Henderson v. Cameron

Mississippi Supreme Court
Henderson v. Cameron, 73 Miss. 843 (Miss. 1896)
Woods

Henderson v. Cameron

Opinion of the Court

Woods, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The record presents the case of one seeking to shelter his attack upon another claiming by an unrecorded deed under our registry laws. Those laws are designed to shelter only purchasers in good faith. Now, the very deed from Mrs. Hyatt to appellant gave him notice that some of the deeds made by Mrs. Hyatt to purchasers of lands once belonging to her were unrecorded. Not only this, but the eighth interrogatory to appellee and his answer thereto (which was improperly excluded by the court below, because of the mere form of the question), and the ninth interrogatory and the answer thereto, in the same deposition, show that appellant 'had actual notice *849of the deed from Mrs. Hyatt to Giacomo Monti, and, despite the form of words employed in Mrs. Hyatt’s deed to appellant, it cannot be successfully maintained that one purchasing with actual knowledge of a former unrecorded deed shall take against the earlier purchaser under the unrecorded deed, no matter what jugglery of words were employed in the subsequent conveyance.

Affirmed.

Reference

Full Case Name
J. L. Henderson v. A. F. Cameron
Cited By
3 cases
Status
Published
Syllabus
1. Vendor and Vendee. Prior unrecorded deed. Notice imparted by subsequent deed. A deed that conveys all the lands within the state owned by the widow and devisee of a former owner, excepting snch as had been previously conveyed by her deceased husband or herself, by deeds “which are of record, and none other,” affects the grantee, by its terms, with notice that some of the deeds to lands that once belonged to her husband or herself are unrecorded. 3. Same. Achual notice. A grantee of land takes subject to a prior unrecorded deed from his g-rantor of which he has actual notice.