Kee v. Ewing

1906 OK 86, 87 P. 297, 17 Okla. 410, 1906 Okla. LEXIS 48
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 6, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 1906 OK 86 (Kee v. Ewing) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kee v. Ewing, 1906 OK 86, 87 P. 297, 17 Okla. 410, 1906 Okla. LEXIS 48 (Okla. 1906).

Opinion

Opinion of the court by

Gillette, J.:

The only question presented by the brief of plaintiff in error is a question arising under the following assingment of error:

“The court erred in finding that the mortgage of the Union Trust Company was a first lien, and that Kee had a second and third lien on said property,”

*413 Tbe facts were found by a referee, from whose finding of facts it appears that the Union Trust Company had a mortgage upon the lands involved, given June 5, 1901, and recorded March 24, 1902, executed by one Ewing and-wife. On November 27, 1901, Ewing and wife ezecuted a mortgage toj the plaintiff in error, O. B. Kee, which was recorded the following day, November 28, 1901.

On March 30, 1902, the plaintiff in error purchased another note of Ewing, which was secured by a deed of Ewing and wife, on the same property and recorded April 8, 1902.

At the time of the execution and acknowledgment of the two last named instruments the plaintiff in error was president of the National Exchange Bank of Weatherford, O. T., and the notary taking the acknowledgment of Ewing and wife to each of said instruments was O. H. Oafky, who was at that time cashier of and a stockholder in said bank.

The National Exchange Bank of Weatherford is shown by the record and findings to be interested in the mortgage and deed taken in the name of the plaintiff in error.

The findings of the trial court that the mortgage of the Union Trust Company was a first lien, although recorded subsequent to the recording of the mortgage taken in the name of the plaintiff in error was based upon the fact that such mortgage and deed was acknowledged before O. H. Cafky, an interested person.

It is argued by the plaintiff in error, that under the provisions of section 888, WTlsj Statute, which provides: “Except as herein provided, no aclmowledgment or recording shall be necessary to the validity of any deed, mortgage, *414 or contract • relating to real estate as between tbe parties •thereto; but no deed, mortgage, contract, bond, lease, or other instrument relating to real estate, .other than a lease for a period not exceeding one year and accompanied by actual possession, shall be Valid as against third persons unless acknowledged and recorded as herein provided;, except, ^actual notice to such third persons shall be equivalent to due acknowledgment and recording,” that the laches of the Union Trust Company in not recording its mortgage left the record free and clear when Kee took his mortgage, and in so doing relied upon the record.

That in such transaction, he, Kee, was the third person referred to in the statute above quoted. That therefore he had parted with his money to Ewing relying upon a clear record, which was clear only because of the laches of the Union Trust Company, and urges as the law of this proposition that ■when one of two innocent persons must suffer because of the fraud of another, it shall be the. one who placed it within the power of such other to do the wrong.

This argument can have no application to the debt of Kee secured by the deed, as the note to secure which the deed was given was made in November, 1901, for an obligation due to one Wells, who thereafter sold the same to plaintiff in error, and afterwards on the 10th day of March, 1902, Ewing gave a quit claim deed to secure the payment thereof, to the property in question.

As this deed was not recorded by Kee for nearly a month after its execution, and' fifteen days after the recording of the trust company’s mortgage, it was at the time of bring *415 ing this suit clearly an inferior lien to that of the trust company’s mortgage.

The obligation of Ewing to Wells was not executed upon the faith of a clear title to the real estate of Ewing, hence the rule invoked by the plaintiff in error could not be relied upon, if at all, to protect the transaction.

At the time the trust company’s mortgage was recorded, Kee, so far as the deed was concerned, and the trust company, were both guilty of laches in the recording of their seeurities. The trust company’s mortgage was recorded first and it clearly thereafter took precedence as a conveyance.

With reference to the mortgage of the plaintiff in error to the land in question we have had much more trouble to Teach a conclusion.

It was taken as a security for a direct obligation from Ewing and wife to Kee upon the property in question when the record was silent as to the obligation from Ewing to the trust company, and there are equities in favor of its enforcement in preference to the mortgage of the trust company for this reason.

The mortgage of the plaintiff in error was recorded on the 28th of November, the day following its execution and delivery, and four months prior to the recording of the mortgage to the Union Trust Company, which clearly gave it precedence if the same was entitled to record at that time. It is urged, however, by the defendant in error that it was not entitled to record, and did not, because of being recorded, acquire a superior right of enforcement over the mortgage of defendant in error, because of the fact that the National *416 Bank of Weatherford had some interest therein, and O. H. Cafky, cashier of said bank, and stockholder therein, took the acknowledgment of Ewing and wife to its execution.

Our statute requires the due acknowledgment of the execution of a written instrument affecting real estate before the same is entitled to record and may be properly recorded, and it is clear under the authorities that a person cannot acknowledge the execution of an instrument of this kind made to himself, and we think they are equally clear that an officer of a bank who is a stockholder therein may not take an acknowledgment of such an instrument made to secure a debt made payable to the bank, and if so taken and acknowledged the instrument would not be entitled to record, and such record if made would not give to it the force and effect of a recorded instrument.

But that is not this case. The note and mortgage was made to the plaintiff in error, O. B. Kee, and this action was brought by Kee to enforce the same. There is nothing on the face of the mortgage to indicate either that the bank had any interest in the mortgage, or that Cafky had any interest in the bank, or in the debt secured by the mortgage. The instrument was fair upon its face, and as such was entitled to record when presented to the register of deeds for that purpose.

It was found by the referee that the National Exchange Bank of Weatherford was interested in this note and mortgage, which finding is justified from the evidence, but the nature and extent of its interest is not found by the referee, nor does the evidence disclose the same. May the validity of' this mortgage as against the interests of the Union Trust *417 Company be impeached because the National Exchange Bank was interested in it, and O. H.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1906 OK 86, 87 P. 297, 17 Okla. 410, 1906 Okla. LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kee-v-ewing-okla-1906.