Cribben v. Deal

27 P. 1046, 21 Or. 211, 1891 Ore. LEXIS 33
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 2, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 27 P. 1046 (Cribben v. Deal) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cribben v. Deal, 27 P. 1046, 21 Or. 211, 1891 Ore. LEXIS 33 (Or. 1891).

Opinion

Lord, J.

This is a suit in equity brought by the plaintiffs to have a deed of general assignment set aside and declared void and to have the attached property applied in payment of their judgment. The single proposition of law involved is whether the name of the grantee can, by some one authorized upon parol authority of the grantor, be inserted in a blank left in a deed of general assignment, after the deed has been signed, sealed and acknowledged, but before delivery. For the purposes of this case, the facts are these: That the deed of assignment was made on the seventeenth of November, 1888, by C. E. Deal, J. C. O’Reilly, and J. W. Brockett, partners doing business under the firm name of [213]*213Deal, O’Reilly & Co., to Thomas Connell for the benefit of creditors; that it was in all things completed and signed and sealed and acknowledged, except that a blank was left for the name of the grantee; that Mr. F. A. E. Starr was authorized to insert as the name of such grantee any person satisfactory to himself and the members of such firm; that on the following day, Mr. Starr, with the consent of the members of such firm, inserted the name of Thomas Connell as assignee in such deed, and the deed was delivered to Thomas Connell, and on the next day was recorded. Upon this state of facts, the contention is, that such deed is void because the name of Thomas Connell was not inserted when the deed was signed and sealed.

It is said in Shepherd’s Touchstone, 54, that “every deed well made must be written, i. e., the agreement must all he written before the sealing and delivery of it; for if a man seal and deliver an empty piece of paper, or parchment, albeit he do therewithal give commandment that an obligation or other matter shall be written in it, and this be done accordingly; yet this is no good deed.” This is founded upon that ancient and technical rule of the common law, that the authority to make a deed, or to alter, or fill a blank in some substantial part of it, cannot be verbally conferred, but must be created by an instrument of equal dignity. As the deed was under seal, to alter or complete it by the insertion of the name of the grantee, required the authority to be under seal. So firmly rooted was this principle that it mattered not with what solemnities a deed may have been signed and sealed, unless the grantee’s name was inserted, and delivery was made by him, or some one legally authorized under seal, it was a nullity. It imposed no liability on the party making it, nor conferred any rights upon the party receiving it; it was in fact no deed. Hence, it was held that parol authority to fill a blank with the name of a grantee could not be conferred without violating established principles of law, and rendering the deed void. This doctrine still prevails in England.

[214]*214It is true that in the case of Texira v. Evans, cited in Master v. Miller, 1 Anstr. 225, Lord Mansfield held otherwise, but this was in effect overruled in Hibblewhite v. McMorine, 6 M. & W. 200, on the ground that an authority to execute a sealed instrument could not be given by parol, but must be given by deed, although this latter case seems more or less trenched upon by the decision in Eggleston v. Gutteridge, 11 M. & W. 465, and by Davison v. Cooper, Id. 778, and in West v. Steward, Id. 47. But the rule has never been universally accepted in this country; and however the holding of some courts may be, still the better opinion and the prevailing current of authority is, that when a deed is regularly executed in other respects, with a blank left therein for the name of the grantee, parol authority is sufficient to authorize the insertion of the name of such grantee, and that when so filled out and delivered, it is a valid deed.

It is true that Chief Justice Marshall, in U. S. v. Nelson, 2 Brock. 74, felt bound to follow the ancient rule, but his opinion clearly indicates he felt that the authority to fill a blank in an instrument under seal should be held to be valid. He says: “The case of Speake v. U. S. 9 Cranch, 28, in determining that parol evidence of such assent may be received, undoubtedly goes far toward deciding it, and it is probable that the same court may completely abolish the distinction in this particular between sealed and unsealed instruments.” Again: “ If this question depended on those moral rules of action, which in the ordinary course of things are applied by courts to human transactions, there would not be much difficulty in saying that this paper ought to have the effect which the parties at the time of its execution intended it should have.” And he concludes with this statement: I say with much doubt, and with a strong belief that this judgment will be reversed, that the law on the verdict is, in my opinion, with the defendants.”

The rule was purely technical, and the outgrowth of a state of affairs and condition of the law which does not [215]*215now exist. The reason of the law is the life of it, and when the reason fails, the law itself should fail. At the present day the distinction between sealed and unsealed instruments is fast disappearing, and the courts are gradually doing away with them. As Judge Redeield said: “But it (the rule) seems to he rather technical than substantial, and to found itself either on the policy of the stamp duties, or the superior force and sacredness of contracts by deed, both of which have little importance in this country. And the prevailing current of American authority and the practical instincts and business experience and sense of our people are undoubtedly otherwise.” (Redfield Law Railways, Yol. 1,124.)

In Drury v. Foster, 2 Wall. 24, the court says: “Although it was at one time doubted whether parol authority was adequate to authorize an alteration or addition to a sealed instrument, the better opinion of this day is that the power is sufficient.” Again in Allen v. Withrow, 110 U. S. 119, the court says: “It may be and probably is the law in Iowa, as in several states, that the grantors in a deed conveying real property, signed and acknowledged with a blank for the name of a. grantee, may authorize another party by parol to fill up the blank.” “But,” he continues, “there are two conditions essential to make a deed thus executed in blank operate as a conveyance of the property described in it; the blank must be filled by the party authorized to fill it, and this must be done before or at the time of the delivery of the deed to the grantee named.” In the case at bar these conditions were fulfilled.

In Inhabitants etc. v. Huntress, 53 Me. 89; 87 Am. Dec. 535, the court held that a party executing a deed, bond, or other instrument, and delivering the same to another as his deed, knowing there are blanks in it to be filled necessary to make it a perfect instrument, must be considered as agreeing that the blanks may be thus filled after he has executed it. In delivering the opinion of the court, KENT, J., said: “The rule invoked is purely technical. .Practically there is no [216]*216real distinction in this matter between bonds and simple contracts. There is no more danger of fraud or injury or wrong in allowing insertions in a bond than there is in allowing them in a promissory note or bill of exchange, and in neither can unauthorized alterations be made with impunity.

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Bluebook (online)
27 P. 1046, 21 Or. 211, 1891 Ore. LEXIS 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cribben-v-deal-or-1891.