Middlecoff v. Hemstreet

67 P. 768, 135 Cal. 173, 1901 Cal. LEXIS 668
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 23, 1901
DocketL.A. No. 1130.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 67 P. 768 (Middlecoff v. Hemstreet) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Middlecoff v. Hemstreet, 67 P. 768, 135 Cal. 173, 1901 Cal. LEXIS 668 (Cal. 1901).

Opinion

HAYNES, C.

This action was brought by the plaintiff, appellant here, to foreclose a mortgage made by defendant C. S. Hemstreet, on April 16, 1896, to Lawrence Middlecoff, since deceased, upon certain lands situated in the county of Riverside, to secure a promissory note of that date for $250, for services to be thereafter rendered, and which mortgage was recorded in the recorder’s office of said Riverside County on April 21, 1896. The defendant Emily Hemstreet is the wife of said mortgagor; and three days after said mortgage was recorded she filed a declaration of homestead upon the same lands described in said mortgage, for the benefit of herself and husband. The court found in favor of the plaintiff, against the defendant C. S. Hemstreet, for the amount due upon the promissory note, but held that the mortgage was invalid as against the homestead, because of the insufficiency of the certificate of acknowledgment to entitle the mortgage to be recorded. No question is made as to the validity of the homestead, except as against the mortgage, nor as to the sufficiency of the findings to support the judgment. The only question discussed and to be decided is whether the certificate of the acknowledgment of said mortgage was such as to entitle it to be recorded. If it was, Mrs. Hemstreet had constructive notice of the existence of the mortgage when she filed her declaration of homestead, and if it was not sufficient, she had no notice, either actual or constructive, of its existence.

The mortgage describes the property mortgaged as situated in the county of Riverside, and the certificate of acknowledgment, as set out in the findings, is as follows:—

‘ ‘ State of California, County of San Diego, ss.
“On this 16th day of April, one thousand eight hundred and ninety-six, before me, J. W. Ryan, a justice of the peace of the township of San Jacinto, in said county, residing *175 therein, duly commissioned and sworn, personally appeared C. S. Hemstreet, known to me to be the person described in, and whose name is subscribed to, the within instrument, and he acknowledged to me that he executed the same.
“In witness whereof, I have hereunto set my hand and affixed my official seal, at my office in the county of San Diego, the day and year first above written. Í<T XXT _
el. W. xCYAN,
“.Justice of the Peace, San Jacinto Township,
“ County of Riverside, State of California. ’ ’

The body of the mortgage described the mortgaged premises as situated in the county of Riverside, but that fact does not even tend to show where the acknowledgment was taken or certified. The acknowledgment would be quite as valid if taken and properly certified before an authorized officer in another county or state.

It appears from the bill of exceptions that it was proved, over the objection of defendants, that the original certificate consists partly of printed form and partly of written words; that the words “San Diego” wherever they appear therein are printed, and the words “Riverside” and “San Jacinto Township,” wherever they appear, are written; and that the certificate, as recorded in the recorder’s office, is entirely in writing, and does not show that any part of the original was printed.

Upon the face of the original certificate it appears that Ryan was a justice of the peace in Riverside County, and that he took and certified the acknowledgment in San Diego County. The venue is laid in that county. 11 The purpose of the venue to an official certificate is to show that the official act is done within the territorial jurisdiction of the officer.” (Roussain v. Norton, 53 Minn. 563; Black’s Law Dictionary, title “Venue.”) He certifies that Hemstreet appeared before him “in said county,” and the in testimonium clause certifies that it was done at his office “in the county of San Diego,”' and subscribes himself as “Justice of the Peace of San Jacinto Township, County of Riverside.”

Section 179 of the Code of Civil Procedure limits the territorial jurisdiction of a justice of the peace to take and certify acknowledgments, to his county. Even if it were possible to *176 conclude "that Eyan was a justice of the peace of San Diego County, his certificate was not accompanied by the certificate of the county clerk of that county, required by section 1194 of the Civil Code, and the mortgage in such case was not entitled to record in Eiverside County.

In Emeric v. Alvarado, 90 Cal. 477 et seq., the requirements of the Civil Code in regard to certificates of acknowledgments are quite fully considered, and as to the certificate there under consideration it was said: “Now, the certificate of acknowledgment to the said deed to Patrick commences as follows: ‘State of California, City and County of San Francisco,—ss. On this eighth day of December, A. D. 1879, before me, H. I. Tillotson, a notary public in and for said city and county.’ It is signed ‘H. I. Tillotson, Nqtary Public.’ At the end of the certificate he says he has hereunto ‘affixed my official seal,’ and he attaches a seal, as follows: “Seal. H. I. Tillotson, Notary Public, Contra Costa County.” It was held in that case that the material statements in the certificate were not true, and that it was not sufficient on its face; and in the same case (p. 462), speaking of the title of another portion of the San Pablo Eancho, it was said: “We think the certificate of acknowledgment of the deed from Gabriel Castro and wife to Acosta is fatally defective. It commences as follows: ‘Be it remembered, that on the fifteenth day of November, A. D. 1851, before me, Gustavus Harper, one of the justices of the peace in and for said . . . came the above-named, ’ etc., and it is signed ‘Gustavus Harper, J. P.’ This certificate shows neither venue nor jurisdiction.”

Appellant cites section 1862 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which provides: “When an instrument consists partly of written words and partly of a printed form, and the two are inconsistent, the former controls the latter,” and argues that, as the signature of the justice is followed by the written statement that he is a “Justice of the Peace of San Jacinto Township, County of Eiverside,” that we must read “Eiverside County” wherever “San Diego County” occurs in the certificate. But it may be true that he is a justice of the peace of Eiverside County, and that he took and certified this acknowledgment in San Diego County, believing that he had jurisdiction to do so. These two facts, as such, are not inconsistent.

*177 But said section of the code is not applicable here, and appellant’s argument based thereon conclusively sustains respondents’ contention, since it shows that if the whole of the certificate had been in the handwriting of the justice, the only possible conclusion would be that the acknowledgment was taken in San Diego County, by a justice of the peace of Riverside County, and hence outside of his territorial jurisdiction.

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Bluebook (online)
67 P. 768, 135 Cal. 173, 1901 Cal. LEXIS 668, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/middlecoff-v-hemstreet-cal-1901.