Wadsworth v. Wendell

5 Johns. Ch. 224, 1821 N.Y. LEXIS 101, 1821 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 13
CourtNew York Court of Chancery
DecidedMay 3, 1821
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 5 Johns. Ch. 224 (Wadsworth v. Wendell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wadsworth v. Wendell, 5 Johns. Ch. 224, 1821 N.Y. LEXIS 101, 1821 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 13 (N.Y. 1821).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

The plaintiff sets up an equitable right to lot No. 11, in Solan, in the county of Cortlandt. The original patentee was John Thomas, a soldier in the Nezu-York regiment of artillery, in the revolutionary war; and the patent to him for the lot was dated July 9th, 1790. His right commenced with the concurrent resolution of the legislature, of the 27th of March, 1783, and was confirmed by subsequent acts of the legislature. The act ef the 11th of May, 1784, directed letters patent to issue to the officers and soldiers entitled under the concurrent resolution of 1783, and that the' military bounty lands be laid out in the manner therein prescribed. The act of the 28th of February, 1789, directed the commissioners of the land office to lay out these lands into townships, and the townships into lots, and then to proceed to ballot for each soldier’s lot. In this inchoate state of the military rights, the above patentee, on the 5th of September, 1789, (having then an equitable right, but no legal title,) sold, quit-claimed, and confirmed all his right, title, claim, and demand,” to the said lands, to the plaintifij by a conveyance, purporting to be a deed in fee, and to be given for a valuable consideration, but which had no seal affixed to it After this conveyance, the act of 6th April, [228]*2281790, was passed, giving letters patent for the military bounty lands, an operation as and from the 27th of March, 1783, so as to be deemed to have vested a title in the grantees from that time; and it declared that “ all grants, bargains, sales, devises, or other dispositions,” made by the grantees, or their heirs or assigns, of the said lands so to be granted, between the 27th of March, 1783, and the date of the letters patent, should be good and effectual, as if the letters patent had been granted on the 27th of March, 1783.

Thomas, the soldier, is then to be deemed, by the force of this last statute, to have been legally seized of the lot in question, when he sold to the plaintiff, by an instrument intended to be valid, but by mistake or ignorance, not competent to convey an estate in fee, at law, according to the decisions of the Supreme Court. The conveyance, however, was equally valid as if the soldier had been seized in fee at the time of making it; and though it be a defective conveyance, for want of a seal, yet it created such an equity as to bind the lands in the hands of the soldier and of his heirs. The only point in the case is, whether subsequent purchasers from Thomas were also bound by that equity, in consequence of the deposit of that conveyance, under the acts of 8th of January, 1794, and 27th of March, 1794.

I think it is a clear point, that Thomas was bound by the conveyance to the plaintiff, and that it passed all his right and interest in equity. It was not intended to be an agreement only to convey, but an actual present conveyance of all his right and title ; and, in equity, it did pass it. The omission to affix a seal, was a mere mistake, contrary to the intention of the parties; for the instrument concluded with these words: “ In witness whereof, I have hereunto set my hand and seal.” It also contained a covenant, for further assurance, and that he would at any time thereafter, at the request, cost, and charges of the plaintiff, his heirs and assigns, make, seal, and execute any reasonable act, convey-[229]*229mice, and assurance in the law, for the perfect granting, quit-claiming, and confirming all his right, title, and demand to the lands aforesaid. Thomas and his heirs could have been compelled to have executed a more perfect conveyance, and one competent to have passed the legal title to the plaintiff. But he, afterwards, in 1796, conveyed his legal title, by a deed in fee, to Preston, under whom the defendants claim $ and the question is, whether Preston, and all holding under him, were not chargeable with notice of the equity of the plaintiff.

A deposit oft* conveyance of military bounty land, pursuant to the act of the 8th of January9 1794, was equivalent to a record, and operated as a notice to subsequent purchasers-

The act of 8th of January, 1794, directed, that all deeds and conveyances heretofore made and executed, or pretended so to be, of and concerning, or whereby any of the said lands might be any way affected in law or equity, should, on or before the 1st of May, 1794, be deposited in the clerk’s office, &c. and if not, that they should be adjudged fraudulent and void, against any subsequent purchaser or mortgagee, for a valuable consideration ; and all deeds and conveyances thereafter to be made, were to be recorded, or to be adjudged fraudulent and void, against any subsequent purchaser or mortgagee, for a valuable consideration, whose deed should be first recorded,” &c. The time for depositing the deeds was afterwards prolonged to the 1st of May, 1795, and it appears in proof, that the conveyance to the plaintiff was duly deposited, in pursuance of the act, on the 27th of April, 1795, and was afterwards duly proved, on the 8th of March, 1799, and the identity of the soldier is perfectly ascertained.

The deposit of these conveyances was intended by the legislature to be notice to all subsequent purchasers of their existence and contents, and the deposit of them would have been, in a degree, useless, if it was not intended to operate as notice. The deposit, as to all deeds and conveyances made prior to the act, was intended as a substitute for the prior registry of them, and to be from the date of the deposit, equiva[230]*230lent to the recording of them. It was the policy of that statute to place all the military titles upon record, and by another revision in it, all future conveyances of any of these lands were to have priority, according to the registry of them. The words of the act were comprehensive enough to embrace the case of the plaintiff’s conveyance, for it reached to every instrument of or concerning these lands, and whereby these lands might be affected, in law or equity. Deeds and conveyances, any way affecting the title prior to that day, were to be deposited, and deeds and conveyances thereafter were to be recorded; and the omission to deposit in the one case, and the omission to record in the other, equally avoided the conveyance as against subsequent purchasers, without notice, whose deeds were first recorded. There was no space of time left, in which the files and records in the clerk’s office were not to contain the test of the title; and I cannot entertain a doubt, that the deposit was intended to be, and was, in judgment of law, as effectual notice to purchasers in the one case, as the record of subsequent deeds was notice in the other. It is settled, (Johnson v. Stagg, 2 Johns. Rep. 510. Frost v. Beekman, 1 Johns. Ch. Rep. 298. Parkist v. Alexander, ib. 389.) that the registry of a mortgage under the mortgage act, is notice to all subsequent purchasers and mortgagees; and the same construction ought to be given to the act above referred to, for the case is within the same reason and policy.

A defective conveyance binds the lands, in equity, against the heirs of the grantor.

When, therefore, Preston purchased of Thomas, and when Matthews

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Bluebook (online)
5 Johns. Ch. 224, 1821 N.Y. LEXIS 101, 1821 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wadsworth-v-wendell-nychanct-1821.