Pritchett v. New York Life Insurance

170 So. 700, 125 Fla. 653, 1936 Fla. LEXIS 1342
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJuly 27, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 170 So. 700 (Pritchett v. New York Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pritchett v. New York Life Insurance, 170 So. 700, 125 Fla. 653, 1936 Fla. LEXIS 1342 (Fla. 1936).

Opinions

Whitfield, C. J.

— This is a suit to foreclose a mortgage upon real estate, the separate property of Effie F. Pritchett, wife of H. E. Pritchett, the wife not being a free dealer under the Florida statute when the mortgage was given.

The bill of complaint was filed August 1, 1934, by New York Life Insurance Company against H. E. Pritchett, a widower, Thelma Pritchett Miller and her husband, and others. Mrs. Effie F. Pritchett died before the bill of complaint was filed.

The note is dated June 1, 1927, and is signed:

“Effie F. Pritchett (Seal)
“H. E. Pritchett (Seal)”

The mortgage is' dated June 1, 1927, and the execution thereof is as follows:

“In Witness Whereof, said Mortgagors have executed these presents under seal at Lakeland, in Polk County, Florida, the day and year first above written.
“Signed, sealed and delivered in the presence of the following witnesses:
“Thelma P. Miller.
“Effie F. Pritchett (Seal)
“Z. H. Sanders.
“H. E. Pritchett (Seal)
*662 “State of Florida,
“County of Polk.

“Before me personally appeared H. E. Pritchett and Effie F. Pritchett, his wife, both of whom are to me well known, and known to me to be the individuals described in and who executed the foregoing mortgage, and acknowledged to and before me that they executed said mortgage for the purposes therein expressed; and the said Effie F. Pritchett, well known to me and known to me to be the wife of the said H. E. Pritci-iett, upon a separate and private examination, taken and made separately and apart from her said husband acknowledged before me that she executed said instrument freely and voluntarily, without any compulsion, constraint, apprehension or fear of or from her said husband, for the purposes therein set forth.

“Witness my hand and official seal, this 2nd day of June, 1927.
“Z. H. Sanders,
“Notary Public.”
“My Commission expires Nov. 26, 1928.”

The mortgage executed to Stockton. Mortgage Company, a corporation, was recorded June 3, 1927. On June 16, 1927, the mortgage was assigned by Stockton Mortgage Company to New York Life Insurance Company; and the assignment was filed for record June 21, 1927, and recorded. Z. H. Sanders, the officer who took the acknowledgment of the execution of the mortgage and who witnessed it, died in September, 1934, before the answers were filed. The answer of H. E. Pritchett and other parties interested in the title to the property was filed November 30, 1934. The defendants by such answer “expressly deny the allegation as contained in Paragraph Three of said Bill of Complaint *663 and particularly deny that portion thereof which charges that the said Effie F. Pritchett duly signed, witnessed, and acknowledged said mortgage described or any other security for the alleged debt and for further answer to said Paragraph, these Respondents aver that the mortgage referred to in said Paragraph was not signed or witnessed or acknowledged by the said Effie F. Pritchett, in the presence of a Notary or any other officer authorized to take acknowledgments in the State of Florida, and further aver that the said Z. H. Sanders, the Notary Public, whose certificate of acknowledgment appears appended to the copy of the purported mortgage deed annexed to said Bill of Complaint, was never in the presence of the said Effie F. Pritchett at the time she signed said mortgage or at the time said certificate of acknowledgment was thereto appended, or at any other time, and Respondents would further show the facts to be that the said Z. H. Sanders came to the house or home of the said H. E. Pritchett on or about the date said mortgage is alleged to have been executed and brought said mortgage with him and at that time the said Effie F. Pritchett was confined to her bedroom in the second story of the home of H. E. Pritchett and seriously ill, and that the said H. E. Pritchett received said alleged mortgage into his possession and carried the same upstairs where the said Effie F. Pritchett signed the same, beyond the presence of the -said Sanders' and in the presence of the said H. E. Pritchett, her husband, and that the said H. E. Pritchett then carried the alleged mortgage downstairs and delivered it to the said Sanders, who thereafter appended his certificate to said mortgage without ever having had the said Effie F. Pritchett appear before him or in his presence to acknowledge the execution of said alleged mortgage as required by law.”

*664 The court denied a motion to strike the above quoted portion of the answer and granted leave to amend the bill of complaint.

■ An amended bill of complaint was filed and the court denied motions to dismiss and to strike the bill of complaint and to strike portions thereof.

1 The answer to the. amended bill contains averments that are in effect similar to those above quoted from the answer to the original bill of complaint. See Statement for the quotation from the answer to the amended bill of complaint and other matters

Upon notice to counsel for defendants, an order appointing a special master was made which contains the following :

“This cause be and the same hereby is referred to Don Register, Esquire, a practicing solicitor of this Court, as Special Master herein, to take the testimony and proof of the parties, and said Special Master herein appointed to take the testimony and proof of the parties is directed to make report thereof, together with his findings of law and fact and his recommendations thereon to this Court.”

The master who heard and saw the witnesses testify, found that the note and mortgage were signed by the wife and her husband, and in effect also found that under the circumstances of the case, the officer’s certificate of the acknowledgment by the wife of her execution of the mortgage was not legally overcome by the testimony of the husband and of the subscribing witness, Thelma Pritchett Miller, a daughter of the mortgagors, that the wife did not acknowledge the execution of the mortgage before or in the presence of the officer, the widowed husband and the daughter being interested parties, and the wife and officer having died before the defense was asserted and after pay *665 ments on the mortgage were made and other transactions had recognized the validity of the mortgage.

The chancellor referred to the detailed report and findings of the master concerning the evidence on which the master ultimately found that “the statement of the notary that the wife personally appeared before him, has not been dis-proven.” In the decree the chancellor states: “For these reasons, I am of the opinion that the Master’s finding that the mortgage is a validly executed mortgage and should be foreclosed, should be sustained by this court.”

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Bluebook (online)
170 So. 700, 125 Fla. 653, 1936 Fla. LEXIS 1342, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pritchett-v-new-york-life-insurance-fla-1936.