Congress, having provided, through the Act of February 19, 1903,
c. 707, 32 Stat. 841, and the provisions of Mansfield's Digest as
thereby extended to the Indian Territory, that instruments
affecting the title to land, to be valid against subsequent
purchasers for value, should be recorded or filed in the office of
the clerk or the deputy clerk of the United States Court for the
Indian Territory at the place of holding court in the recording
district in which the land was located, afterwards, by the Act of
June 21, 1906, c. 3504, 34 Stat. 343, created and defined a new
recording district, naming a place for recording and for holding
court therein, but an interval of some days occurred between the
date of the act and the time when a deputy clerk was appointed and
qualified for the new district and opened the office for reception
of instruments.
Held that the law made no provision
whereby, during this interval, a deed of land in the new district
might be filed in an older district in which the land was
previously located, and that a deed so filed was not constructive
notice to subsequent purchasers who bought several months after the
recording office in the new district was opened. P.
249 U. S.
84.
The provision made by the Act of February 19, 1903,
supra, for transfer of recorded instruments to the indices
of new recording districts applied only to instruments recorded
before the date of the act.
Id.
153 P. 1101 affirmed.
The case is stated in the opinion.
Page 249 U. S. 80
MR. JUSTICE Day delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a contest between claimants to the ownership of a tract
of land now part of Carter County, Oklahoma, and prior to June 21,
1906, a part of the 20th Recording District, Ryan (office of the
recording district), Indian Territory. Thereafter it was in the
29th Recording District, Duncan (office of the recording district),
Indian Territory.
The facts so far as pertinent are:
On the 27th day of June, 1906, Wilburn Adams, who held title to
the land, made and delivered a deed for the same to the plaintiff
in error, Whitehead, which deed was filed for record in the office
of the 20th Recording District
Page 249 U. S. 81
at Ryan, Indian Territory, on the 28th day of June, 1906, and
was duly recorded. Afterwards, Adams and wife made a warranty deed
of the same property to James O. Galloway, dated November 16, 1906,
and recorded November 22, 1906, in the office of the 29th Recording
District of the Indian Territory at Duncan. Galloway, on the 24th
day of December, 1906, conveyed the same to Winfield S. Pressgrove
and his wife, which deed was recorded at Duncan. Pressgrove and
wife executed to the Travelers' Insurance Company of Hartford,
Connecticut, a mortgage on the land dated March 22, 1907, recorded
April 5, 1907, in the office of the 29th Recording District at
Duncan, Indian Territory. Pressgrove and wife executed a mortgage
to the Atkinson, Warren & Henley Company dated March 22, 1907,
recorded April 24, 1907, in the office of the 29th Recording
District at Duncan.
On June 21, 1906, Congress passed an act (34 Stat. 343):
"That, in addition to the places now provided by law for holding
courts in the Southern Judicial District of Indian Territory,
courts shall be held in the Town of Duncan, and all laws regulating
the holding of the courts in the Indian Territory shall be
applicable to the said court hereby created in said Town of Duncan.
That the territory next hereinafter described shall be known as
Recording District numbered twenty-nine, beginning at a point where
township line between townships two and three north reaches the
east boundary line of Oklahoma Territory; thence east on said
township line twenty-four miles to where it intersects with range
line three and four west; thence south on said range line twelve
miles to where it intersects the base line between townships one
north and one south; thence east along said base line six miles to
the range line between ranges two and three west; thence south
twelve miles along said range line to the township line between
townships two
Page 249 U. S. 82
and three south; thence west thirty miles along said township
line to where it intersects with the east line of Oklahoma
Territory; thence north along said line twenty-four miles to the
place of beginning, and the place of recording and holding court in
said district shall be Duncan."
Prior to the passage of this act of Congress, the lands involved
in this case were located in the 20th Recording District of the
Indian Territory, known as the "Ryan district." But this act made
them a part of the 29th Recording District, known as the "Duncan
Recording District." On June 30, 1906, C. M. Campbell, who was then
clerk of the United States Court for the Southern District of the
Indian Territory, appointed C. N. Jackson deputy clerk and
ex
officio recorder for the newly created 29th Recording
District, with headquarters at Duncan. C. N. Jackson took and
subscribed the oath of office and filed his bond on June 30, 1906,
and his appointment was duly approved by the United States Court at
Ardmore on the same day. He arrived at Duncan and first opened his
office on July 7, 1906, and the first entry made upon the books was
upon that date. No recording office was opened at Duncan prior to
July 7, 1906, when C. N. Jackson arrived and opened one.
From the time of the conveyance of the lands to Pressgrove
(December 24, 1906), he has been in the actual possession
thereof.
The lower court and the Supreme Court of Oklahoma decided in
favor of Galloway and his successors, holding that the recording of
the deed, made to Whitehead at Ryan, was not constructive notice to
the subsequent purchasers. 153 P. 1101,
rehearing denied
without opinion, 157 P. xxiii.
At the time of the passage of the statute of June 21, 1906,
another statute provided in effect (32 Stat. 841, 10 Fed.Stats.,
1st ed., p. 130):
That chapter twenty-seven of the Digest of the Statutes
Page 249 U. S. 83
of Arkansas of 1884 be extended to the Indian Territory so far
as the same is applicable and not inconsistent with any law of
Congress; that the clerk or deputy clerk of the United States court
of each of the courts of the territory should be
ex
officio recorder for his district and perform the duties
required of the recorder in the chapter of Mansfield's Digest,
hereinafter referred to. The duty was placed on each clerk or
deputy clerk to record in the books provided for the office all
deeds, mortgages, etc. Instruments theretofore recorded with the
clerk of the United States Court for the Indian Territory were not
required to be again recorded, but should be transferred to the
indexes without further cost, and that such records theretofore
made should be of full force and effect. That whenever in said
chapter (Mansfield's Digest) the word "county" occurs, there should
be substituted the word "district," and wherever the words "state"
or "State of Arkansas" occur, there should be substituted therefor
the words "Indian Territory," and wherever the words "clerk" or
"recorder" occur, there should be substituted the words "clerk or
deputy clerk of the United States court." The statute further
provides that all instruments of writing the filing of which is
provided by law should be recorded or filed in the office of the
clerk or deputy clerk at the place of holding court in the
recording district where said property may be located.
The provisions of Mansfield's Digest, which Congress extended to
the Indian Territory so far as applicable, provide (Mansfield's
Digest 1884, c. 27, § 671):
"No deed, bond, or instrument of writing, for the conveyance of
any real estate, or by which the title thereto may be affected in
law or equity, hereafter made or executed, shall be good or valid
against a subsequent purchaser of such real estate for a valuable
consideration without actual notice thereof, or against any
creditor of the person executing such deed, bond, or instrument
obtaining
Page 249 U. S. 84
a judgment or decree which by law may be a lien upon such real
estate unless such deed, bond, or instrument, duly executed and
acknowledged, or approved, as is or may be required by law, shall
be filed for record in the office of the clerk and
ex
officio recorder of the county where such real estate may be
situated."
Congress made no provision whereby deeds to lands in the new
district were to be recorded at Ryan in the old district pending
the opening of the office in the new district at Duncan. The
provision as to transfer of recorded instruments to the new
indexes, 32 Stat. 842, applied to instruments theretofore recorded.
See Bank v. Keys, 229 U. S. 179.
Cases cited by plaintiff in error where statutes provide for the
organization of new counties, and holding that, until such new
counties are organized, the place for recording is the old county
where the lands are situated, are not apposite. Congress itself
declared and defined the new recording district, and the applicable
provisions of Mansfield's Digest provided that no conveyance should
be constructive notice against a subsequent purchaser unless such
deed should be filed for record in the office of the clerk and
ex officio recorder of the district where the real estate
was situated. The statute is explicit, and when Whitehead bought
from Adams, the requirement of the law was plain that the deed
should be filed for record at Duncan in the new district.
See Astor v.
Wells, 4 Wheat. 466. But, it is said, at the time
of the conveyance to Whitehead, no office had been established at
Duncan. This fact, however, did not continue Ryan as the place for
recording deeds for lands in the new district.
The requirements of the legislation are positive, making Duncan
the place for filing the deed in the new recording district where
the lands are situated. The plaintiff in error urges that, until an
office was opened at Duncan, it was impossible to record a deed
there. This
Page 249 U. S. 85
fact does present an anomalous situation, not to be remedied,
however, by judicial construction in derogation of positive and
controlling legislation.
Moreover, by the agreed statement of facts, it appears that a
deputy clerk, who became
ex officio recorder, was
appointed June 30, 1906, and opened his office for the transaction
of business at Duncan on July 7, 1906. The conveyance from Adams to
Galloway was made on November 16, 1906. Had Whitehead filed his
deed for record at Duncan after the recording office was opened
there and prior to November 16, 1906, Galloway and the subsequent
purchasers would have had constructive notice by means of this
record of the prior conveyance. But all that Whitehead did was to
file his deed at Ryan after the lands had become part of the Duncan
district. After the opening of the Duncan office, it was his duty,
if he would charge others with constructive notice, to file his
deed in the office at Duncan. Had he done this, he would have had a
conveyance of record which would have been constructive notice to
subsequent purchasers. Such constructive notice was not conveyed to
Galloway and the subsequent purchasers by the filing of the deed
for record at Ryan in the old district. It results that the
judgment of the Supreme Court of Oklahoma must be
Affirmed.