Wickes v. Lake

Dixoít, C. J.,

dissenting. The question of notice, in cases of this nature, is a question of fraud, or bad faith. It stands upon the ground of fraud and bad faith in the subsequent mortgagee or purchaser for value; and equity never interferes to deprive him of the benefit of the legal title, except upon that ground, the proof of which must be most clear.and satisfactory against Jiim. It is not *81enough, that the proof raises a strong suspicion of guilt; but the guilty knowledge must be proved, or in lieu thereof, knowledge of sucli other facts and circumstances as. will charge the purchaser with gross and culpable negligence in not having ascertained the truth — with a deliberate and guilty purpose not to inquire, because such inquiry would lead to actual knowledge of the superior adverse title or equitable claim. If, therefore,' the facts and circumstances are such as to be consistent with good faith and innocence on the part of the mortgagee or purchaser, or such even as to leave it doubtful whether he was guilty of fraud or bad faith, equity will not disturb his title. These principles are elementary and familiar. They are fully discussed in the leading case of Le Neve v. Le Neve, 2 Lead. Cas. in Equity, 127, and notes. And see, particularly, Jones u. Smith, 1 Hare, 55, there cited.

' ’ In discussing this question of notice, in whatever form it may arise, courts should never lose sight of this fundamental principle upon which the doctrine is founded. The consequences of notice are most highly severe and penal, involving no less than a forfeiture of the entire title or estate of the party charged with it, as a punishment for his fraud. Courts cannot,. therefore, be too guarded and cautious in the application of this doctrine, the liability to error in which has led so many courts and judges to regret that it ever existed at all, and inclined them to limit it to cases to which it has already been applied, and not to extend it to new ones. Ware v. Lord Egmont, 4 De G., Mac. & G. 473; Attorney-General v. Stephens, 6 id. 148 ; Ford v. White, 16 Beav. 123; Fish v. Redington, 31 Cal. 185. Every case should be carefully tested by the principle; and the questions should be: “ Was the party guilty of fraud or bad faith? Hid he acquire the legal title with intent to cheat and defraud his adversary ? Hoes the testimony clearly and satisfactorily establish these facts ?”

*82Now possession is but constructive notice of the title of the party holding it. It is not actual notice of such title. It puts the purchaser upon inquiry merely, and charges him with such knowledge or information as he would have obtained if he had inquired. Knowing that the premises are in the actual possession of some person other than his grantor, the law considers it an act of fraud and bad faith if the purchaser does not make the inquiry which such knowledge naturally suggests. It is a willful and intentional omission of duty, evincing a design and purpose on his part not to regard the rights of the party in possession, but to deprive and defraud him of_ them, whatever they may be. The punishment for such fraudulent and wicked conduct in a court of equity is to hold the purchaser, by construction or implication, to a knowledge of all such facts as he would have ascertained if he had inquired. This protects the rights of the party in possession, and places the purchaser where he ought to have placed himself.

The great controversy in cases where possession is relied upon as the ground of constructive notice is, and always has been, as to the nature and extent of such possession. What is that possession which the purchaser in looMng upon is bound to Tcnow■ is - not the possession of his grantor, but is the possession pf some third person ? Knowledge — actual notice — that the vendor is out of possession, and that some third person is in, must in all cases be brought home to the purchaser, or the charge of fraud or bad faith cannot be sustained against him. And this knowledge must not be the subject of doubt or speculation, or of probable inference even ; it must be clearly and positively established. •

It is with a viéw 'to this- ingredient of fraud, and the positive proof required to establish it, that courts of equity have observed so pauch care in laying down ,the rule as to what that possession shall be which puts the purchaser upon inquiry, or operates as constructive no*83tice to Mm of the rights of the party claiming it. The courts have studiously endeavored so to restrict and limit the rule as that, by possibility, no innocent purchaser should suffer by it. Innocent purchasers are the especial favorites of courts of equity. It is well settled that no case can be stronger in equity than that of a purchaser who has put himself in peril by purchasing a title and paying a valuable consideration, without notice of any defect in it or adverse claim to it. Equity will not disarm but assist him. Basset v. Nosworthy, 2 Lead. Cas. in Eq. 52 ; Boone v. Chiles, 10 Peters, 210.

The facts of this case are in substance as stated in the opinion of the court, with one exception. The mortgage was executed in mid winter, February, 7, 1854, when there were no crops growing, cattle grazing, or other visible sign upon the land of any present use or occupancy whatever.

The mortgagee in this case was a corporation, having its place of business in the city of Milwaukee, distant about one hundred and fifty miles from the land in controversy. Let us take the facts just as they would have presented themselves to an agent of the mortgagee, .if he had visited the premises at or about the time the mortgage was executed, for the purpose of ascertaining their situation, value, etc. What would such agent have seen ? The two small unoccupied fields, with evidence, perhaps, of the previous season’s cultivation, and here and there a stump in the woods showing that a few trees had been cut or taken from or used upon the premises. This would have been all, absolutely every thing, visible upon the lands themselves, to warn him that the mortgagor was not in possession, and that the defendants were. He would not have seen the cattle grazing in the woods, nor the growing beans, turnips, or potatoes.

My associates adopt the rule which was well laid down in Ely v. Wilcox (20 Wis. 531), “that possession, *84to be notice, miist be open, visible, exclusive and unambiguous ; not liable to be misunderstood or misconstrued.” Such are the qualities which must characterize the possession of the party who would set it up to defeat the title of the subsequent purchaser for value without notice, and whose conveyance was first recorded. They have been very carefully defined so as to conform to the principle which governs in such cases, namely, that fraud and bad faith must be shown on the part of such purchaser before his title can be disturbed. Such are the qualities which must have marked and distinguished the possession of the defendants, Lake and Palmer, at the time the mortgage was executed, showing unmistakably that it was their possession and not that of the party having the legal title of record. It must have been theirs openly, visibly, unambiguously, and without liability to misunderstanding or misconstruction. In what one of these particulars did their possession comply with the rule ? I undertake to say, in none of them. Was it their open, visible and unambiguous possession! Was it their possession, not liable to be misunderstood or misconstrued? These are the questions to be answered,'and answered as a stranger would answer them examining the premises for the first time, and with no other knowledge or information than such examination- would give. The rule is established for the benefit of strangers — of any person, who chooses to buy or receive in security. The registry is evidence to all the world of the state of the title, and who has it, and every one is entitled to deal with the person so having it as the true and lawful owner. Strangers may do so; and the question is, what would a stranger have said about the possession, had he seen it on the day the mortgage was made ? Had the mortgagee sent an agent to examine, he in all probability'would have been a stranger, and what .would he have said? The answer is plain. He would have replied that there was *85no person in actual possession; that the possession was vacant. And this was the precise character of the possession. It was what is called in cases of this kind a vacant possession, which imposes no obligation or duty of inquiry whatever. There was, therefore, nothing in the possession to bring it within.the rule according to its true sense and application. The improvements indicated that some one had been, and, perhaps, then was, in possession to the extent of making such improvements, but they indicated nothing more. They did not indicate that they were made by these defendants, or by any one for them. For all that appeared they might have been made by any other persons in the world, and were as strong evidence of the possession of any other persons as of the defendants. They were improvements made according to the ordinary course of husbandry upon lands of the kind throughout the country. There was nothing strange or unusual in their character. They were just such as "any owner would have made who was proceeding to open up a farm; and a stranger, knowing who the owner was, and proposing to buy of him, would have inferred that they were made by him or under his direction and authority. This inference would have been reasonable, just and proper — the only natural inference under the circumstances. It would have been the inference of the law upon the same state of facts on which the stranger was acting, because no one but the owner would have had the.lawful right to make or cause them to be made. . The conclusion, therefore, would have been, that the possession, so far as the state or condition of the premises indicated it to be actually in any person, was in the owner. If a stranger had bought under these circumstances, paid-full value, and recorded his deed, would he not have acquired a valid title as against the defendants? With no other knowledge or information- respecting the pos: session of the defendants than that which he had thus *86derived, or could have derived, from an examination of the lands, could he have been found guilty of any fraud or bad faith ? Could it have been said that there was any thing in the facts to have raised the slightest suspicion in the mind of an honest and prudent man, so as to have put him upon inquiry at all ? It seems to me clearly not.

But if the transaction had taken place at a different season of the year, in summer, for example, when the crops were growing and cattle grazing, would the case have been any different? The buyer and seller go together to the lands, the buyer to examine and the seller to point them out. The buyer sees the improvements, the crops growing and cattle grazing, but sees no person on the lands exercising any acts of ownership or control. He has been informed by the seller that the lands are partially improved, and that he has growing crops and stock upon them. Or if he has not been so informed, he inquires of the seller, and the latter informs him that the improvements, crops and cattle are his — that he put in the crops, or employed laborers to do so, and to attend the cattle. Would not the buyer, a stranger, acting on the information furnished by the record that the seller was the owner of the land, have acquired a valid title under such circumstances as against all the world ? The registered title, that shown by the record, is, to the stranger, or party having no other information, the only true one. To him the record imports verity. It is so intended by law; and when he acts upon it, he acts as one having positive knowledge that the party with whom-he deals lawfully owns and may lawfully dispose, and that no other person has any title or interest whatsoever. In such a case the apparent possession of the owner and grantor becomes the real and only possession to the stranger and purchaser. The latter looks upon it and sees nothing inconsistent with the title, possession and representations of his grantor. Nothing is more common *87than for lands to be owned, improved and cultivated in this way, without any actual residence upon or continued personal possession of them. The purchaser knows this, and, examining the land, sees nothing whatever, to manifest that any other person occupies or cultivates it. The possession is as manifestly and clearly that of his grantor as it can be that of any other person. But, more than this, he knows that his grantor owns it. He acts upon this knowledge and in this full belief, else he would not buy. To a person thus purchasing or advancing money upon a mortgage, what is there to put him upon inquiry ? What is there to cause him to doubt or suspect ? It seems to me nothing, clearly nothing at all. To affirm that there is, would be to affirm that a person so situated must act against all natural and legal presumptions and inferences, and must assume, because, by possibility, some other persons might have made the improvements and planted the crops, therefore that they did do so; and so the purchaser, before- he can safely buy, must make a journey throughout the neighborhood, town or county, I know not how far, inquiring of every inhabitant until he finds such persons, or finds that he is mistaken in his assumption. This would be a most extraordinary rule of conduct for the law to prescribe in such cases, and the law does not do so. Parties claiming under unregistered deeds and conveyances cannot protect themselves by this kind of doubtful, uncertain and ambiguous possession. They must be upon the lands themselves, to warn purchasers and answer questions which may be put to them. Purchasers having no knowledge of the facts are not bound to go off the premises in search of information. It is the business of the parties claiming such rights to bring it to them on the lands. And the reason of this is obvious. The fault is with the parties whose titles are not recorded. The law has made full provision for. the recording of all written instruments, properly acknowledged, etc., conveying any interest in lands, and if the *88title or claim of tbe parties is not evidenced by writing, but is equitable and resting on matters in pais, the courts are open for their protection, and the lis pendens is provided to be filed in the office of the register of deeds. In all cases, therefore, parties may have their titles or claims, whatever they may be, registered in the proper office, and it is their wrong and their neglect that they are not so registered. The law contemplates and requires that they shall be. It is always the fault and the wrong of such parties, therefore, that inquiry should ever become necessary, or that purchasers or mortgagees for value should. ever be put in jeopardy by reason of such unregistered titles.

So much for the question of possession in this case; concerning which I think it very clear that it was wholly insufficient to put a purchaser upon inquiry. It was not of a kind to show any notice to or knowledge in a purchaser that an adverse possession existed. The purchaser, as we have seen, must trust to appearances — to the visible condition of the premises at the time of sale, with respect to the fact of possession; and if there be nothing in these to awaken suspicion or cause inquiry, he must be held innocent, unless actual knowledge on his part be otherwise shown. The primary fact, therefore, or foundation, upon. which the mortgagee must have been charged, if at all, with constructive notice of the defendants’ equities, is wholly wanting. It is, of course, quite plain to be seen now, with all the facts in evidence before the court, that there was an adverse possession, at least for some purposes. As stated in the opinion of the court, the acts of the defendants may have been something more than mere trespasses, and may have constituted a disseisin, as between them and the holder of the legal title. But these are nothing to our present purpose. Because, with full knowledge of every fact, we can see that there was 'a change of possession as between the owner or mortgagor and the de*89fendants, it does not follow that a purchaser could have seen it. Indeed, it very clearly appears that he could not. And this seems to me to be the mistake, and the very simple one, on the part of the court, that, because we can see it, therefore the mortgagee or purchaser could.

But the evidence discloses some other facts which seem to enter into the consideration and judgment of my brethren. It was generally reputed throughout the neighborhood that LaJce claimed one of the tracts, and Palmer the other; and their agents or tenants, Black-wood and Thompson, resided in the neighborhood. These are the additional facts, and the only ones. These neighborhood reports and -rumors were proved by several witnesses; but there was no proof, or offer of proof, that any officer or agent of the mortgagee knew any thing about them. It was shown that Blackwood and. Thompson were agents to look after the lands and prevent trespassers from cutting the pine timber, etc.; but it was not shown, nor offered to be, that any agent or individual connected with the taking of the mortgage knew any thing about them, or that any such persons as they or their principals existed. The time has not yet arrived, I trust, when any person is to be convicted of fraud, and his property forfeited, upon such evidence as this. What would it have mattered to a purchaser, 'though the whole town had heard of Laké s and Palmer1 s claims, if he knew nothing about them ? Could he have been found guilty of fraud on their knowledge? And what would it have signified to him, that their agents resided in the neighborhood, so long as there was nothing in the possession to suggest the fact that they, or any one else, had any interest in or control over the lands ? The truth is, that all this testimony was irrelevant and inadmissible, and should have, been excluded, and especially the evidence oí rumors and reports. It is well settled that such rumors and reports, or mere *90general assertions that some other persons claim a title, are not sufficient to affect a person with notice. 4 Wis. 1; 5 id. 443.

I come now to the examination of some authorities directly touching the questions which I have thus discussed. And first I must refer to the case of Ely v. Wilcox, above cited, in this court, the facts of which will be found to have been very much stronger in favor of the party claiming by the unregistered conveyance than those here presented. The facts unfortunately are not stated in the report, and I give them here as they appear from the record. That was a tract of timbered land, situated in a new and sparsely settled country, upon which Ely, the owner and claimant by the prior unregistered deed, had a dwelling-house built of pine logs, hewed and well laid up, with shingle roof and glazed windows. The house was sixteen by twenty-two feet on the ground, and in front of it was an inclosure which had been cleared and cultivated as a garden. Ely acquired his title November 1, 1854. The conveyance to the defendant Wilcox was in May, 1856. Prom the date of Ely’s deed until within a few days before the date of that to Wilcox, Ely had lived very near the land, and during all the time had been exercising constant'acts of ownership over it. He had taken possession of the house and leased it to a tenant, by whom it had been occupied a considerable part of the time. He and several men in his employment, together with a surveyor or surveyors, had worked upon the land for days together at different times, laying it out into lots and blocks as an addition to the town of Superior. Lines and openings were cut and cleared by him through the woods, indicating the different streets and the size and location of the blocks. When the house was not occupied by his tenant it was used by himself and his men on such occasions to cook and sleep in. At other times it was locked up, and he kept the key. It was so *91locked, and the key in Ms possession, wken Wilcox purchased. His tenant had cut and taken wood from the land, and so had several other persons by his permission and direction. Such was the possession of Ely from November 1, 1854, to May 1, 1856, a period of one and one-half years, when he removed to a place about six miles distant. In less than one month afterward, namely, on the 27th of May, Wilcox acquired his title- It did not occur to the learned counsel in that case that neighborhood reports and rumors were competent evidence, for if it had, they could undoubtedly have proved, by one-half the inhabitants of the little village of Superior, the notoriety there of Ely’s claim. If this had been proved, and also that he had an agent in the vicinity, could it have made any difference with the case ? I think not. Either that case was wrongly decided, or judgment here should go against the defendants.

In McMechan v. Griffing, 3 Pick. 149, it was held that implied notice of a prior unregistered deed, to avoid a subsequent deed or attachment, must be not merely a probable but a necessary and tonquestionable inference from the facts proved. Such inference cannot in all cases be made from an open, peaceable, and exclusive possession. Thus, where a person, owning and in possession of a part of a lot of land not divided by a partition fence, purchased the residue, consisting principally of wood land, and which had not been occupied by the grantor, repaired the fence around the lot, depas-tured cattle, in it, sold trees from the part purchased, and removed an old hovel standing on the same part, it was held that these facts did not imply notice. And in the opinion the court say: “When a prior conveyance, not recorded until after one of a subsequent date, is attempted to be supported on the ground of fraud in the second purchaser, the fraud must be very clearly proved. This remark applies as well to implied as to express notice. The principle is the same in both. The *92fact of notice must be proved by indubitable evidence; either by direct evidence of the fact, or by proving other facts from which it may be clearly inferred. It is not in such case sufficient that the inference is probable; it must be necessary and unquestionable.” And again they say: “But it is not always true that a possession which, if adverse, would constitute a disseisin, would, under a deed not recorded, amount to implied notice. The cases depend on different principles.

In Buck v. Holloway’s Devisees, 2 J. J. Marshall, 180, the court say: “The only sensible rule is, that actual residence upon the land is notice to all the world of every claim which the tenant may legally assert in defense of his possession.” It might be going too far to say, a pri-ori, that this is in all cases necessary. But this, or something equivalent to it, must be shown. If the tenant is actually present on the land when the purchaser comes, so that he is seen in possession, that may suffice. There may be something in the nature of the improvements or use to warn the purchaser; as, if he sees a church, a school-house, or other public budding on the land, or a public burial place, or a pond of water used to supply a mill on the lands of another, and the like.

The case of Boggs v. Varner, 6 Watts & Serg. 469, is a very clear, strong and well-considered case, involving the questions here presented. Both parties deduced their title from on.e John Irwin. John Irwin conveyed to John Boggs, who sold by parol to William Boggs, the plaintiff’s ancestor. William Boggs ..entered and continued his possession, until 1822, when he went down the Ohio, taking his family with him, but leaving the house and some of his furniture in the care and custody of his sister, intending to return, but he did not. The sister rented the property to a man named Steel, who continued to occupy it until the house and furniture were consumed by fire, in 1825. The defendant Varner claimed under a deed executed by John Irwin, dated *93September 6, 1828, and recorded on the day of its date. The plaintiff, as rebutting evidence, offered, in connection, as follows: 1. A continued possession of the Boggses, up to December, 1825. 2. That James Yarner (the defendant), during all this period, lived on part of what was. originally the same lot, and was in habits of daily intercourse with the family of the Boggses. 3. The notoriety of the title of the Boggses, by every body in the neighborhood. The court overruled the offer, and sealed a bill of exceptions, and the case went up on this and one other question.

Upon this the court'said: “It must be remembered that at the time of the purchase in 1828, no person was in possession, and that the property had been vacant from the time of the fire in 1825, a period of three years. Had any person been lining on the property when it was bought by Yarnef, it is conceded it would be notice to the purchaser; for where there is a clear and unequivocal possession, it is constructive and legal notice, because it puts the purchaser on inquiry. 2 Watts, 275. But to whom must the nendee resort for information of title? Undoubtedly to the per son in possession when the bargain is made; for if the possession is vacant, it supersedes the necessity of further inquiry, for no case has yet been ruled which extends the doctrine of constructive notice so far as to visit him with all the consequences of notice, because he may have known a person to have been in possession at «any distant period of time before his contract. The law is not so unreasonable, and upon this point we do not wish to extend it further.

“The other parts of the offer were also properly overruled. There is no case yet where a jury has been permitted to infer the fact of notice, merely because the purchaser lived on the adjoining lot to the owner, or was intimate with him, or because it was notorious in the neighborhood that he was the owner. The evidence is too general, uncertain and indefinite to destroy a title *94for which a valuable consideration has been paid by the buyer. The recording acts were specially intended for the protection of purchasers, and they would be of problematical benefit if a jury were allowed to act or draw inferences to his prejudice on such loose, unsatisfactory testimony. The provisions of the act may be easily complied with, and at but little expense, so that owners are left without excuse; and if they will neglect their duty in this particular, it is but just that the consequences be visited on their own heads. A court of equity acts on the conscience; and as it is impossible to make any demand on the conscience of a man who has purchased for a valuable consideration, bona fide and without notice of any claim on the estate, such a man is entitled to the peculiar favor of a court of equity. As every presumption is in favor of the subsequent purchaser, where the former owner is guilty of neglect his title cannot be postponed except by evidence which taints his conduct with fraud. And this, it is obvious, ought not to be done by testimony in its nature vague and indefinite, and leading to no certain results, such as that he ought to have known of the prior title because he lived near the owner, in the same town, perhaps, or on the next lot, and that he was well acquainted with him, or because the title was well known to others. This may all be true, and yet at the time he pays his money he may be ignorant of any other title than his own. It is not just that inferences should be strained in favor of the person by whose default the mischief has been done. We think the court was right in rejecting the evidence, because, admitting the truth of it, no legitimate conclusion adverse to the purchaser can be drawn from it. When you seelc to act on the conscience of the purchaser it must be by evidence direct and certain, and not vague and indeterminate.'''1

And I invite particular attention to the case of Mechan v. Williams, 48 Pa. St. 238, to the facts and to the opin*95ion of the court by Stjrohg-, J. The party there, residing in the immediate vicinity, who had purchased the land for the purpose of obtaining fuel, wood and coal, and had used it according to the custom of the country, cutting wood and taking coal or overdrift, asked an instruction that' this was sufficient notice of his claim, which was refused. The court say: “It certainly is the law that the possession of land, which is equivalent, in effect, to notice of rights in the possessor, must be distinct and unequivocal. It must be occupancy — 'something more than successive1 and occasional entries on the land. All the authorities agree that possession is not notice, except during its continuance, and that, even when his vendor is out of possession, a vendee is not bound to take notice of the antecedent possession of third persons. A purchaser is bound to inquire only of those on the land at the time of his purchase. The authorities are equally clear, that, to be effective as notice, possession, even at the time of sale, must be distinct and unequivocal.” And again: “What makes inquiry a duty is such a visible state of things as is inconsistent with a perfect right in him who proposes to sell.”

In Campbell v. Brackenridge (8 Blackford, 471) the equitable owner had taken possession of the lot, built a house upon it, moved into the house, and lived there for three months. He then moved out of the house, leaving it unoccupied, 'and about two months afterward the other party acquired the title. It was held no notice. The court say: “A purchaser, when the possession is vacant, is not bound to inquire of the late occupier what was the nature of his title, and will not be held to have implied notice of the information which he might have obtained by inquiry.”

And the same rule was held by Sir J. Leach, V. C., in Miles v. Langley (1 Russ. & Myl. 39), that, if the possession is vacant, the purchaser is not bound to inquire.

And, in Smith v. Yule (31 Cal. 180), one of the points *96decided was: “If the apparent possession of land is consistent with, the title appearing of record, it is not the duty of the purchaser to make any inquiry concerning the title, beyond what the recording office shows.” The following is the language of the court: “Inquiry does not become a duty when the apparent possession is consistent with the title appearing of record. * * * Where the vendor is in the apparent possession, the subsequent purchaser, finding the title of record in the vendor,1 is put upon no further inquiry, because the possession appears to be according to-the title.”

These authorities are directly to the point, and fully sustain the positions for which I contend; and I know of none to the contrary. There are, no doubt, some loose and ill-considered cases in .the books upon this subject of notice, and it is not impossible, in the multitude, that some may be found sustaining or seeming to sustain contrary doctrines ; and if there be, it is because they are not well considered, and not because these doctrines are not the sound and true ones.

To the authorities above cited I would add the following : Cook v. Travis, 20 N. Y. 402, 403; Hewes v. Wiswell, 8 Greenl. 94 ; Scott v. Gallagher, 14 Serg. & Rawle, 333; Billington v. Welsh, 5 Binney, 132; Hanrick v. Thompson, 9 Ala. 409 ; Plumer v. Robertson, 6 Serg. & Rawle, 184; Fort v. Burch, 6 Barb. 60, 78; Cook v. Travis, 22 id. 338, 359 ; Siter v. M’Clanachan, 2 Gratt. 280, 313 ; Grimstone v. Carter, 3 Paige, 421; Great Falls Co. v. Worster, 15 N. H. 412 ; Bell v. Twilight, 2 Foster, 519 ; Dickey v. Lyon, 19 Iowa, 544.

Some stress is laid in the opinion upon the value of the improvements. I certainly need not dwell upon that, since the question of notice or fraud is in no possible way affected by it. The purchaser in good faith without notice buys and pays for the improvements with the land, and his title is certainly not to be defeated because they may have been of more or less relative value.

*97I have nal; gone through this case without noticing .the fact that there was no proof or offer of proof, from beginning to end, to show that the mortgagee or an7 agent or officer knew the possession of the defendants, such as the proofs show it to have been. The authorities all proceed upon the principle that the party to be affected with constructive notice by possession must have actual knowledge of such possession, and this has raised the query in my mind, whether purchasers, buying on the faith of the recorded title, are bound at their peril to visit the premises and ascertain that there is no person in possession, claiming under an unrecorded deed or other title. This is a very important question, and I do not propose to discuss it at all. I wish merely to observe, that, if such be the law, as I find it very frequently assumed to be, the effect would seem to be to nullify the registry laws as to a very large class of cases — indeed, all cases where possession immediately follows conveyance. The point is noticed by the court in Hewes v. Wiswell (8 Grreenl. 94), where it is said: “An entry and open and exclusive possession and perception of profits under an unregistered deed has often been considered and pronounced as equivalent to tile registry of the deed. This cannot be correct; the language is too strong, and is on that very account deceptive.” The court proceed to show very clearly that this cannot be true in particular cases, but do not advert to any general reason. It is the manifest spirit and intent of the registry laws, that all deeds and conveyancés shall be recorded. They are enacted to afford a remedy against the mischiefs arising from secret or concealed conveyances, or secret or concealed charges upon estates. 2 Sngden on Vendors, 214, marginal paging. See also Harris r. Arnold, 1 R. I. 125 ; Lessee of Henry v. Morgan, 2 Binney, 502; Vaughn v. Tracy, 22 Mo. 415; Scott v. Gallagher, 14 Serg. & Rawle, 333; Grimstone v. Carter, 3 Paige, 421; Cook v. Travis, 22 Barb. 359; *98and Fleming v. Townsend, 6 Geo. 103. “Now, it is obvious,” says Sir Edward Sugden, “that no more effectual remedy could be devised than by requiring that every deed by which, any interest in lands or tenements was transferred, or any charge created thereon, should be put upon the register, under the peril, that, if it was not found thereon, the subsequent purchaser, for a valuable consideration, without notice, should gain the priority over the former conveyance by the earlier registration of his subsequent deed.” If, however, all purchasers are bound to take notice of the possession, or conclusively presumed to know it, as some of the authorities seem to suppose, then it follows that there can be no forfeiture when there is possession under an unregistered deed, and that parties taking possession need never record their deeds. They are just as safe without recording them as with. Entry and possession is fully equivalent to registry, and the penalty or sanction of the statute is entirely gone. Purchasers may proceed thus for generations, and so we have all the mischiefs, uncertainty and confusion which the statute was designed to prevent. Secret conveyances may exist, the same as before the statute was enacted, and creditors, purchasers and all others interested in estates be subjected to the same doubts, hazards and inconveniences, and the same expensive proceedings be required to settle questions.of title. If such be the rule, I doubt its correctness, and ' doubt whether the statute allows such construction.

I think the judgment below should be reversed.

By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.