Abney v. Ohio Lumber & Mining Co.

32 S.E. 256, 45 W. Va. 446, 1898 W. Va. LEXIS 113
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 3, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 32 S.E. 256 (Abney v. Ohio Lumber & Mining Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Abney v. Ohio Lumber & Mining Co., 32 S.E. 256, 45 W. Va. 446, 1898 W. Va. LEXIS 113 (W. Va. 1898).

Opinion

McWhorter, Judge:

The Ohio Lumber & Mining- Company, a foreign and insolvent corporation, on the 23d of January, 1897, executed and delivered to W. H. Millinger and William Nold, assignees, a deed of assignment of all its real estate and personal property, for the benefit of all its creditors, to be paid o rata, with the following certificate of acknowledgment: “The State of Ohio, Columbiana County — ss.: I, James W. Clark, a notary public in and for said county and state, do hereby certify that S. J. Rohrbaugh, president of the Ohio Lumber and Mining Company, and J. L. Yoder, secretary of said company, whose names, respectively, are signed to to the foregoing instrument, bearing date on the 23d day of January, 1897, have this day acknowledged before me in my said county the signing and execution of said instrument, for themselves, respectively, and for and on behalf of said the Ohio Lumber and Mining Company, and acknowledged that they affixed the corporate seal of said company to said instrument by direction of a resolution of tne directors of said company, and have acknowledged that the same in all respects is their free act and deed, as such officers respectively, and the full act and deed of said corporation for the purposes and uses herein set forth. I further certify that S. J. Rohrbaugh and J. L. Yoder are known to me to be the individuals and officers described in and who executed said instrument. I further certify that William H. Millinger and William Nold, whose names are signed to the foregoing instrument, have this day acknowledged the same before me in my said county. Witness my hand and official seal, this 23d day of January, A. D. 1897. James W. Clark, Notary Public. [Notarial Seal. J. W. Clark, Columbiana County, Ohio.]”

On the 25th day of the same month the. said assignment, with the certificate of acknowledgment indorsed thereon, was admitted to record in the clerk’s office of the county court of Wayne County. Two days after, on the 27th day [448]*448of said January, Abney, Barnes & Co., creditors of said company, instituted tbeir action of assumpsit in the circuit court of Wayne County, suing- out their writ from the clerk’s office of said court returnable at the February rules, 1897, and on the same day filed an affidavit claiming the rig-ht to recover nine hundred and thirty-nine dollars and seventy-one cents, and gave bond for attachment, upon which the clerk of said court issued an order of attachment against the estate of said corporation, which was duly levied on both the personal effects and real estate of defendant, the levy on the personal property being made on the 27th of January, and on the real estate on the 29th of January, 1897. On the 2d day of February, 1897, the said deed of assignm ent*was reacknowledged, and on the 4th of February was 'again recorded, together with the new certificate of acknowledgment. The assignees, W. H. Millinger and William Nold, appeared in court on the 2d day of February, 1897, and tendered their petition in the said action of assumpsit, setting up their claim to the property of the defendant corporation by virtue of said deed of assignment, and praying that the claim to the property and its possession be adjudicated and determined according to the statute in such case made and provided, and that said order of attachment be quashed and abated, and that said levy be released, and for general relief; to the filing of which petition plaintiffs objected, and by consent the natters arising on said objection were passed to a future day of the term, and on the 10th day of February the court overruled the objection, and filed the petition, and the parties agreed as to the facts and submitted the matters of law and fact to the court in lieu of a jury. On consideration the court held that the deed of assignment was a valid deed, and that the same was duly and properly recorded on the 25th of January, and that the claim of said assignees to the property attached was paramount and superior to the said attachment, and ordered that the levy of said attachment on all of said property, except the money, if any, in the Huntington National Bank, be released and discharged, and that the officer levying the same deliver all of said property to the said assignees, and rendered judgment for petitioner’s costs; to which ruling [449]*449of the court in directing the release of the real estate levied on by plaintiffs, and in holding that said deed of assignment was duly recorded on the 25th of January, 1897, and that the title of said assignees to said real estate was paramount to the lien of plaintiffs’ attachment, plaintiffs objected and excepted and on motion of plaintiffs the operation of so much of the order and judgment as affected the real estate was suspended for sixty days to give plaintiffs time to obtain a writ of error, and the plaintiffs moved the court to set aside its finding and judgment, and grant them a new trial, of which the court took time until the next term to consider. At the June term, 1897, of said court, the order of publication awarded having been duly published aud posted, judgment was rendered for plaintiffs in the action of assumpsit, by the court in lieu of a jury for nine hundred and thirty-nine dollars and seventy-one cents, but the court declined to order a sale of the property attached, and reserved all matters pertaining to a sale for further consideration and action. And on the 4th day of December, 1897, the court, having maturely considered the motion of plaintiffs to set aside the finding and judgment rendered upon the petition of the assignees holding that said petitioners were entitled to the possession of the property levied upon by the order of attachment, and grant them a new trial, overruled said motion, and refused to set aside the judgment and grant a new trial, to which rulings plaintiffs excepted. Plaintiffs obtained a writ of error and supersedeas.

It is insisted by appellants that under section 5, chapter 74, Code, the deed of assignment was void as to their creditors by reason of the fact that the certificate of acknowledgment to said deed was so defective under the statute providing for acknowledgments of deeds and other writings by corporations that it could not be admitted to record, and, if not properly recorded, under said section 5, chapter 74, it remained void as to creditors and subsequent purchasers for valuable consideration without notice, notwithstanding it was written in the record book in the clerk’s office. Sections 2, 3, chapter 73, Code, provide what instruments of writing shall be recorded, and what is necessary to appear on such writing, or how it [450]*450shall be proved to entitle it to recordation; and, if it is wanting in certificate of proper acknowledgment of proof required by the statute, it is not recordable. Section 5, .chapter 73, prescribes what shall be evidence of proper acknowledgment of a corporation to entitle the writing acknowledged to be recorded. The officer or agent of the corporation must be first sworn or affirmed by the magistrate taking the acknowledgment, and he must depose and say (1) that he is such officer or agent of the corpoi'ation described in the writing bearing date on the-day of -,18 — ; (2) that he is authorized by said corporation to execute and acknowledge deeds and other writings of said corporation; (3) that the seal affixed to said writing is the corporate seal of said corporation; and (4) that.said writing was signed and sealed by him in behalf .of said corporation, by its authority duly given.

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Bluebook (online)
32 S.E. 256, 45 W. Va. 446, 1898 W. Va. LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/abney-v-ohio-lumber-mining-co-wva-1898.