Oklahoma Farm Mortgage Co. v. Jordan

1917 OK 556, 168 P. 1029, 67 Okla. 69, 1917 Okla. LEXIS 340
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 20, 1917
Docket8168
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 1917 OK 556 (Oklahoma Farm Mortgage Co. v. Jordan) 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
Oklahoma Farm Mortgage Co. v. Jordan, 1917 OK 556, 168 P. 1029, 67 Okla. 69, 1917 Okla. LEXIS 340 (Okla. 1917).

Opinion

RAINEY, J.

On July 31, 1915, the plaintiff in error, Oklahoma Farm Mortgage Company, brought their action in the district court of Love county, Okla., against Jesse L. Jordan, Geo. W. Burnett, and J. W. Scan-lon, for damages, alleging that Jesse L. Jordan, as a notary public, on June 8, 1909, made false certificates of acknowledgment to two certain mortgages purporting to have ■been executed toy W. A. Anglin and wife, Lucy O. Anglin, to secure the payment of money loaned by the Oklahoma Farm Mortgage Company to W. A. Anglin; that Geo. W. Burnett and J. ■ W. Scanlon were sureties on Jesse L. Jordan’s notarial bond. In its petition plaintiff further alleged that W. A. Anglin made payments upon the notes for which the mortgage was given as security at various times, until his death in 1911, and that subsequent to his death, L. A. Kirkpatrick, as administrator of his estate, also made payments upon the notes, but that later the said L. A. Kirkpatrick notified the plaintiff by letter that the signatures of Lucy O. Anglin to the mortgages were forgeries, and that Jordan’s notarial certificates of acknowledgment to 'the mortgages were false; that the falsity of the certificates was not discovered by plaintiff until the receipt of said letter on August 5, 1912. It is also alleged in the petition that on April 12, 1913, the plaintiff filed suit in the district court of Love county, Okla., seeking to foreclose the mortgages, in which action the said Lucy O. Anglin denied the execution, of the notes and mortgages sued upon, and charged that her signatures 'thereto were forgeries, and that the land de *70 scribed in the mortgages was her homestead, and that on this issue the jury found in her favor. The petition in the instant case also alleged that the said Jesse L. Jordan was engaged in the real estate and loan business at Marietta, Okla., and that at the time he made the false certificates he was acting as agent for the plaintiff in procuring loans, and that the plaintiff relied upon the certificates made by the said Jesse L. Jordan. The defendants interposed a demurrer to the petition, on the ground, among others, that it appeared from the face of the petition that if the plaintiff ever had any cause of action against the defendants, the same was barred by the statute of limitations. The trial court sustained the demurrer on this ground, to which action of the trial court plaintiff excepted, and brings the case here.

It is conceded toy plaintiff in error that the statute off limitations which governs this case is section 4249, Rev. Laws Okla. 1910, which reads as follows:

“¡Statute of Limitations. 'No suit shall toe instituted against any such notary or his securities more than three years after the cause of action accrues.”

The sole question presented to this court for decision is: When did the cause of action accrue? Plaintiff in error contends that it accrued when it first discovered that the notary’s certificates were false, and that the action was commenced in time, while the defen'daints in error contend that the cause of action, i|f 'any, accrued at the time of the making of the false certificates. If the plaintiff in error is correct, the action was commenced in time; otherwise it was barred on June 12, 1912, three years after the making of the alleged false certificates. According to Corpus Juris, vol. 1, p. 1146:

“The term ‘to accrue,’ as applied to a cause of action, means to arrive, to commence, t¿ come into existence, to become a present and enforceable demand, and that a cause orf action accrues when facts exist which authorizes one party to maintain an action against another, and that the term implies the coexistence of a demand capable of present enforcement, and of parties by and against whom it may be enforced.”

In 1 Ruling Case Law, 337, it is said that in the case of an act causing an injury, if the injury, however slight, is complete at the time of the act, a cause of action accrues at that time. The case of Walker v. Bowman et al., 27 Okla. 172, 111 Pac. 319, 30 L. R. A. (N. S.) 642, Ann. Cas. 1912B, 839, was an action on an abstracter’s bond against the abstracter and his sureties for the making of an incorrect abstract. The condition of the abstracter’s bond, as required by the statutes, 'was that they (the abstracter and his bondsmen) “will pay all damages that may accrue to any person by reason of any incompleteness, imperfection, or errors in any abstract furnished by him,” and it was held .that:

“The right of action against an abstracter for damages resulting from incompleteness, imperfections, or error in an abstract furnished by him accrues at the time the examination is made and reported, and not when the error is discovered and the damages resulting therefrom have been paid.”

In that case the court further observed that, in a ease where the petition alleges a 'breach of duty and also special and consequential damages, the breach of duty, and not .the consequential damage, is the cause of action. This case is similar in principle to the case at bar, and is in accord with the general rule that a cause of action accrues ¿for a breach of duty immediately upon the happening of the breach, although the actual damage resulting therefrom may not toe discovered until some time afterwards. Middelkamp v. Bessemer Irrigating Ditch Co., 46 Colo. 102, 103 Pac. 280, 23 L. R. A. (N. S.) 795. The rule in actions on bonds is that where the bond is conditioned for the performance of some act or duty toy the obligor, •the cause of action accrues when the condition is broken, and the statute of limitations begins to run from .the date of the breach, whether the obligee has suffered actual damage or not. 25 Cyc. 1101. Section 4241, Rev. Laws 1910, provides that every notary public, before entering upon the duties of his office, shall execute—

“a good and sufficient bond to the state of Oklahoma, in the sum of one thousand dollars, with one or more sureties, to be approved toy said clerk, conditioned for the faithful performance of the duties of his office. * * *”

The case of Bartlett et al. v. Bullene & Co., 23 Kan. 606, is a case construing a Kansas statute of limitations identical with section 4249, Rev. Laws Okla. 1910, supra, and is in point. Except for the difference in names and dates, the facts are exactly like the facts in the ease at bar, and it was contended there, as here, that the cause of action first accrued when the making of the false certificate was discovered. In disposing of this contention the Supreme Court of Kansas said:

“While there is some little conflict in the decisions, the highest and most- decisive authority favors the view that the malfeasance of a person, or the' negligence or *71 breach of duty of an officer, is the gist of the action, and not the injury consequent thereon, and that the statute therefore begins to run from the malfeasance, negligence, or breach. ‘In actions for official or professional negligence, the cause of action is founded on the breach of duty which actually injured the .plaintiff, and not on the consequential damage. * * * So, in an action against the sheriff for an insufficient return upon a writ by reason whereof the judgment was reversed, the statute begins to run from the time of the return, and not from the reversal of the judgment.’ 2 Greenl. Ev. § 433.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1917 OK 556, 168 P. 1029, 67 Okla. 69, 1917 Okla. LEXIS 340, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oklahoma-farm-mortgage-co-v-jordan-okla-1917.