DeCourcy, Lafourcade & Co. v. Barr

45 N.C. 181
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJune 5, 1853
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 45 N.C. 181 (DeCourcy, Lafourcade & Co. v. Barr) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
DeCourcy, Lafourcade & Co. v. Barr, 45 N.C. 181 (N.C. 1853).

Opinion

PearsoN, J.

The defendant, Barr, executed three mortgages. The first and second to the other defendants, and the third to the plaintiffs, who seek to avoid the second and to redeem the first mortgage, and for an account and decree of foreclosure.

The second mortgage recites that it was made by Charles Barr, of the toion of Wilmington, county of New Hanover, and State of North Carolina, to John D. W". Hooks & Co, of the City of New York. The following certificates are annexed :

“State, City and County of New York.

“ I, John Bissell, Commissioner for the State, and resident in “ New York, appointed by the Governor of the State of North “ Carolina, under the laws, and commissioned under the great “ seal of the State, duly affirmed and qualified to take testimony “and acknowledgments, &c. &c., to be used and recorded in “ that State, do by this instrument, given under my hand and “ official seal, certify that on the 10th day of October, 1850, be- “ fore-me in the State of New York, personally appeared Charles “ Barr, signer and sealer of the annexed instrument, and ac- “ knowledged the same to be his act and deed, for the uses and “ purposes therein set forth.-

“JoHN Bissell,

“ Commissioner for North Carolina.”

“ State of North Carolina : 1 County Court Clerk’s Office, “ New Hanover County, f 4 November, 1850.

“ The execution of this deed is duly proven by the certificate *183 “ of John Bissell, Commissioner for North Carolina.' Let it be registered.

“ Teste L, H. Maktin, Clerk,

By J. E. Pine, Dep. Clerk.”

Received and registered.

the 4th November, 1850. D. E. Bunting, Reg’r.”

The plaintiffs insist that .this deed has not been duly proven and registered, and is therefore inoperative as to them ; for that John Bissell had no authority as commissioner, to take the acknowledgment of Barr. And the question as prqsentpd, is the authority of the commissioner confined to deeds executed by nonresidents, or does it also extend to deeds executed by a resident of .this State, who happens to be in another State, and there executes and acknowledges a deed 1

The authority of the commissioners is confined to deeds executed by non-residents. The Act of. 1827, (Rev. Stat. ch. 37, sec 5,) provides that deeds &c for land in this State, executed by any person or persons residing in any of the United States other than this State, or in any of the territories, or in the District of Columbia,” may be acknowledged or proven before some one of the Judges of supreme jurisdiction, &c.; and the deed and certificate being exhibited in the Court of Pleas and Quarter Sessions, or to some one of the Judges of the Supreme or of the Superior Courts of this State, shall be ordered to be registered with the certificates thereunto annexed, &c. The Act of 1830, (Rev. Stat. ch. 21, sec. 2,) provides that the Governor may appoint commissioners in any of the other States, District of Columbia, or territories, who shall have authority to take the acknowledgment or proof of deeds, &c., for land in this State, and such an acknowledgment or proof certified by the commissioner, shall have the same force and effect, and be as good and available in law for all purposes, as if the same had been done before some one of the Judges of supreme jurisdiction &c., in any other State, &fc.

The probate of any deed for land in this State, may be taken by the Court of Pleas and Quarter Sessions of the county where *184 the land lies, or by one of the Judges of the Supreme or Superior Courts of this State. This is the general law. By the Act of 1T84, (Rev. Stat. ch. 37, sec. 4,) the Court of Pleas and Quarter Sessions of the county in which the land lies, may direct a dedinvus to two or more commissioners in the State where the subscribing witness or grantor resides, empowering them to take the proof or acknowledgment of the deed, whereupon the deed, dedimus and certificate shall be registered, &c. This exception to the general law was made, because when the grantor or subscribing witness were non-residents, it was inconvenient for them to come to our State. For the same reason, the 10th section provides, u vyhere it is represented to the Court or Judge, that a feme covert fc so aged or infirm that she cannot travel, or is a resident of another country, (misprinted in the Revised Statutes, county. Pierce v. Wanett, 10 Ire. 449,) a dedimus may issue to two or more commissioners, to take her private examination. The 11th section prescribing the form of the dedimus,,u it being represented, that she is not an inhabitant of our State.” The exception is obviously confined to non-residents. It was found however that it did not go far enough to meet the inconvenience in regard to non-residents ; because it. was necessary to apply for a dedvmus in each case. To remedy this, the. Act of 1827 allowed deeds executed by any person or persons, residing in any of the United States other than this State,” to be acknowledged on the proof thereof taken, before any Judge of supreme jurisdiction. Here again, the exception by its very terms, is confined to non-residents. Even this, did not answer the purpose. For to say nothing of the fact that the Judges of other States are under no obligation to act as commissioners of our Courts, the result was, that scarcely one deed out of ten was properly certified, owing, no doubt, to the fact that the mode of authentication differs in some particulars in almost every State. This suggested the Act of 1830, by which the Governor is to appoint some fit person in the other States, a commissioner for North Carolina, whose authority and jurisdiction are put on the same footing with that before given to the Judges of supreme jurisdiction in the other States. It is clear, the purpose of the statute was to provide a general commissioner, so as to avoid the necessity of a special *185 commission in each case when the grantor or witness resided in another State ; consequently the commissioner has no authority jto take the acknowledgment or proof of deeds, except such as are executed by non-residents. If a citizen of this State can go to New York, execute a deed there, and acknowledge it before a commissioner, upon the same construction, a deed executed by a citizen of this State may be taken to New York and acknowledged before a commissioner. In other words, a commissioner has the same jurisdiction as a Judge, or the County Courts of our own State ; whereas the statute, in so many words, puts him on a footing with the Judges of supreme jurisdiction in any other State except our own.

Mr. Wright called our attention to the fact, that the 6th and-7th sections of the 37th chapter, in reference to deeds executed in foreign countries,

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Bluebook (online)
45 N.C. 181, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/decourcy-lafourcade-co-v-barr-nc-1853.