Varick's executors v. Briggs

After advisement the following opinion was delivered :

By Senator Verplanck.

My opinion is that the chancellor’s decree should be affirmed.' because I think that such a construction must be given to the several statutes of 1813 and prior years concerning the registry of deeds as will shut out all retrospective operation and effect upon the Validity of deeds, made before their enactment, and not at that time required to be recorded» It is conceded that the chancellor has fallen into a slight error, (not affecting the merits of the case or varying the decree,) in relation to the deed of July, 1801, which he supposed to be subject to the recording act of 1798. It now appears that in consequence of the alteration of counties, the lands in question were then within the bounds of another county to which that act did not apply. The two deeds to Mrs. Briggs, therefore,, stand on the same footing, and if proved to have *546been duly made as alleged, (which I agree with the chancellor is made out by the evidence,) the title under them is valid, unless they are vitiated by the statutes requiring in general terms all deeds executed since February, 1799, and October, 1802, to be recorded, and enacting that all deeds not so recorded should be considered fraudulent and void against subsequent bona fide purchasers and mortgagees. I have nothing to add to the chancellor’s reasoning as to the probable intention of the legislature that the act of 1813 was not to be retrospective as to all prior deeds, but was intended to apply only to conveyances of lands in counties which had already been subject to similar laws under previous acts for recording; and that, therefore, lands in this particular district, which had by accidental changes from one county to another, escaped the operation of such laws, must not be deemed to be included in the general retrospective words. I assent fully to this construction ; but at the same time I must pla'ce my conclusion as to the effect of these recording statutes distinctly and expressly upon the clause of the constitution of the United States prohibiting any state from passing any law impairing the obligation of contracts. I cannot but give an effect, to this constitutional restriction, in relation to this question, much beyond what the chancellor’s opinion appears to admit. I have, in a former opinion, delivered in this court, objected to what I considered an undue extension of this salutary restriction. Here I regard it as applying in full force. Deeds valid and perfect at the time of their execution, and not then requiring for their full legal effect, any further legal sanction, such as recording, are complete and valid executed contracts. Now the effect of a subsequent statute enacting that such valid contracts shall be adjudged fraudulent and void as against certain persons unless a further legal sanction be added, must be in direct hostility to the very words of the constitutional inhibition. The contracts themselves are impaired by being adjudged void. If a law enacts that any class of contracts now fair and valid against the whole world shall hereafter be adjudged fraudulent and void against some particular persons, can this be any other than a law impairing the ob*547ligation of those contracts ? It is true that the contract may still be said to exist as 'between the original parties: but the obligation of the contract is surely impaired if its effect and validity are destroyed as against another party—if the executed contract has no longer any validity as between one of the original parties and an assignee of the other, in relation to the same subject matter. The obligation of the contract between A. and B., was before binding upon B. and all who might claim the effect of the contract by his grant or under his title. A law is passed pronouncing that in certain cases the contract shall be binding only upon B., and that its former obligation shall no longer bind B.’s grantees. Does not such a law impair that contract ? Now it cannot be presumed that the legislature intended to enact such an unconstitutional requirement. If their intention to do so, was manifest and their language not susceptible of any other meaning, then the enactment was unconstitutional and void. But here, evidence, as shewn by the chancellor, not indeed from the statute itself, but from other parts of the statute book, indicates the probable intention, as well as the manner, in which the framers of the law were led by a natural oversight, to use words that in their literal interpretation would apply retrospectively to some few cases, like the present, not within their contemplation. We may accordingly safely here apply the rule that a thing which is within the letter of the statute, is not within the statute unless it is within the intention of the maker.” Buc. Abr. tit. Statute I. When, therefore, the act of 1813, required all deeds executed after February I, 1799, to be recorded, under the penalty of being adjudged to be fraudulent and void against subsequent purchasers, we must consider it as referring to deeds, which had when executed been subject to a similar rule, and which should have been recorded under previous laws, but not as embracing retroactively deeds then valid without being recorded, which might unintentionally fall within the letter of the enactment. I apply the same principle and the same rule of interpretation to the prior act of 1805. I allow the xveight of the chronological reasons assigned by the chancellor to show' that *548this act did not cover the deed of 1802, and which was probably executed in August or September, whilst the act did not go into effect until October. But independently of that view, that act cannot vitiate either of these deeds, if it comprehends them in its provisions as the chancellor thinks it would, unless proved to have been lost or destroyed. It is remarkable that this act, after requiring all deeds executed since October 1, 1802, to be recorded before the 1st of January 1806, does not go on to add in terms the usual penalty of being adjudged fraudulent and void against subsequent purchasers. It is only by inference from the former act of 1801, the provisions of which are here extended to another county, that this penalty can be made out, A mere inference of this kind, operating in direct hostility to a .constitutional restriction, cannot be presumed or allowed, when, even if it had been an enactment in express words, such enactment would have been void. The provision for recording such prior deed then stands alone, merely directory as to the manner, the time, and the place of recording the deeds of those, who without absolute legal necessity might think fit thus to protect the evidence and muniments of their title.

I assent to the chancellor’s view of the evidence of the existence of the deeds, and of their loss or destruction, as well as to his conclusions from that evidence.

I am, therefore, of opinion that the deed of 1801 to Mrs. Briggs, and the deed of 1,802 for the same lands, with the addition of two hundred acres more, excepted out of the first, are not to be adjudged fraudulent and vojd as against the eomp.lainants, under any of the recording acts j but conveyed a valid title not defeated by the subsequent conveyance,

.On the question being put, Shall this decree be reversed1 All the members of the court answered in the negative. Whereupon the decree of the chancellor was affirmed*