Winchester v. Parm.

141 A. 271
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedMarch 7, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 141 A. 271 (Winchester v. Parm.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Winchester v. Parm., 141 A. 271 (Del. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

The objection which the defendant makes to the complainant's title hinges upon the validity of the title conveyed by the sheriff in the foreclosure proceedings as against the deed delivered by Richardson to the Underwriters Realty and Mortgage Company. Both the mortgage and deed were recorded on the same day. The mortgage was noted on the record as recorded at 11:35 A. M. of that day (the statute, Sec. 1380, Revised Code 1915, quoted infra, required this); but no notation of the hour of recording was noted upon the record of the deed, the statute requiring none.

The defendant contends that there being no notation of the exact time when the deed was *Page 273 recorded, the law, disregarding fractions of the day, will in obedience to the familiar fiction consider the deed as having been recorded from the first moment of the day, and such being the case, the defendant contends, the deed from Richardson to the Underwriters Realty and Mortgage Company took prior rank over the mortgage of Richardson to Cohen, recorded at 11:35 A. M. of that day, and the title under that deed could not therefore be divested by foreclosure proceedings under the mortgage.

In reply to this contention it is urged by the complainant that the mortgage, being one to secure a portion of the purchase money, is by virtue of the statute entitled to the status of a valid lien even though it be conceded that the deed executed by the mortgagor was, either because of the fiction or as a matter of fact, delivered and recorded before the mortgage.

The statute upon which this contention is based was approved March 15, 1915, and is found in 28 Del. Laws, Ch. 223. It is as follows:

"If lands or tenements be sold and one or more mortgages on the same, or any part thereof, be made by the purchaser to the vendor for securing the purchase money or any part thereof, and if such mortgage or mortgages be recorded within five days after the deed conveying such land or tenements from such vendor to such purchaser shall be recorded, the lien of said mortgage or mortgages on said lands or tenements or any part thereof shall have preference to and priority over any judgment against the mortgagor, or any other lien created or suffered by him, although such judgment, or lien, be of a date prior to said mortgage or mortgages. And as between two or more such purchase money mortgages on the same land, they shall have priority and preference according to the times that they are severally recorded in the proper office. Two or more such mortgages, recorded at the same time, shall have no preference or priority as between themselves."

This section is in substitution for an earlier provision found in Sec. 3224, Revised Code 1915, and alters the earlier provision in the following among other respects — the earlier provision allowed thirty days from the making of the purchase money mortgage for its recordation, whereas now only five days is allowed and this runs not from the making of the mortgage as formerly but from the date of the recording of the deed to the vendee-mortgagor.

In so far, therefore, as the time of the recording of the mortgage in question is concerned it was placed upon the record within the five day period. Hence it enjoys the preference which the quoted section gives. But what is that preference? By the terms of the section (and in this respect the statute is the same as formerly) it is "over any judgment against the mortgagor, or any other lien created or suffered by him" regardless of date. There is a marked distinction between this language and that which is found in another portion of the law dealing with the recording of instruments, where it is provided that unless a deed is recorded within three months it "shall not avail against a subsequent fair creditor, mortgagee or purchaser for a valuable consideration unless," etc. Sec. 3218, Revised Code 1915. See also Sec. 3219, Revised Code 1915. Like deeds duly recorded in the prescribed time, purchase money mortgages if recorded within the proper period are preferred by the express language of the statute against judgment and mortgage creditors; but unlike deeds, purchase money mortgages are not allowed by the language of the statute to enjoy a priority over subsequent purchasers for value. In this condition of the statute law, it is difficult to see how the purchase money mortgage from which the complainant derives his title can, if the deed to Underwriters Realty and Mortgage Company was in fact recorded ahead of the mortgage, be preferred thereto by reason of anything found in the quoted section dealing with purchase money mortgages. If that section included subsequent purchasers upon a valuable consideration among those against whom the purchase money mortgage could claim priority, in analogy to the provisions concerning the rights of grantees in deeds, the protection which the complainant claims by virtue of the statute would then be a secure one notwithstanding the deed was entered first, assuming of course that the grantee in the deed gave a valuable consideration.

From the foregoing it results that the complainant cannot call to. his aid against the grantee in the deed, the protection which the statute affords to the holder of a purchase money mortgage.

This being so, whatever advantage the complainant has by reason of the recording of the purchase money mortgage is derived, not from the particular section dealing with the recordation of such instruments, but from the sections dealing with the recording of mortgages generally. Those sections are published in the Code of 1915, as follows:

"3222. Sec. 26. * * * A mortgage, or a conveyance in the nature of a mortgage, of lands or tenements, shall have priority according to the time of recording it in the proper office, without respect to the time of its being sealed and delivered, and shall be a lien from said time of recording it, and not before."

"1380. Sec. 10. * * * When a deed, or other writing proper to be recorded, is lodged in the Recorder's office, he shall note upon it the day, month and year, and in case of any mortgage, the hour and minute of its being so lodged; * * * and the recording shall take date from the time it was lodged in the office. * * "

The mortgage in question, therefore, notwithstanding it was a purchase money mortgage, acquired its quality of a lien from *Page 274

11:35 A. M. of the day of its recording. Now at that minute of the day, had title passed out of the mortgagor to the Underwriters Realty and Mortgage Company by virtue of the deed? The deed was dated September 6, 1917. Deeds of course are effective from the date of delivery. Littleton v. Johnson, 3 Boyce, 97, 81 A. 47; Doe ex dem. Guest et al. v. Beeson, 2 Houst, 246; Smith et al. v. May, 3 Pennewill, 233, 50 A. 59. There is nothing to show in this case when the deed was delivered. In the absence of such showing the date of the deed is presumed to be the date of its delivery. Buker v. Carroll et al., 1 Pennewill, 559, 42 A. 986. The delivery date of this deed was then September 6, 1917, and, its recordation having been delayed for over three months, the record of it cannot by virtue of the statute (Secs. 3218, 3219, Revised Code 1915) acquire any effect anterior to the time of its actual entry.

Both the deed and the mortgage, therefore, must so far as their respective rights to priority are concerned stand upon the actual record of entry without the aid of any statutory provision by which either can be transposed by relation to a prior time.

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Bluebook (online)
141 A. 271, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/winchester-v-parm-delch-1928.