The only question presented in this case is, did the appellees, the attaching creditors of Smith, have notice of the sale of the land to the appellants, before the levy of their attachment ?
The proof is clear that Smith had sold and conveyed the land to appellants for a valuable consideration, and without fraud to appellants, on the 27th Feb., 1856, and the deed duly filed for record and recorded on the 12th March thereafter. The attachment was issued on the 9th of March.
The bill alleges that appellees, when they levied the attachment, knew of this sale to appellants.
Milner, who alone answered the bill, states that he had no personal knowledge of the sale, nor of the consideration paid, but, from information and belief, presumes the sale and consideration may be as stated in the bill, and that he "has no knowledge of the execution of a deed as stated in the bill, nor of the record thereof, and calls for proof. He also denies possession by appellants at the time of the levy, but alleges it was in the possession of Smith, and further denies that he had any direct knowledge of the sale and conveyance of the land to the appellants, complainants. A replication was filed to this answer, and testimony taken before the master.
Freeman Westfall, one of the witnesses for complainants, details a conversation he heard between Mr. Milner, the defendant, and William Trent, at Trent’s house, in Black Oak Grove, on a Sunday in March, 1856, when he was on his way to the county seat to take out the attachment, in which he spoke of some lands lying somewhere between Allen’s Grove and Salt Creek, and said that a man by the name of Smith had sold the land and squandered his property and left, and that Smith had kept a store there and owed him about a thousand dollars; that he was going to take out an attachment on the land and try to secure his money; thinks, but is not certain, there was something said about getting his attachment levied on the land before the deed was recorded.
William Trent corroborates substantially this testimony, though he says nothing about a levy before recording the deed, or anything about a deed.
Jacob Propst testified, that about the first of March, Smith and the complainants were at his house, and Smith handed a deed to one of the two, and observed, that they were to take possession of the land that spring, excepting one acre to keep a storehouse on; did not see the deed.
Powell Engle, for complainants, testifies, that he rented of Cox ten acres of the Smith land, between the first and fifth of March; that it was known among a good many of the neighbors that complainants owned the land; that they moved on to the land about the first of April; that he relinquished bis contract for the ten acres, and never cultivated it.
John S. Wilbourn, the clerk of the Circuit Court, sworn on the part of complainants, says, that when a certain attachment was about to issue against a man by the name of Smith, in favor of Milner, either Milner, or Moss, his attorney, remarked that they understood that Smith had sold his lands, and they wanted an attachment immediately. This was on Monday; the attachment issued same day; that on request of Milner he searched the records to see if there was any conveyance from Smith, and found none; that as recorder of Mason county, he gave a man by the name of Smith a certificate that there was no incumbrance on the land, he saying he wanted it to show to some person to whom he was about to sell the land, to satisfy them, and this was sometime before issuing the attachment.
William L. Woodward, on the part of the defendants, testifies as to the premises being occupied by Mrs. Smith and family on the day the attachment was levied, and that complainants did not take possession until four or six weeks afterwards.
W. D. Moss, on the part of the defendants, says, that he was present at Trent’s at the time spoken of by Westfall and Trent, and heard all the conversation, and not a word was said about their being in a hurry to get to Havana to get out an attachment on the land, because it was conveyed; says he went to Havana with Milner from Trent’s, to search the records to find if Smith owned any land and had conveyed it; found land in Smith’s name and no conveyance on record; went from Havana to Smith’s place on the following Monday with the sheriff and Milner, and found a woman calling herself Mrs. Smith in possession of the premises. Says that he first heard of Cox and Powell claiming to have purchased the land, at the house of Mrs. Bleakley on the after part of the same day on which the attachment was levied on the goods; that prior to this time, he, and he believes Milner, had no knowledge of the claim of the complainants.
The testimony of Mr. Moss is not sufficient to weaken or affect that of Westfall and Trent, and Wilbourn, the clerk of the court. They state distinctly a knowledge on the part of Milner that Smith had sold the land before the attachment was sued out, and the inference is very strong, that Westfall could not be mistaken when he said he thought, but was not certain, Milner said he wanted to attach the land before the deed was recorded —all the facts squint that way. Even Milner does not deny that he had heard of the sale.
We are satisfied the facts proved, and Milner’s admissions in this answer, charge him with notice that the land had been sold by Smith before he levied the attachment on it. The case comes fully within the principles recognized by this court in the case of Doyle et al. v. Teas et al., 4 Scam. 202, where we say, the doctrine in relation to notice is, that each case must be governed by its own peculiar circumstances ; and where a court is satisfied that a subsequent purchaser has acted in bad faith, and that he either had actual notice of a prior sale or agreement, or might have had that notice, had he not willfully or negligently shut his eyes against those lights which, with proper observation, would have led him to a knowledge of the facts: The defendant is certainly chargeable with notice in law, because he had information sufficient to put him upon inquiry, as he admitted he had heard Smith had sold the land.! In all cases where the evidence is satisfactory that a party claiming had heard of the sale of the land before he purchased, and from a source entitled to any reasonable credit, and under circumstances not likely to be forgotten, the court would hold that the duty devolved upon him of tracing the matter out, and ascertaining its truth. Such knowledge is sufficient to put him upon inquiry, and makes him chargeable with knowledge of such other facts as might be ascertained by the evidence of ordinary diligence and understanding. ) Rupert v. Mark, 15 Ill. R. 542.
When Milner heard that Smith had sold the land to complainants, which Engle states was known among a good many of the neighbors, a little inquiry would have resulted doubtless in the exhibition of the unrecorded deed to the defendant, if he was desirous of seeing it, or of being fully satisfied on that point. He had the means for originating and carrying on a full inquiry, but did not do so. It is unnecessary to multiply authorities on this point.
The levy of the attachment did not cut off the complainants’ right to the land—it must be postponed to that right, and consequently, the decree must be reversed and tlje cause remanded, with instructions to the Circuit Court to restore the injunction, and to make the same perpetual.
Decree reversed.