Tuttle v. Churchman
Tuttle v. Churchman
Opinion of the Court
Opinion of the court by
The appellant, Tuttle, brought an action to quiet the title to real estate against a judgment lien asserted by the appellees, Churchman and Fletcher. The suit was begun in Johnson county where the real estate is situated, and transferred by agreement to the superior court, wherein at special term there was a finding and judgment for the plaintiff which was reversed at general term. This reversal is assigned as error. While some exceptions were saved in reference to the admission of some portions of the evidence, the real dispute is whether the decision and judgment of the court at special term, upon the proofs made, was right. We have, however, examined the evidence carefully, giving especial attention to the portions which were admitted over objection, and think the court committed no error in admitting any part thereof. But whether the court reached the right conclusion upon the whole case, is a question not free from difficulty and involved in some conflict of authority.
The following summary of the facts proven, about which we may say there is little or no dispute, will be sufficient to afford an understanding of the questions presented, and of the conclusions of the court thereon.
On the 26th day of April, 1877, the plaintiff was the owner in fee, and in possession of, a certain tract of land in Johnson county, Indiana, subject to a mortgage to secure the payment of three promissory notes for $1,200 each, executed by the plaintiff as principal debtor, and by Jacob Smock, the father-in-law of the plaintiff, as surety; and said Smock, having paid two of said notes, and being still liable on the third, the plaintiff, on said day, made to
The plaintiff did not surrender possession upon the execution of his said deed to said Jacob Smock, but continued in the actual occupation of the whole of the land until March 1, 1878, when said Jacob F. took possession of the portion conveyed to him and has remained in possession thereof, and the plaintiff has continued to occupy the land in suit, so reconveyed to him. While Jacob Smock held the legal title under said deed from the plaintiff, to-wit, on the 2d day of August, 1877, one Eliza R. Scott (since Espy), caused to be filed in the office of the clerk of the circuit court of Johnson county, a duly certified transcript of a judgment which she had recovered in the superior court of Marion county against said Jacob Smock and others in the sum of $3,100, which thereby became an apparent lien on said land, and thereafter she caused an execution to issue on said judgment from said court, directed to the sheriff of Johnson county, who levied the same on said real estate, and on the 4th day of October, 1877, returned said writ unsatisfied, but with said levy indorsed thereon as a part of the return. Afterwards, and after the date of said reconveyance to the plaintiff, to-wit, on June 10, 1879, said Eliza Espy duly assigned of record her said judgment to the appellees, who took the same, paying the full amount thereof, in ignorance and without notice of the fact that said deed from the plaintiff to said Smock was only a security, or that the plaintiff claimed it to be such, and in the belief that said judgment was a lien on the land from the date of the filing of said transcript.
“Sec. 17. When a deed purports to contain an absolute convey-*292 anee of any estate in lands, but is made, or intended to be made, defeasible by force of a deed of defeasance, bond or other instrument for that purpose, the original conveyance shall not thereby be defeated or affected, as against any person other than the maker of the defeasance, or his heirs or devisees, or persons having actual notice thereof, unless the instrument of defeasance shall have been recorded according to law, within ninety days after the date of said deed.”
In Crassan v. Swoveland, 22 Ind. 427, after quoting the section of the statute, the court says: “This statute, it will be seen, requires actual notice to defeat a purchaser, where the defeasance has not been duly recorded. Possession has never been held anything more than constructive notice.” Such constructive notice does not come within the statute. This is in accordance with the authorities. Says an elementary writer: “Nor will the continued possession by the grantor of the land, after the making of his deed, be notice of a defeasance held by him, which is not recorded. 1 Wast. on Peal Prop., p. 495, sec. 22. The case of Hennessy v. Andrews, 6 Cush. 170, is directly in point under a statute similar to our own.”
It is claimed there is conflict in this respect between these cases and the case of Glidewell v. Spaugh, 26 Ind. 319. There the vendor did not remain in possession, nor the vendee take it; but immediately upon the execution of the conveyance, a third party, Glidewell, who claimed that the grantee held only in trust for him, took and held the possession, and it was held that “ the fact that immediately upon the conveyance of the property to Woehlor, the appellant entered into possession of the same, and continued to hold that possession at the date of the sheriff’s sale, was constructive notice to the appellee of Glidewell’s right, and put him on inquiry,” etc. The cases are plainly distinguishable, and not at all at variance upon the doctrine under consideration.
There is, however, conflict of authority on the subject. See Lead. Cas. in Eq., vol. 2, p. 184; and the case of Pell v. McElroy, 36 Cal. 268, is pressed upon our attention as unanswerably establishing a contrary doctrine to the one stated supra. We do not deem it necessary or profitable to examine the reasoning of the court in that case, or to enter into a review and citation of the cases pro and con, but content ourselves with saying that the doctrine
It may be true, as counsel for the appellant contends, and as declared in the opinion of one of the judges of the superior court, that the subject is not controlled by said seventeenth section of the statute, because “ it provides only that when a deed purports to be an absolute conveyance, it shall not be defeated or affected by force of a deed, bond, or other instrument, unless the same shall have been recorded, etc. Here the plaintiff does not set up or rely on a written evidence of the interest he asserts. His right rests in parol and can be proven only, as the whole case assumes by oral testimony that the deed to Smock was, in fact, intended by the parties as a mortgage. He had the legal right to rest on the oral promise to reconvey. No statute required the transaction to be evidenced by a writing. Not being required to take in writing, the plaintiff can not be charged with negligence in not placing a defeasance on record. The question of registry does not apply to the facts of the case; and the statute quoted can have no application, inasmuch as it does not inhibit the taking of a parol defeasance, or provide that such a defeasance shall not affect the deed, but simply requires the registration of instruments in writing which are to so operate. The reports are full of cases where the agreement to reconvey has been shown by parol, and in no case within my knowledge has this section of the statute been'arrayed against such proof, and the case in the 22d Indiana, supra, does not so hold or intimate. An unrecorded written defeasance was there involved, and what was said as to the application of the statute had reference to that fact.”
What is here said in reference to the admissibility of the proof of the defeasance is aside from the question, because the proof is always admissible, whether parol or in writing, and whether the writing be recorded or unrecorded. The statute does not exclude the evidence in any case, but only limits its effect to “ the maker of the defeasance, his heirs or devisees, or persons having notice thereof, unless the instrument of defeasance shall have been recorded according to law.” But if we adopt the constructive notice by reason of
Whether Mrs. Espy, by filing a transcript of her judgment in the office of the clerk of Johnson county, and by causing an execution to be issued and levied, acquired a lien on the land which. she could have enforced in preference to the rights of the plaintiff, we need not and do not decide; but the appellees, having purchased the judgment, which, by the records, appeared to have become a lien on the land, and, having expended their money upon the faith of that appearance, did acquire such superior right, and were entitled on the evidence, to a finding and judgment in their favor. Upon this phase of the case, there is no serious dispute, resting, as it does, upon the authority of the following cases: Flanders v. O’Brien, 46 Ind. 284; Busenbark v. Ramsey, 53 Ind. 499; Wainwright v. Flanders, 64 Ind. 306. The judgment of the superior court, at general term, reversing that at the special term, is affirmed with costs.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.