McMillan v. Wooley

51 P. 1029, 6 Idaho 36, 1898 Ida. LEXIS 18
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 7, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 51 P. 1029 (McMillan v. Wooley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McMillan v. Wooley, 51 P. 1029, 6 Idaho 36, 1898 Ida. LEXIS 18 (Idaho 1898).

Opinion

QUARLES, J.

— The defendants in this ease filed a general demurrer to the complaint, which was sustained by the district court. From the judgment dismissing the action the plaintiff appeals. The facts as they appear in the complaint are as follows : Hyrum S. Wooley executed his promissory note to plaintiff for the sum of $4,600, on the twenty-seventh day of February, 1894, and on the same day said Wooley and his wife executed a mortgage to the plaintiff on eight lots or parcels of land, to secure the payment of said note at its maturity, August 27, 1894. The mortgage covered some community property, the homestead, and one parcel of separate property of the wife. December 18, 1894, the plaintiff commenced an action in the district court of the fifth district, in and for Bear Lake county, [39]*39tbe county in which said property is situated, for the foreclosure of the said mortgage. To this action the defendant, Hyrum S. Wooley, made default, but his wife, Minerva M. Wooley, filed her demurrer to the said complaint, on the ground that it did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, which demurrer was sustained by the district court, on the ground “that the certificate of acknowledgment of Minerva M. Wooley attached to the said mortgage deed did not conform to the requirements of the law in such cases made and provided, and that the same was defective and void (she, the said Minerva M. Wooley, being then and there a married woman, as alleged in said cause), in this, to wit, that the officer faking the acknowledgment of said Minerva M. Wooley did not certify that he made her acquainted with the contents of said mortgage deed on an examination without the hearing of her husband,” whereupon the said district court rendered judgment, dismissing the said action as to the said defendant Minerva M. Wooley, on the twenty-second day of August, 1895. On the twenty-fifth day of February, 1896, the court found that there was due from said Hyrum S. Wooley to plaintiff, on said mortgage debt, the sum of $5,600, and rendered judgment foreclosing the said mortgage on the said community property, but refusing to foreclose it on said homestead and separate property of Mrs. Wooley. Thereafter the said community property was sold under the said decree, the proceeds of which paid the costs and disbursements and $769.45 of the principal debt, leaving a balance due of $4,592, with interest thereon from April 18, 1896, still unpaid. The said mortgage was acknowledged by Wooley and wife before Douglas Hix, then probate judge of said Bear Lake county. The said foreclosure action was brought by the plaintiff through his attorneys, Bell & Breen and Hart & Sons, who appeared at the trial for the said plaintiff. The attorney who represents the plaintiff in this action does not appear to have been an attorney for the plaintiff in the said foreclosure case; nor does it appear in the complaint in this action when said attorney was employed for or on behalf of the said plaintiff; yet it is alleged in said complaint in this action that “the plaintiff, through and by his attorney T. L. Glenn, immediately after the making and [40]*40entering of said decision dismissing the said canse, carefully and diligently inquired, through and by his said attorney T. L. Glenn, of the said Douglas Hix, the officer taking and certifying the acknowledgment aforesaid, as to whether he had, on an examination without the hearing of her husband, made her acquainted with the contents of the said instrument, and 3 upon such examination, and without the hearing of her husband, she acknowledged that she executed said instrument, and that she wished not to retract the execution thereof, whereupon the said Douglas Hix informed said T. L. Glenn, attorney for the plaintiff, as aforesaid, that Hyrum S. Wooley, the husband of the said Minerva M. Wooley, was at all the times present and within the-hearing of the said Minerva M. Wooley while he took her acknowledgment, and certified the same”; that, relying upon the said statement of said Hix, plaintiff commenced, February 5, 1896, an action against said officer and his sureties on Eis official bond, to recover damages sustained by plaintiff on account of the gross negligence of the said officer in taking and certifying a void acknowledgment of said Mrs. Wooley to the said mortgage; that this last-named cause came on for trial on September 2, 1896, and on the said trial said Hix testified that he informed Mrs. Wooley of the contents of the said mortgage on examination apart from and without the hearing of her said husband, whereupon she acknowledged to him that she executed the same, and that she did not wish to retract the execution of the same; that said action was decided in favor of the defendants, said Hix and his sureties, and judgment rendered in their favor; that the plaintiff was misled by the said statements of Douglas Hix to the said Glenn, attorney for the plaintiff, touching the acknowledgment of said mortgage by Mrs. Wooley, for which reason he did not amend his complaint in the said foreclosure action so as to seek a reformation of the certificate of acknowledgment of Mrs. Wooley to the said mortgage; that the only defect in said certificate of acknowledgment was that it failed to state that said officer made Mrs. Wooley acquainted with the contents of said mortgage on examination separate and apart from and without the hearing of her husband, which was actually done, as plaintiff can now prove by said Douglas Hix [41]*41and one William Pendry, residents of said Bear Lake county. The foregoing was substantially the facts stated in the complaint in this action, which was filed in the district court on the twenty-sixth day of January, 1896. The prayer to said complaint is in the following words and figures, to wit: ^Wherefore plaintiff prays that the judgment on the demurrer of Minerva M. Wooley in the foreclosure proceedings hereinbefore set forth, dismissing the said cause as to her, be set aside and held for naught; that the certificate of acknowledgment to the mortgage deed of said Hyrum S. Wooley and Minerva M. Wooley be amended and reformed to conform to the facts as set forth herein; that plaintiff have judgment against the defendant Hyrum S. Wooley for the sum of four thousand five hundred and ninety-two dollars ($4,592), with interest thereon from the eighteenth day of April, 1896, at the rate of eight per cent per annum; that that piece or parcel of land herein described as the separate property of Minerva M. Wooley and the homestead of defendants be sold according to law; and that the proceeds be applied to the payment of the judgment to be found herein; or, if that cannot he done in this case, that the said judgment of dismissal, as in this prayer first above described, be vacated, set aside, and held for naught; and that this plaintiff have leave to amend his complaint in the said foreclosure suit so as to set up the facts touching the execution of the mortgage deed by the said Minerva M. Wooley, and the certification of her acknowledgment thereto so as to reform the same to conform to the law in such cases made and provided, and for such other and proper relief as in equity he may be entitled to.”

The only question in this ease that we are called on to decide is the correctness of the lower court in sustaining the demurrer to the complaint. It will be seen that the complaint does not set forth in haec verla the certificate of acknowledgment to the said mortgage. We are unable to say from the record before us whether the said certificate absolutely failed to state whether the officer informed Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
51 P. 1029, 6 Idaho 36, 1898 Ida. LEXIS 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcmillan-v-wooley-idaho-1898.