Luthi v. Evans, 223 Kan. 622, 576 P.2d 1064 (Supreme Court of Kansas 1978)
Luthi v. Evans is a leading property and oil-and-gas recording case on the limits of constructive notice under a recording system that relies on indices keyed to legal descriptions.
Does the recording of a Mother Hubbard assignment that describes conveyed property only in blanket, county-wide terms provide constructive notice to a subsequent purchaser of a specific leasehold interest that is not specifically described in the instrument?
Under Kansas recording law, to impart constructive notice to subsequent purchasers, a recorded instrument must contain a description sufficiently specific to identify the real property affected or to provide the means for its identification so that it can be properly indexed and discovered through a reasonable title search. A Mother Hubbard clause is valid and effective between the parties, but as to third parties it does not give constructive notice of interests in specific tracts not adequately described in the record. A subsequent purchaser for value without actual or constructive notice—i.e., a bona fide purchaser—prevails over an earlier unindexed or insufficiently described conveyance.
No. The recorded Mother Hubbard assignment did not give constructive notice of the Kufahl lease to Evans because the lease was not specifically described and could not be indexed to that tract. Evans, a subsequent purchaser for value without actual notice, prevails. The Mother Hubbard assignment remains effective between its parties but is ineffective against Evans as to the Kufahl lease.
Luthi v. Evans is a staple of Property and Oil & Gas courses for its treatment of constructive notice, chain-of-title searching, and the limits of Mother Hubbard clauses. It teaches that the recording act protects reasonable searchers who rely on tract-based indexing and that blanket descriptions cannot be used to spring undiscoverable claims on later purchasers. Practically, the case instructs drafters to follow up blanket assignments with promptly recorded instruments identifying each affected tract so that the public record provides meaningful, searchable notice.