First National Bank v. Clifton Armory Co.

128 P. 810, 14 Ariz. 360, 1912 Ariz. LEXIS 158
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 19, 1912
DocketCivil No. 1234
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 128 P. 810 (First National Bank v. Clifton Armory Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First National Bank v. Clifton Armory Co., 128 P. 810, 14 Ariz. 360, 1912 Ariz. LEXIS 158 (Ark. 1912).

Opinions

FRANKLIN, C. J.

This action involves the rights, respectively, of a chattel mortgagee and a judgment creditor of [362]*362the Clifton Armory Company to a certain building in Clifton, Arizona, the building having been erected by the Clifton Armory Company on leased premises. The owner of the land was not made a party to the suit. The ease before us is not tinctured with fraud or intimation of it.

The appellant assigns as error the rejection of evidence and the insufficiency of the evidence to sustain the judgment. The record in the case is very unsatisfactory, and from the record on the present appeal we can. only determine as the law of the ease the one question: Is the instrument offered in evidence by the appellant sufficient in form of its execution as a chattel mortgage so as to entitle it to be filed in the office of the county recorder and thereby import constructive notice to creditors of the mortgagor? The character of the building as a real fixture or a personal fixture, in other words, whether the building is personal property or a part and parcel of the freehold, must on the state of this record and on the present appeal be left to be determined in the first instance by the lower court on the retrial of the ease.

Paragraph 3282, Revised Statutes of Arizona (section 23), provides: “No chattel mortgage shall have any legal force or effect except between the parties, unless the residence of the mortgager and mortgagee, the sum to be secured, the rate of interest to be paid, when and where payable, shall be set out in the mortgage; and the mortgager and mortgagee shall make affidavit that the mortgage is bona fide and made without any design' to defraud or delay creditors, which affidavit shall be attached to such mortgage.”

The instrument before us contains all of the recitals required by the foregoing provision. But it is contended that the mortgage is not properly executed because, at the end of the mortgage proper and before the affidavit required to be attached to the mortgage, the instrument is not signed by the mortgagor. The note set out in the instrument and to secure the payment of which the mortgage purports to have been given is signed “Clifton Armory Company, by Paul Reisinger, President, B. R. Lanneau, Secretary,” with the corporation seal affixed. At the end of the mortgage and before the required affidavit, it is recited: “In witness whereof, the said Clifton Armory Company has caused these presents to be signed by its president . . . ”—but without any signa[363]*363ture of the corporation or its officers, or the seal of the corporation affixed. Then follows the jurat and affidavit attached to the mortgage and signed by the president and secretary of the Clifton Armory Company, mortgagor, and the cashier of the First National Bank of Clifton, mortgagee. The affidavit is subscribed and sworn to before a notary public with his official signature subscribed thereto and his official seal affixed. The execution of the mortgage is also acknowledged before a notary public by the said Beisinger and Lanneau, as president and secretary, respectively, of the Clifton Armory Company. However, we do not attach much, if any, importance to this acknowledgment, as this appeal does not present the case of a copy of the mortgage being presented to the recorder for filing instead of the original instrument. It is well settled that it is not necessary that the parties should sign the affidavit attached to a chattel mortgage unless such signature is required by some statute. Bloomingdale v. Chittenden, 75 Mich. 305, 42 N. W. 836; Norton v. Hague, 47 Minn. 405, 50 N. W. 368; Garrard v. Hitsman, 16 N. J. L. 124; Alford v. McCormac, 90 N. C. 151; Shelton v. Berry, 19 Tex. 154, 70 Am. Dec. 326. It is sufficient if it appears that the affidavit was taken by a competent officer. Ede v. Johnson, 15 Cal. 53; Pope v. Kirchner, 77 Cal. 152, 19 Pac. 264; Lutz v. Kinney, 23 Nev. 279, 46 Pac. 257; A. P. Hotaling & Co. v. Brogan, 12 Cal. App. 500, 107 Pac. 711; Fairbanks, Morse & Co. v. Getchell, 13 Cal. App. 458, 110 Pac. 331.

While under our statute we do not deem it essential to the validity of the mortgage that the required affidavit be subscribed to by the parties, good practice would suggest to one not to hazard an unsigned affidavit in any important matter. When a security is given in the form of a chattel mortgage, it is the purpose of the law to protect parties from each other and to see that third parties who have rights shall not be prejudiced through the want of care or honesty of parties to the mortgage, and the parties, in order to receive such protection, should be cautious in observing the requirements of the statute in the execution and filing of such instruments. While the mortgage in question is not drawn with that precision to be expected of one skilled in the legal accuracies required, we are of the opinion that the method employed in the [364]*364execution of the instrument before us, taking in view the whole instrument, shows the true object and intent to be the execution of the mortgage as the act of the corporation, and entitled to be filed in the office of the county recorder as constructive notice to those acquiring rights in the property. That the signatures are at the end of the affidavit and not at the end of the instrument proper we do not think should be held to defeat the rights of the mortgagee.

In this ease the seal of the Clifton Armory Company, a corporation, mortgagor, was not affixed to the mortgage. And, while a seal is not essential to the validity of a chattel mortgage alleged to have been executed by a corporation, still in its absence there is no presumption that the act is a corporate act, and it devolves upon the party relying upon the mortgage to show that the officer or agent had authority to execute it. So in the absence of such preliminary proof the court was right in excluding it.

Mr. Thompson in his work on Corporations, volume 2, section 1928, says: “A general rule may be stated to the effect ffiat, when ,an instrument is produced with the impression of the seal of the corporation, it is prima, facie the act of the corporation, and no evidence is necessary to show by whom it was affixed, or that any steps were taken to confer authority on the officer or agent who affixed it, or that any steps had been taken by the corporation to authorize the execution of the instrument.”

The chief effect of the use of a seal by the corporation is with reference to the burden of proof, and while the mere affixing of the corporate seal does not make the writing the act of the corporation unless it was affixed by authority, it follows, of course, that the prima facie case may be overcome by showing the seal to have been affixed without proper authority from the corporation.

What standing the Blinn Lumber Company, one of the parties defendant, has in the case cannot be ascertained from the record. True it is that both appellant and appellee intimate that a sheriff’s certificate of sale was put in evidence, but the transcript of the record certified as correct by the trial judge discloses the following: “Mr. Laine (counsel for the L. W. Blinn Lumber Company) : I want to introduce in evidence the duplicate certificate of sale under the judgment as brought [365]*365out by Mr. Kearney. Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
128 P. 810, 14 Ariz. 360, 1912 Ariz. LEXIS 158, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-national-bank-v-clifton-armory-co-ariz-1912.