Read v. Toledo Loan Co.

67 N.E. 729, 1 Ohio Law Rep. 357, 68 Ohio St. 280, 68 Ohio St. (N.S.) 280, 1903 Ohio LEXIS 251
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedMay 19, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 67 N.E. 729 (Read v. Toledo Loan Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Read v. Toledo Loan Co., 67 N.E. 729, 1 Ohio Law Rep. 357, 68 Ohio St. 280, 68 Ohio St. (N.S.) 280, 1903 Ohio LEXIS 251 (Ohio 1903).

Opinion

On the trial of this cause in the court of' common pleas, at the request of the plaintiff, the court made and stated it's finding of facts separate from its conclusions of l'aw, and the facts so found and stated by said court of common pleas are admitted to be correct, and they are not here in dispute. The sole controversy in this case arises upon the statement of facts contained in paragraphs four and five of its findings of fact so made by said court of common pleas. Said paragraphs are as follows:

“4. That prior to and upon Pebruary 19, 1896, said assignor, Cary D. Lindsay, was a member of said The Toledo Loan Co., and on said date subscribed for ten shares of the capital stock of said company; that thereupon, on the representation of said Cary D. [359]*359Lindsay to said company, and upon agreement betweeen said Cary Lindsay and said company, that said loan should become and be secured by a first lien upon said lots numbers 116 and 117 in Shaw’s Monroe Street Addition to Toledo, Ohio, said The Toledo Loan Co., on February 19, 1896, loaned and advanced to said Cary D. Lindsay the sum of forty-eight hundred dollars ($4,800), of and from the moneys theretofore raised by said company for said purpose of loaning to its members, said Cary D. Lindsay agreeing to repay said loan with interest, in weekly installments, in accordance with the constitution and by-laws of said company; that in pursuance of said representations and agreement, and to secure the payment of said money so loaned, with interest, and simultaneously with the loaning thereof, said Cary D. Lindsay executed, acknowledged and -clelivéred to said defendant, The Toledo Loan Co., his certain mortgage for said sum of $4,800 upon said lots numbers 116 and 117 in Shaw’s Monroe Street Addition, aforesaid.
“5. That said mortgage was executed by said Cary D. Lindsay in the presence of Eva M. Ely and Grant Williams, and was acknowledged by said Cary D. Lindsay before Grant Williams, a notary public within and for Lucas county, Ohio; that at the time of the execution and acknowledgement of said mortgage, said Cary D. Lindsay was a stockholder in said The Toledo Loan Co., and Eva M. Ely and Grant Williams were not otherwise related to said The Toledo Loan Co., or in any wise employed by it; and said Cary D. Lindsay then knew that said witnesses and notary, respectively, were stockholders in said company.”

Upon the foregoing facts, it is claimed by plaintiff in error:

“First — That inasmuch as Eva M. Ely and Grant Williams were both stockholders of the defendant company, the mortgage given to it by Cary D. Lindsay was never witnessed. „
“Second — That inasmuch as Grant Williams, the notary before whom said mortgage purports to have been acknowledged by Cary D. Lindsay, was a stockholder in said company, that said mortgage was never duly acknowledged.
“Third — That never having been acknowledged and never having been witnessed as to its signature, said mortgage was not entitled-to record in Lucas County, and the recording of the same was a nullity.
“Fourth — That the plaintiff as assignee holds the legal title to said real estate free from all incumbrances or liens growing out of said mortgage.”

It will thus be seen that the question here presented is: Whether a mortgage made to a corporation as grantee is invalid and of no effect by reason of the fact that the witnesses to such mortgage [360]*360and the officer taking the acknowledgement thereof are stockholders in said corporation. The requisites as to the manner and form of the execution of instruments for the conveyance or in-cumbrance of real property is matter of statutory regulation; and the statute providing for and governing the execution and ac-knowledgement of deeds, mortgages, etc., in this state, is Section 41OG, Revised Statutes, which section, so far as it has relation to the present inquiry, and application to the question here involved, provides as follows:

“A * * * mortgage * * * of any estate or interest in real property shall be signed by the mortgagor * * * and such signing shall be acknowledged by the *■ * mortgagor •* * * -in the presence of two witnesses, who shall attest the signing and subscribe their names to the attestation, and such signing shall also be acknowledged by the * * * mortgagor * * * before a judge of a court of record in this state, or a clerk thereof, a county auditor, county surveyor, notary public, mayor or justice of the peace, who shall certify the acknowledgement on the same sheet on which the instrument is written or printed, and subscribe his name thereto.”

' It will be observed that within the provisions of this section the only requirements 'are that the mortgage shall be signed by the mortgagor, that such signing shall be acknowledged by him in the presence of two witnesses who shall attest the same, and that such signing shall be acknowledged by the mortgagor before one of the several officers therein named, whose duty it shall be to make certificate thereon of said acknowledgement. But the qualifications of the witnesses so attesting, and the officer so certifying, are not attempted to be prescribed by said section, nor is there in said statute any provision or even suggestion that a witness or officer shall be disqualified or rendered incompetent as such, by reason of being interested in the conveyance so witnessed and certified. In the absence then of any express provision in the statute forbidding it, the precise question here presented is, whether a stockholder in a corporation, not otherwise interested therein, may be a witness to, and as notary public may take the acknowledgement of a mortgage executed by another to such corporation; and the proper determination of this inquiry involves, to some extent at least, a consideration both of the purpose of the legislation requiring the observance of these formalities in the execution of a mortgage, and also of the capacity in which a notary acts in taking 'and certifying [361]*361tbe acknowledgement of the grantor, whether such act' on his part is judicial or ministerial in character: At common law attestation was not necessary to the validity of a deed or mortgage and is not now necessary, except when required by statute. The purpose of the Legislature in requiring that an instrument for the convejr-am.ee or incumbrance of real property shall be witnessed by two witnesses doubtless was that there might be on record, in .a matter so important as that of the conveyance or incumbrance of real property, the names of two persons who certify or attest the fact, that they saw the grantor sign the instrument or heard him acknowledge the same, and thereby to furnish an easy and effectual mode of proof of its execution, and thus to provide an additional protection or security against the making of a fraudulent or forged conveyance or incumbrance. The certificate of acknowledgement by a notary public, or other authorized officer, is simply an additional solemnity in the execution of a deed or mortgage and is required by statute chiefly for the purpose of affording proof of the due execution of the instrument by the grantor, sufficient to authorize the recorder to make the same matter of public record. Section 4-134, Revised Statutes.

■ Jones on the Law of Real Property in Conveyancing-, at Section 1126, in discussing the subject of “acknowledgement” says:

“The chief use of an acknowledgement, as already noticed, is to perfect the deed for record.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
67 N.E. 729, 1 Ohio Law Rep. 357, 68 Ohio St. 280, 68 Ohio St. (N.S.) 280, 1903 Ohio LEXIS 251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/read-v-toledo-loan-co-ohio-1903.