Allen v. Hernon

328 P.2d 301, 74 Nev. 238, 1958 Nev. LEXIS 124
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1958
Docket4041
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 328 P.2d 301 (Allen v. Hernon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allen v. Hernon, 328 P.2d 301, 74 Nev. 238, 1958 Nev. LEXIS 124 (Neb. 1958).

Opinion

*239 OPINION

By the Court,

Badt, C. J.:

The main question here presented is whether the trial court properly applied the rule, with respect to negotiable instruments, that as between innocent parties, the one whose negligence has occasioned the loss must bear it. The facts establish this case as a classic example for the application of the rule as applied by the district court.

*240 (1) The action to set aside a note and trust deed was commenced by the Allens, husband and wife, makers of the note and trust deed involved, against Clark County Mortgage Company, a corporation, payee of the note and beneficiary under the trust deed, which was the party guilty of the fraud, and the Hernons, husband and wife, who purchased the paper from the mortgage company. The note and trust deed in the sum of $6,000, both dated as of September 30, 1955, were executed by the Allens about October 14, 1955, and delivered to the mortgage company on that date. The trust deed ran to Pioneer Title Insurance and Trust Company, as trustee. The mortgage company promised to deliver its check to the Allens as soon as the trust deed was recorded. Mistakes, both as to the date of the note, the maturity of the note and the interest rate therein specified, required the execution of a second and then a third note. Mistakes in the description of the property and in other respects required the execution of a second trust deed and, as the first trust deed had already been recorded, required the execution of a reconveyance of the land conveyed by the first trust deed. Although the execution of the second and third notes, the second trust deed and the reconveyance under the first trust deed occupied a great many pages of the testimony and a great deal of the argument contained in the briefs, this in no way affects the determination of the main issue. The mortgage company never paid any money to the Allens. It sold and assigned the trust deed to the Hernons for a $6,000 cash consideration, which the Hernons paid to the mortgage company. The Allens alleged that the Hernons took the paper with knowledge of the fact that the Allens had received no consideration for the same. The court, however, made specific findings to the effect that the Hernons took without any knowledge of the situation, and there is ample evidence in the record to support this finding. It specifically found that the allegation of the complaint that the Hernons took with notice was untrue. In its opinion from the bench, the court said: “There is no evidence that the *241 Hernons had any knowledge of any tricky business, so to speak, by the mortgage company, none at all.” The Allens had had prior dealings with the mortgage company, had borrowed money from it, reposed confidence in it, put their note and deed of trust in its hands, even executed a second and third note and a second trust deed, relied upon its promise that it would pay them the proceeds. That this trust was misplaced, that the Allens received no consideration, that they were defrauded, are unfortunate and tragic. facts. The judgment they received against the mortgage company is, we judge from the record, worthless. The mortgage company is insolvent. Its affairs were the subject of a grand jury investigation — all matters of little consolation to the Allens, who must suffer the loss of their misplaced confidence. The Hernons were holders in due course under the provisions of our negotiable instruments law, NRS 92.059, 92.066, “free from defenses available” to the Allens against the mortgage company, id. 92.064.

(2) Error is assigned in giving effect to the deed of trust because it was proved that Donald A. Hulihan, an agent of the mortgage company, who executed the certificate of acknowledgment by the Allens, was not at the time a notary public. Appellants refer to our statutes requiring acknowledgment of instruments conveying real property and providing that upon such acknowledgment they may be recorded. Picetti v. Orcio, 57 Nev. 52, 58 P.2d 1046, 57 Nev. 65, 67 P.2d 315, is cited by appellants in support of the contention that the defective acknowledgment made the instrument void. Such is not the holding of the case, nor are the facts in point. Appellants refer to many cases in which the certificate of acknowledgment for one reason or another has been held void. We are here concerned, however, with the simple question whether lack of an acknowledgment or a defective acknowledgment before a notary public rendered the deed of trust void as between the Allens and the mortgage company on the one hand and the Hernons on the other hand as transferees of the mortgage company. *242 Such is not the case. The statutory provisions relating to the acknowledgment and recordation of such instruments are for the protection and security of creditors and purchasers. Such provisions do' not prevent the passing of title by the grantor to the grantee. Kimbro v. Kimbro, 199 Cal. 344, 249 P. 180, citing 1 Devlin on Real Estate, 3d Ed., 817. In American Law of Property, vol. III, sec. 12.60, page 307, it is said: “However, except as made so by statute, the certificate of acknowledgment is not a part of a deed and is required only for the purpose of entitling it to be recorded and to be received in evidence without other proof of execution.” No statute of this state voids a deed, as between the parties, for failure of acknowledgment.

(3) Appellants insist, however, that in any event the lack of an acknowledgment certificate by a duly authorized notary public on the deed of trust rendered the instrument void because the property comprised the unrecorded homestead of the parties, and that in such case under NRS 123.230 the improperly acknowledged deed of trust was void. That section provides: “That no deed of conveyance or mortgage of a homestead as now defined by law, regardless of whether a declaration thereof has been filed or not, shall be valid for any purpose whatever unless both the husband and wife execute and acknowledge the same as now provided by law for the conveyance of real property.” It is true that appellants lived upon the premises and made it their home. However, the record shows that they held the property not as community property but in joint tenancy. Accordingly, NRS 123.230 has no application. Mullikin v. Jones, 71 Nev. 14, 278 P.2d 876.

(4) Appellants also assert that the assignment of the deed of trust from the mortgage company to the Hernons was void because it purported to be acknowledged before one Donald Aguirre who likewise was not at the time a notary public. Aguirre executed a certificate of corporate acknowledgment of the execution of this instrument. *243 What we have said with reference to the acknowledgment of the deed of trust by the Allens applies to like extent to the acknowledgment of the assignment.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
328 P.2d 301, 74 Nev. 238, 1958 Nev. LEXIS 124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-v-hernon-nev-1958.