Youngblood v. Keadle

32 S.C.L. 121
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedDecember 15, 1846
StatusPublished

This text of 32 S.C.L. 121 (Youngblood v. Keadle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Youngblood v. Keadle, 32 S.C.L. 121 (S.C. Ct. App. 1846).

Opinion

O’Neall J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

in this case, the grounds of appeal will be better considered, by reversing the order in which they are set down.

The 3rd ground is answered and disposed of, by The Bank v. Gourdin et al, 1 Spear’s Eq. Rep., 458-59; in that case it was ruled, that an unregistered mortgage is not void.

The 2d ground is equally untenable. It is plain, as is said in the report, that the Act of 1698 was intended to guard against double mortgages, or sales by the same person of the same goods. The preamble, 2 Stat., 137, P. L. 3, recites the mischief to be remedied, to be, “that the want, or neglect of registering and recording of sales, conveyances, and mortgages of lands and other goods and chattels, hath encouraged and given opportunity to several knavish and necessitous persons, to make tioo or more sales, conveyances, and mortgages of the same, plantation^ negroes and other goods and chattels, the first sale, conveyance and mortgage being in full force and not discharged, <&c.” This shews most clearly that the mischief was double mortgaging, selling or conveying by the same person, for the remedy of which the Act of 1698 was enacted. It is plain that the first clause of the Act, in terms provides for this mischief, and no other. The provisions both as to land and slaves postpone the first unrecorded to the second recorded sale, conveyance or mortgage. The case of Barnwell v. Porteus, 2 Hill Ch. R., 219, was the case of a sheriff’s deed of a part: of the land mortgaged, sold under a fi. fa, against the mortgagor, in which it was held that, that deed, being first put on record, obtained precedence over the unrecorded mortgage. The distinction to which 1 have adverted was not considered in that case. Still [124]*124it may be, and I think was rightly decided, on the ground that the sheriff’s deed was the same as a second conveyance by the mortgagor himself. But if it were so, that a mortgage, sale or conveyance, by some third person deriving title from the first vendor, grantor or mortgagor, could be considered within the terms of the Act, and thus gain a precedence by being first on record, still the plaintiff could not gain any thing. For when Harley’s mortgage was foreclosed by sale, the plaintiff’s bill of sale was unrecorded. At that time, therefore, he and Harley stood alike, as to the Act of 1698. The foreclosure by sale of personal chattels, is equivalent to a foreclosure by a decree of a Court of Equity. The mortgagor’s equity of redemption, and the whole estates of mortgagee and mortgagor thereby pass to the vendee. If there were nothing then existing to shake the mortgagor’s right to foreclose, any thing subsequently done by a third person cannot have any such effect. There is still however another decisive objection to the plaintiff’s title. When he brought his action, his bill of sale was unrecorded: and therefore, in that point of view, his title was inferior to that derived from Harley.

The first ground to my mind presents no difficulty. The inquiry is, in whom was the legal title to the slave? There can be no doubt, it passed under the mortgage to Harley. A sale of the same chattel to another person conveys no right, unless it be the right to redeem. Against such a vendee, an action of trover would lie by the mortgagee, and against such an one he could recover, even before condition broken. Spriggs v. Camp, 2 Spear., 181; so too, as in Bellune v. Wallace, 2 Rich., 80; a mortgagee to whom a chattel was mortgaged, as an indemnity for- a collateral liability, was held to be entitled to recover against a purchaser. It is plain, therefore, that the legal estate is in the first morgagee. If this be undivested by law, it seems to me strange, how in a Law Court a purchaser can be protected. It is true, if the party were obliged to resort to equity, and his title to relief rested on an equitable, not a legal right, that in such case the purchaser for valuable consideration without notice would be protected. But in a Law Court such a defence is worth nothing, except on a question of a [125]*125fraudulent conveyance. Then it is a mere circumstance from which fraud may be presumed. The party here having the legal estate, has possessed himself of his property, and sold and delivered it to another: the purchaser claims it; but in such a case, when the legal title is against him, his claim is in vain. It may be, if he had sued Harley or the sheriff, in trespass for taking the slave out of his possession, he might have stood on a better ground. For in such a case his possession would have been title, until a paramount title had been shewn. In that way he could have put Harley to the proof of an unquestionable title; and then it might have been urged with more plausibility, your title ought not to affect me, because I bought without knowledge of it, and therefore it operated, as a legal fraud, upon my rights. I am not prepared however, even in that point of view, to say the argument could operate; but now, as the case stands, it can certainly have no effect.

The motion is dismissed.

Richardson J., Evans J., and Frost J., concuiTed.

Per Wardlaw J.

From statements and admissions made at the bar, it appears that the money which the mortgage of J. J. Stallings to Harley was intended to secure, became due one year after the date of the mortgage, and so the condition of the mortgage was broken on 13th Dec., 1837: that before breach of the condition, the slave had been transferred by delivery from the mortgagor to Walker, and from Walker to Stansell, valuable and full considerations having been paid for her both times, but no bill of sale having been made at either of these transfers: that the seizure of the mortgagee was the first notice which, as it appeared, the plaintiff or any of the intermediate owners between him and the mortgagor had of the mortgage: and that all of these persons lived within twelve miles of the mortgagee.

I was at first inclined to think that, as notice is generally and properly said to be equivalent to registration, the notice of ownership in the possessor of a chattel, which usually proceeds from open possession accompanied by a claim of ownership, must be presumed to have been had by the mortgagee concerning the plaintiff’s title long before the seizure, and such notice [126]*126might be held to be equivalent, as regards the mortgagee, to the registration of the plaintiff’s bill of sale. But upon reflection I have been persuaded that this is wrong. If it were right, the privity between a mortgagee and a purchaser, each of whom had taken his conveyance without notice of the other’s, and had neglected to register, would be determined by proof that one had subsequently acquired notice of the other’s conveyance, the other being still ignorant of his:—a result which in many instances would be absurd and unjust. The notice which is equivalent to recording, is notice before taking a conveyance—such notice as may guard against harm from a prior unregistered conveyance. As to persons equally unaffected by notice when their conveyances were severally taken, the Act of 1698, without regard to subsequent information, seems, in encouragement of registration, to propose priority of right as the reward of superior diligence. Notice, which is not equivalent to registration, may however be a very important circumstance in a question of fraud, legal or moral, as I will endeavor to show hereafter.

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Bluebook (online)
32 S.C.L. 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/youngblood-v-keadle-scctapp-1846.