Opinion
1812.
The purchaser of a legal title for a valuable consideration without notice of an outstanding equity, will not be affected by it. Aliter, as to the purchaser of an equitable title.
A bill, therefore, which seeks to divest the legal title to land out of the grantee, and third persons claiming under him, upon the ground that the warrant, on which the grant is founded, was the property of the complainants, is good as against the grantee; but can not be sustained against the other defendants without alleging that a valuable consideration was not paid by them, or that they knew of the complainant's equity either at or before the consideration was paid, or the conveyance made. [Acc. Craig v. Leiper, 2 Y., 193.]
A sub-purchaser, with notice of an outstanding equity, from an innocent purchaser without notice, will stand in the shoes of the latter.
[Cited in: 4 Heis., 218.]
The cause was very fully spoken to by Haywood and Cooke, for the complainants; and they cited in argument upon the different points the following cases: 2 Co. Dig. 658, 9; 1 Atk. 382; 3 P. Wms. 307; 1 Atk. 334; Amb. 314; 2 Co. Dig. 262, 3; 3 Atk. 304; 2 Atk. 630; 1 Vern. 185; 1 Vern. 246; 3. Atk. 302; 4 T. R. 28; 2 Wash. Rep. 233; Hardin's Rep. 36; 1 Vern. 475; Hardin's Rep. 531; 2 Vern. 764; 1 Wils. 322; 2 Pow. Con. 176; 1 Fon. Eq. 132; 1 Har. Ch. 18, 19; 2 Vern. 25; 1 Vern. 348, 342; 1 Salk. 158; 2 Com. Dig. 512; 2 Ves. 517.
Dickinson and Whiteside, for the defendants, were stopped by the Court.
S. C., 1 Tenn., 509; Cooke, 189.
This was a bill in equity brought by the complainant Perkins and John Taply in his lifetime against the defendants, to recover a tract of land.
The bill stated that a certain John Grinder enlisted as a soldier in the North Carolina State line during the revolutionary war, in which service he died some time in the year 1780; that for his services there issued to his heirs a land warrant, under the law of North Carolina, for one thousand acres; that at the time of his death he left a widow, Mary Grinder, and two sons, his only children Joshua Grinder and Robert Grinder; that a certain Sarah Grinder, falsely representing herself to be the only heir of the said John Grinder, assigned the warrant aforesaid to the defendant Hays, and that upon this warrant Hays made an entry and procured a grant for one thousand acres of land; that the said Hays conveyed, in fee, to a certain James Douglass, four hundred and forty-six acres of the said land, which was afterwards conveyed, in fee, by Douglass to one Maury, and by Maury in like manner to the defendant Walkup; that the defendants Sloan and Gurtre set up a claim to the said four hundred and forty-six acres, as deriving a title under the said Walkup.
The bill does not charge that the purchaser from Hays or any of the subsequent purchasers paid no consideration for the land, or that any of them had notice of the complainant's equity.
The bill further states that Joshua Grinder conveyed, for a valuable consideration, his interest in the claim to his brother Robert Grinder, by whom the same was sold for the like consideration to the complainants. Upon the death of Taply the suit, as to him, was revived in the name of his executors.
Hays and Sloan having failed to answer, the bill was taken for confessed against them.
Walkup answered that he was a fair and bona fide purchaser from Maury, for a valuable consideration, without notice of the complainants' equity, which he conceived would protect him; that he had sold two hundred acres, part of the four hundred and forty-six acres, to the defendant Sloan, and had executed a conveyance to him therefor, and that he had sold the residue to the defendant Gurtre, and was ready to make him a title when required. He stated that he had received a conveyance from Maury on the same day the contract was made, but the deed was not produced in evidence.
Gurtre answered that he was a bona fide purchaser from Walkup, for a valuable consideration, without notice, though he had not yet received a conveyance.
Neither Walkup not Gurtre answered as to the fraud charged in the bill, respecting the assignment of the warrant.
The case set forth in the bill was amply supported by proof.
Upon the hearing of the cause several questions were stirred.
1. It was objected by the complainants that it was necessary, to support the defence set up by the defendants, to produce the purchase deed of Walkup and Sloan, and that the answers filed were insufficient to maintain the defence, because they had not answered to the fraud in assigning the warrant. 1 Vern. 185, 246. That the defendant Gurtre could not avail himself of the defence set up, because the plea must show that he had no notice at the time he received his conveyance, and he had received no conveyance yet. 2 Co. Dig. 362. That Sloan could not be protected, because he had not set up any defence, either by way of plea or answer.
2. That if the Court should be of opinion, in a case like the present, a purchaser without notice would be protected, yet here was enough to put him upon inquiry; because by tracing the title, as the purchaser ought to have, back to the commencement, he could easily have ascertained that Sarah Grinder had no right to make the assignment on the warrant; which constructive or notional notice, it was contended, was sufficient to protect the equity of the complainants.
3. It was also contended that where a title originates in a fraud or forgery, as in this case, no kind of transfer could purify the transaction; and that therefore a bona fide purchaser, for a valuable consideration, without notice, must stand in the same situation as the parties to the fraud.
It has been contended by the complainants' counsel, that the statements in the answers are not sufficient to entitle the defendants to the benefit of the defence which is set up by them. Without sopping at this moment to inquire into the facts alleged in the answers, it may be necessary, for the purpose of obviating any difficulty, to turn our attention to another part of the case. If a purchaser for a valuable consideration, without notice, can not have his right postponed, then it is necessary to inquire, whether in a bill framed in a case like the present, it is not necessary to charge notice, or a want of consideration? I am decidedly of opinion that these things should be charged in the bill. In such case, it is incumbent on the complainant to state every fact in his bill, the non-existence of which would disentitle him to a recovery. In those cases where equitable titles have prevailed against a title at law, it has been on the ground that the person who held the legal title had acted mala fide in the procurement thereof, and therefore in conscience he could not hold the property. It should appear in the bill that he can not conscientiously hold; that he is a volunteer, or had notice of the complainant's equity; in which case a court of chancery will decree, that he having acted with bad faith in the procurement of the legal title, his conscience is thereby affected; and that consequently he shall be compelled to do that which an upright and conscientious man would have done without compulsion. Amb. 446.
In this point of view, if the present bill had been demurred to, I am inclined to believe that the demurrer would have been sustained.
But if everything necessary to deprive the defendants of their defence had been charged in the bill, I am not satisfied that the answers are insufficient.
The moment an innocent man, for a valuable consideration, without notice, purchases a legal title, that moment does the trust which remained in the hands of the person committing the fraud cease to exist. Where a person by fraud obtains a legal title to that which equitably belongs to another, he shall be considered in the light of a trustee to that other, and will be compelled in a court of equity, to convey to him his legal title; but if a third person, bona fide, purchases in this legal title, without notice, in his hands the trust is discharged and done; and if once discharged it can never be revived. It follows, therefore, that as Walkup stands in a situation by which he could protect himself, a purchaser from him must remain in the same situation, although he has notice. It is, consequently, perfectly immaterial whether Sloan and Gurtre purchased innocently and bona fide or not. But supposing the answers are insufficient, can advantage be taken of that defect upon the hearing of the cause? Certainly not. If an answer is put in which the complainant judges defective, he should except to its sufficiency; but if he replies to it, he thereby admits it is good, and can not afterwards say the answer is defective, and therefore the defence set up by the defendant shall not prevail. It is just like a plea. If that be replied to, you can not object to its sufficiency; and if you judge it to be insufficient, it should not be replied to, but set down for argument. 1 Har. Ch. 263.
It has been also contended that there was enough in this case to put the defendants or purchasers upon inquiry, which is a sufficient constructive or notional notice. If there really is enough appearing upon the papers to lead a purchaser to a discovery of the fraud, and he does not make the necessary inquiry, yet he shall be considered as having notice. But is that the case here? Take the case of Walkup for example. Maury proposes selling to him, but he refuses to buy until he sees how the title is situated. Maury then procures his deed from Douglass and also shows the deed from Hays to Douglass, as well as the grant to Hays. Walkup is still unwilling to buy, — he wishes to know how Hays procured the grant. Search is made, and it is discovered to be made upon an entry in the name of Hays, founded upon a warrant issued to the heirs of John Grinder, and assigned by Sarah Grinder, purporting to be the heir of John Grinder, to Hays. Shall Walkup go farther back than this? Shall it be said that he must go on and ascertain, without any intimation to the contrary, whether Sarah Grinder is the heir of John Grinder? I conceive that no such duty devolved upon him. And, indeed, I have no hesitation in saying that when a man is about to purchase a legal title, he is not bound to inquire farther back than the grant, and no sort of necessity devolves upon him to make any inquiry about either the entry or warrant. I am also of opinion that constructive notice should not be enlarged. I do not feel disposed to disturb the doctrine on that subject; but if I were at all to interfere, it would be rather to abridge than enlarge the rules and principles upon which constructive notice is founded.
With respect to the third point, which has been much labored by the complainants' counsel, and which is confessedly of great importance, we feel very little difficulty. I am clearly of opinion that where a grant has issued, upon its face purporting to be fair, a purchaser from the grantee, or any subsequent bargainee, for a valuable consideration, without notice of an equity before he receives his conveyance, is eased of the trust which might have attached to the land in the hands of the bargainor. The issuing of a grant confers upon the grantee a legal title to the land; and when an innocent purchaser, without notice, pays the consideration and receives his conveyance, he not only has a legal title in him, but he has an equity also; and although the bargainor may stand in such a situation that, if the legal title had remained in him, a conveyance could have been compelled in favor of an equitable claimant; yet the moment such a transfer is made, as I have just described, the thing transferred is discharged, and the transferee can not be compelled to give up his legal and equitable right, because his conscience is not affected.
The complainants' counsel have insisted that "he who is first in point of time is best in point of right;" and that, inasmuch as the equity of the Grinders existed prior to the equity of the defendants, the complainants' must prevail. To this I reply, that the maxim is one which exists in equity, and is only applicable to rights merely equitable. If both parties have merely an equitable claim, he who is first in time will succeed; but if one has an equitable right, and the other has also an equity, and in addition possesses a title at law, the maxim will not apply, and the prior equity will be postponed. Where the equity is equal the law shall prevail. In this case the Grinders have an equity, and the defendants also have an equity added to a legal title; the legal title must therefore stand unimpeached. The maxim that "he who trusts most shall lose most," also applies to right merely equitable, as in the case of two mortgages. If the first mortgagee fails to take possession of the title-papers, and afterwards a second mortgage is executed to another person, who receives the title-papers, the first mortgagee shall be postponed. But neither of these maxims were ever applied so as to affect a person holding the legal estate, who also had an equitable interest.
It has been contended that the title of the defendants was originally derived through the medium of a fraud and forgery; and that therefore the transaction never can be purged of that impurity. In support of this position, the counsel have cited a variety of books, — we shall notice those only that have been chiefly relied on. The case cited from 4 T. R. 28, was where the plaintiff derived title, directly though innocently, from a fraud and forgery. The person who assigned to the plaintiff the bill of exchange, had no right to it, either in law or equity. The bill was drawn payable to Henry Davis, — another Henry Davis, who had no sort of title to the bill, got possession of it and assigned it to the plaintiff. The Court very properly determined that the plaintiff could not recover, inasmuch as the person who transferred to him the bill of exchange had no kind of title to it. But suppose, although the transaction had been originally fraudulent, that the Henry Davis, the person who assigned the bill, had a legal title to the paper, would it then have been determined that the innocent assignee should be affected by an outstanding equity? Surely not.
The cases in 1 Har. Ch. 18, 19, are relied upon. It is there laid down, that if a bond is fraudulent in its creation, no subsequent assignment can purify it. It will be well to observe that by the laws of England, a bond is not a negotiable paper; and that consequently the assignee can by assignment possess no legal title; his right to the paper or the money which it draws, is only in equity; and it is because the interest of the assignee is only an equitable one, that he takes the paper subject to all prior equity. In such a case both the interests are merely equitable, and then the maxim applies, "he who is first in point of time, is best in point of right." But it is urged that by the act of the Virginia Legislature, passed in 1748, bonds were made assignable, so as to give the assignee a title at law, and a right to bring suit in his own name; and that still the Courts of that county have determined, if an equity once attached to the bond, it followed it into the hands of the assignee. 2 Wash. 233. To the case produced, and the argument founded upon it, we will barely remark that the Court who gave the opinion, went upon the idea that the Legislature did not intend to alter the nature of the bond; but only to authorize a suit to be brought in the name of the assignee.
These observations also apply to the case in Hardin's Reports, 531. It is true May had possession of the horse; but he had neither an equitable nor a legal title to him; and therefore the rightful and legal owner had a right to recover of Chism, the purchaser. The legal as well as equitable right was in Woods, the owner; and it never had been divested.
In Hardin's Rep. 37, there was some proof of notice both to Currens and Coburn. It must have been because of such proof that the Court decreed the land to Hart. If the decree was pronounced upon any other principle, I am not prepared to sanction it.
Upon the whole case, I am of opinion that where a purchaser for a valuable consideration without notice procures a legal title, his conscience is not affected, and he can not be compelled to surrender his legal and equitable estate to one who has an equitable interest only. 1 Caine's C. E. 490; Amb. 230, 313; 2 Ves. jr. 437, 440; 2 Vern. 599, 751; 2 Fon. 307, 308, 309; 1 Johns. 556; 2 Eq. Ca. 244; Cowp. 278; 2 Com. Dig. 718; 2 Atk. 397, 630; 1 Vern. 246; Mitf. 215; 2 Ves. 271; 3 Atk. 407, 650; 1 Wash. 41, 217.
It remains now to determine what is to be done with the case so far as respects the defendant Hays. It is not charged in the bill that he was guilty of any fraud in procuring the assignment from Sarah Grinder. But I have already said, and it is an opinion in which I am very clear, that where a purchase is made, though innocently, from a person who has no title either in law or equity, the rightful owner, as relates to such purchaser, will not lose his property. In this case, Hays purchased from Sarah Grinder, who had no legal right. I am therefore of opinion that the complainants are entitled to a decree against Hays for that part of the land which he has not conveyed; and that as to the residue, a jury be empanelled to ascertain its value, which shall be paid by Hays to the complainants, after deducting a locator's part.
And at a subsequent day of the term the following written opinion was delivered.
The bill states that Martin Grinder died in the revolutionary war; that his heirs were entitled by his services to one thousand acres of land; that a warrant issued to his heirs for that quantity, and that some person by the name of Sarah Grinder, representing herself to be the heir of said Martin Grinder, fraudulently sold and assigned said warrant to Robert Hays, one of the defendants, who located the same and obtained a grant thereon in his own name; that Hays sold and conveyed in fee four hundred acres, a part thereof, to Douglass, who sold and conveyed to Maury, who sold and conveyed to Walkup; under whom the other defendants claim. The bill does not charge that any of the mesne conveyances were made without consideration, or that those to whom they were made had notice of the fraudulent assignment of the warrant. It further states that the name of the widow of Martin Grinder was Mary, and that those under whom the complainants claim were sole heirs. The bill prays a decree for the land.
Hays has filed no answer, and the bill is taken for confessed as to him. Walkup, in his answer, states that he and those under whom he claims are purchasers for a valuable consideration, without any notice of the equity of the complainants at the time the conveyances were made. To these answers a replication has been filed.
The evidence produced shows that no person by the name of Sarah Grinder was heir of Martin Grinder, and that the complainants derive their right under the heirs of said Martin Grinder, deceased.
The ground upon which the complainants rest their case is that, as Hays obtained the grant for this land in virtue of a warrant which was their property, that he must be viewed in the light of a trustee for their benefit; that he can be compelled by this Court to convey to them the legal title for so much of this land as he has not conveyed; and that the purchaser under Hays stands in no better situation than Hays himself, as to the part he purchased.
As it respects that part of this land, the legal title to which is in Hays, we are of opinion the complainants are entitled to a decree for it, because the consideration upon which the grant to Hays is founded belonged not to Hays, but to the complainants. Hays having purchased the warrant from a person who had not any right whatever thereto, such purchase vested him with neither an equitable nor legal title to the same. He may have been imposed on by his vendor, but that ought not to prejudice the owners of this warrant who were not at all instrumental in its sale. When the grant was made to Hays by the State he became vested with the legal title to the land; but the equitable title was still left with the heirs of Grinder, who have a right to call upon Hays to add the legal to their equitable title when they choose.
But how stands the case as it respects innocent purchasers for a valuable consideration?
It has been argued that they stand in no better situation than Hays, and different cases have been referred to, to show that, qui prior est in tempore potior est in jure, — and that as Hays acquired his title through a fraudulent assignment of the warrant, that fraud will affect the title in whose hands soever it may come.
Upon this point, we are of opinion, the case of the complainants is essentially defective; the bill does not charge any particular fraud in Hays, in procuring the assignment of the warrant, — for anything therein stated, he may have acted innocently in the purchase of it, — he may have been imposed upon by Sarah Grinder, who sold to him, and represented herself to be the heir when she was not. But, supposing that point to be immaterial, this case can not be supported against those who purchased from Hays upon another ground. The bill neither charges the conveyances to have been made without consideration, nor does it charge those to whom Hays conveyed with notice of the equitable title of the complainants. It seems to us, that in framing his case, a complainant ought substantially to charge in his bill every fact which it is essential to establish, to entitle himself to relief. We are of opinion, that to entitle the complainants in this case to relief against those who purchased the legal title from Hays, that one of two things must appear; either that a valuable consideration was not paid, or that those who purchased knew of the complainants' equity, either at or before the time they paid the consideration, or at or before the time they accepted the conveyance. Neither of these things are charged in this bill; nor has there been any attempt to establish them from express testimony. This bill seems to have been framed, and is now endeavored to be supported, upon a view of the law which we think entirely incorrect.
The maxim which has been relied upon, and the authorities cited, we think apply to a class of cases not similar to the present; to cases where neither party has a legal title, — where each party claims an equitable title to the matter in dispute. In those cases, the maxim qui prior est in tempore potior est in jure, applies; but in cases where each party has an equitable, and the defendant a legal title also, there the maxim, that where the equity is equal, the law must prevail, applies.
Hays had the legal title by virtue of the grant, when the defendants purchased from him for a valuable consideration without any notice of the complainants' equity; they acted innocently and bona fide; they can with a clear conscience hold this property; and as they have the legal title, they ought to be permitted to enjoy it. 1 Eq. Ca. Ab. 333, 334, 354; 2 Vern. 159; 2 Com. Dig. 628, 629, 630, 631, 632; Sugd. on Vend, and Pur. 490 to 499, 476; 3 Ves. jr. 478; Amb. 447.
If the complainants had, in their bill, charged a want of consideration or knowledge of their equity, there would have been some doubt whether the answers in this case, denied notice in a way that would be perfectly satisfactory to the whole Court; but we conceive it unnecessary to give any decisive opinion upon the answers as to this point.
It has been urged by the counsel for the complainants, that if it was necessary to fix the defendants with notice, it is done, because they must be presumed to have seen the grant to Hays, — the grant shows the warrant on which it issued; the defendant must be supposed to have seen the warrant, and therefore would have knowledge of their equity upon the doctrine of notional or constructive notice. It seems to us that this argument is not well founded; because we are of opinion the defendants were not bound, nor can they be presumed to have examined this title any farther back than the grant to Hays; there the legal title commences, and their inquiry into the title of Hays, we are to presume, stopped. Again, suppose them bound to examine the warrant, it would only show an assignment from Sarah Grinder; but whether she was heir or not, they would be unable to ascertain. Upon every view we can take of this case, we are satisfied that as to those who purchased a part of this land from Hays, the bill must be dismissed with costs.