Recording Flashcards
Recording system questions deal with this kind of hypo
Hypo where O is a double dealer who conveys the same piece of property to A, and then to B.
Two bright line rules for recording statutes
- If B is a bona fide purchaser, and we are in a notice jurisdiction, B wins, regardless of whether or not he records before A does.
- If B is a bona fide purchaser and we are in a race-notice jurisdiction, B wins if he records properly before A does.
Recording statutes exist to protect only these kinds of parties
bona fide purchasers and mortgagees (creditors).
In order to be put into the recording system, B must prove he is this.
Grantee must prove he is a bona fide purchaser.
Two elements for B to qualify as a bona fide purchaser
- Must have purchased the land for value, and
- Had no notice of the previous grantee at the time of his purchase.
Element 1 for BFP- Purchase for value
- Value means substantial pecuniary consideration. Can be a low value, as long it was for money.
- If the B came to his claim to title through devise, descent, or gift, he will not be protected by the recording system.
Element 2 for BFP- Lack of notice
- Buyer must have not noticed someone else got there first.
- 3 forms of notice: AIR
- Actual: Buyer actually and literally learns about the previous grantee
- Inquiry: Buyer’s routine inspection would have revealed the previous conveyance. Buyers have a duty to inspect before closing.
- Record: If the previous buyer properly records her deed before the current buyer, the previous buyer will always win.
If the buyer is proven to be a BFP, he must turn to this to see if he is victorious over the other grantee.
The buyer must look at his jurisdiction’s recording statute.
VA Law on Inquiry Notice
VA does not recignize the concept of inquiry notice.
The three types of recording statutes
- Notice Statute
- Race-Notice Statute
- Race Statute
The notice statute
- About 1/2 of jurisdictions follow this statute
- In this statute, B wins, as long as he is the last bona fide purchaser to take.
- It does not matter if A is a BFP or even if they ultimately recorded first.
- Though they must have recorded at the time B checked, because that would have given him notice and he’d no longer be a BFP
- It does not matter if B never records, as long as he is the last BFP to take.
The Race-Notice Statute
- About half the states use this statute.
- B wins if he accomplishes 2 things:
- B must be a BFP, and
- B must win the race to record
- It is not enough for B to be the last BFP to take, he must also be the first to record properly.
- Example: O conveys to A, then to B, and B checks the records and sees no one. A subsequently records before B records. B loses.
The race statute
- Only in a small minority of statues
- The first to record wins, regardless of whether they are a BFP or not.
- Notice doesn’t matter either.
VA’s Recording Statute
- Language of VA recording statute is consistent with a notice jurisdiction bc it gives last BFP the win even if he doesn’t record.
- BUT, VA S. Ct. characterized VA as race-notice. So, a subsequent BFP will prevail only if she records before the prior grantee.
- If A was a BFP who recorded before B purchased/checked for himself, B would not have notice and A would win.
- BUT, A must also do this.
- A must record properly within the chain of title