by Daniel S. Robertson, his administrator, and a deed was executed to Samuel Darden, the lessor of the ' plaintiff, on the 7th of August, 1838, which last deed was recorded the 18th of October, 1838.

[1.] Apart from other considerations, which of these conveyances is entitled to priority, under the Registry Acts of this State ?

The Act of 1837 provides that “ in all cases where two or more deeds shall hereafter be executed by the same person or persons, conveying the same premises to different persons, the one recorded within twelve months from the time of execution, (if the feoffee have no notice of the prior deed unrecorded at the time of the execution to him or her) shall have preference.” New Dig. 175.

In Ellis vs. the lessee of Smith, (10 Geo. Rep. 253) this [6]*6Court held, that a purchaser at Sheriff’s sale who has his deed first recorded, will gain the same preference over an unrecorded deed, as if he had bought directly from the debtor himself. The rule and the reasoning in that case apply with full force to a purchaser at an administrator’s sale. See also 5 Miss. 387. 1 Green, 43. The Act of 1837 established no new principle upon this subject, but was declaratory only. The priority there given, had been the settled doctrine of the Courts of Georgia, certainly from the organization of our State Government, and was probably coeval with the provincial Act of 1755, requiring all conveyances of land to be recorded within a limited period, and on failure, to be deemed and construed 'to be void and of no effect. Marbury and Crawford’s Digest, 111. Harrison vs. Neal, Dudley’s Rep. 168. By the Registry Acts of England, as expounded by the Courts of that country, grantees in a deed executed after, but recorded before another conveyance of the same land, being bona fide purchasers without notice, are deemed to have ’the better title. See Brown vs. Jackson, 3 Wheat. 449. 4 Cond. Rep. 291.

[2.] But had the rule been established for the first time by the Act of 1837, giving preference to the deed first recorded, the Courts would construe it to extend to conveyances made previous to its passage; as Registry Acts having a re-trospective operation, have never been considered as falling within the constitutional inhibition against ex post facto laws and laws impairing the obligation of contract. 2 Yerger’s Rep. 125. Ib. 260. In Jackson vs. Lamphire, (3 Peters’ Rep. 280,) the Court held that State Legislatures had the undoubted right to pass recording Acts, by'which the elder grantee should be postponed to a younger, if the prior deed was not recorded within a limited time. Had the Act of 1837 been passed to take effect instanter, and been made to apply to antecedent conveyances, and had not allowed a reasonable time after its en.actmentto record existing deeds, such an Act would be unconstitutional. But here, a reasonable time was allowed. The Act passed in December, 1837, and the prior deed was not made until August, 1838, nor recorded until the month of Oc[7]*7tober thereafter. Up to August, 1838, (some eight months,) the deed from Jenkins to Burke was not only good as between them, although executed in 1829, but was valid against ail the world. For although not recorded within the time proscribed by law, still if it had been recorded before the sale by Robertson, the administrator, the first deed would have prevailed.

[3.] The other question made by the bill of exceptions is one of much more difficulty and importance.

We do not doubt the validity of Robertson’s appointment, as administrator. The proper construction of the order is, that -it is absolute, not conditional. It is that Robertson, “be and he is hereby appointed, &c.” and his official bond is produced, corresponding in date, amount, the name of the security and every other particular with the order. We presume that it was given in open Court at the time the order was passed, and that the applicant was then and there duly qualified in terms of the law.

The difficulty arises as to the sufficiency of the second order, directing a sale of the land in controversy.

The argument in behalf of the plaintiff in error is, that the Court of Ordinary being a Court of limited jurisdiction, all the facts which are necessary to give it jurisdiction, should affirmatively appear upon the face of its proceedings.

[4.] And we recognize -^he rule, that nothing is to be intended in favor of jurisdiction. But if the jurisdiction is shown, every thing will be intended in favor of the judgments rendered by Courts; and they must bo taken to have judged right unless the contrary appears. Willes, 416. 8 T. Rep. 181, 182.

[5.] The line of demarcation between Courts of general and limited jurisdiction, is not so definite however, as is generally supposed. It is usual to state what particular Courts ' fall within the one class, and what within the other. But . what author has undertaken to mark with accuracy and precision the boundary between the two ? Bacon has not, nor has Blackstone, nor any other elementary writer.

[6.] The Superior Courts of this State are called Courts of [8]*8general jurisdiction. And yet their jurisdiction is limited by the Constitution. They cannot try titles to land, out of the County where they are situated, or a person accused of a crime out of the County where the offence was committed: nor can they in a civil suit carry the defendant in any case out of the County of his residence, except in a few specified cases, such as joint promissors, co-obligors, &c. Indeed, it is a well settled principle, that the judgments and decrees of Courts of the most unlimited jurisdiction, and of the highest rank, as well as those of a tribunal of peculiar jurisdiction, have been adjudged nullities, because the circumstances of the case made it an exception to the general jurisdiction of the Court. Griffith vs. Frazier, 8 Cranch, 9. Kane vs. Paul, 14 Peters, 39. 1 Peters, 340. 13 Peters, 511. 2 Howard, 59. 3 Howard, 762.

[7.] The Courts of Ordinary in this State, are not created by Statute ; they arc constitutional Courts. New Dig. 1122. They are Courts of record, which the Ecclesiastical Courts of England are not. They are clothed with original, general and exclusive jurisdiction, (except by appeal) in tho broadest terms, over testate and intestate estates. New Dig. 281, 283. The jurisdiction of the Spiritual Courts in England, in matters testamentary and of administration, is extremely limited. And such is the fact too, in many of the States of the Union. And the limits of so much of their jurisdiction in these matters as is peculiar and exclusive,

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