Adamson v. Souder
Adamson v. Souder
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
The legal title to the real estate in dispute was acquired by Benjamin K. Souder on April 13, 1861. On the same day he
To say nothing of the absence of any proof that, by the general terms of the deed of January 24, 1879, it was intended to convey an undivided interest in the property claimed by the appellant, did he acquire any interest in the same ? If Benjamin K. Souder was not the owner of the land when he died, Joseph inherited no interest in it as one of his heirs, and con
At the time the plaintiff below acquired the title to the estate upon which he relies for the recovery of at least an undivided third of the land claimed by the appellee, the declaration of trust in her favor had been on record for more than three years, and, when he became the purchaser at the orphans’ court sale of what Catharine II. Souder had acquired from Joseph, he could have learned, from an examination of the record, before he made his bid, that the interest which had been conveyed to her was collateral security for a prior indebtedness ; and the deed which he finally accepted, and which he now produces as
The contention of the appellant is twofold. To his claim for the whole of the land as the grantee of Anna M. Souder, the answer is that she, by the deed of her husband of January 24, 1879, conveyed nothing that belonged to her; and to his reply, that he ought then to have at least an undivided third, because the declaration of trust was not recorded, the rejoinder is that neither he nor his grantor was a purchaser for value, and he purchased with full notice, not only that Catharine R. Souder had not been a purchaser for value, but that the conveyance to her was but as collateral security.
Judgment affirmed.
Reference
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- Syllabus
- Deed — Collateral security — Antecedent debt — Recording act — Trust and trustees — Declaration of trust — Husband and wife. Where a wife joins in a deed with her husband by which they convey whatever interest they may have in the lands of the husband’s deceased brother, the wife by joining in the deed conveys no lands that belong to herself. In such a case she only joins in the deed for the purpose of passing any inchoate right of dower that she may have in the lands of her husband. A grantee in a deed who takes the land conveyed as collateral security for an antecedent debt is not a purchaser for value within the protection, of the recording acts. Where the purchase money of real estate belongs to the wife of a brother of the grantee, and the grantee on the day of the date of the deed executes a declaration of trust in favor of his sister-in-law, which declaration is not recorded until long after his death and the brother after the death of the grantee and before the declaration of trust is- recorded, executes with his wife a deed to another person of all his interest in his deceased brother’s estate, as collateral security for an antecedent debt, the land belonging to the wife and covered by the declaration of trust does not pass by such deed, nor is the grantee in such deed a purchaser for value within the protection of the recording acts as against the woman who really owned the land.