Roberts v. Mosier

1913 OK 207, 132 P. 678, 35 Okla. 691, 1913 Okla. LEXIS 147
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 1, 1913
Docket2381
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 1913 OK 207 (Roberts v. Mosier) 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
Roberts v. Mosier, 1913 OK 207, 132 P. 678, 35 Okla. 691, 1913 Okla. LEXIS 147 (Okla. 1913).

Opinion

WILLIAMS, J.

The question involved in the lower court was as to the priority of certain mortgages, to wit, the one in favor of defendant in error Jacob Mosier, alias Fred Mosier, or that of Dora M. Roberts, plaintiff in error; both mortgages having been executed by the defendants in error Verona Lyons and Sandy Lyons.

*692 It was contended by the plaintiff in error, who held the second mortgage, that hers should be declared prior to that of defendant in error Jacob Mosier, alias Ered Mosier, on the ground that the same was taken in favor of Ered Mosier in fraud of the revenue laws of the state, for the purpose of evading the payment of taxes justly due this state. Shelton v. Pruessner, 52 Kan. 579, 35 Pac. 201; Hanover National Bank v. First National Bank, 109 Fed. 421.

It was the contention of defendant in error Jacob Mosier, alias Fred Mosier, that the mortgage held at that time was taken in his name, to wit, Fred Mosier, he, at that time, adopting the name of Fred Mosier for the purpose of transacting his business thereunder.-

There appears to be no statute in this state forbidding a man adopting a name for a business purpose. Section 2246, Comp. Laws 1909; section 2067, St. Okla. 1890.

In re John Snook, 2 Hilton’s Reports (N. Y. C. P.), 566, it is said:

“As I have said, a man’s name is the mark or indicia by which he is distinguished from other men. By a practice now almost universal among civilized nations, it is composed of his Christian or given name, and his surname. The one is the name given to him after birth, or at baptism; the other is the patronymic derived from the common name of his parents. In the case of illegitimates, they take the name or designation they have gained by reputation. Rex v. Smith, 6 C. & P. 154; Rex v. Clark, R. & R. C. C. 358. The Christian or first name is, in the law, denominated the proper name; and a party can have but one, for middle or added names are not regarded. State v. Martin, 10 Mis. 391; Edmonston v. The State, 17 Ala. 179; McKay v. Spick, 8 Tex. 376; Rex v. Newman, 1 Ld. Ray. 562, 305; Franklin v. Tallmadge, 5 Johns. R. 64. Formerly, the Christian name was the more important of the two. ‘Special heed/ says Coke, ‘is to be taken of the name of baptism, as a man cannot'have two, though he may have divers surnames.’ Coke Litt. 3, a. (m). Indeed, anciently in England, there was but one name, for surnames did not come into use until the middle of the fourteenth century, and even down to the time of Elizabeth, they were not considered of controlling importance. Thus Chief Justice Popham, in Britton v. Wrightsman (Poph. 56), speaking of grants, declares that ‘the law is not precise in the case of surnames, but for the *693 Christian name/ he says, ‘this ought always to be perfect/ and throughout the early reports the Christian name is uniformly referred to as the most certain mark of the identity of the individual in all deeds or instruments. Greater importance being attached to the Christian name arose from the fact that it was the designation conferred by the religious rites of baptism, while the surname was frequently a chance appellation, assumed by the individual himself, or given to him by others,- for some marked characteristic, such as his mental, moral or bodily qualities, some peculiarity or defect, or for some act he had done which attached to his descendants, while sometimes it did not. Camden mentions an instance of a knight in Cheshire, each of whose sons took different surnames, whilst their sons, in turn, also took different names from their fathers. They altered their names, he says, in respect to habitation, to Egerton, Cotgrove, and Over-ton; in respect to color, to Gough, which is red; in respect to learning, to Ken-Clarke (a knowing clerk or learned man); in respect to quality, to Goodman; in respect to stature, to Richard Tittle; and in respect to the Christian name of the father of one of them, to Richard son, though all were descended from William Belward; and the gentlemen of Cheshire, he adds, bearing those different family names, would not easily believe that they were all the descendants of one man, were it not for an ancient roll, which Camden saw. Camden's Remains (Ed. of 1637) p. 141. And Lord Coke refers to the Year Books to show that a man may have divers names, that is, surnames, at divers times. Coke Litt. 3, a. The insufficiency of the Christian name to distinguish the particular individual, where there were many bearing the same name, led necessarily to the giving of surnames; and a man was distinguished, in addition to his Christian name, in the great majority of cases, by the name of his estate, or the place where he was born, or where he dwelt, or from whence he had come, as in the name Washington, originally Wessyngton, which, as its component parts indicate, means a person dwelling on the meadow land, where creek runs-in from the sea, or else from his calling, as John the smith, or William the tailor, in time abridged to John Smith and William Taylor. And as the son usually followed the pursuit of the father, the occupation became the family surname, or the son was distinguished from the father by calling his John’s-son, or William’s-son, which, among the Welsh, was abridged to s, as Edwards, Johns or Jones, or Peters, which, as familiar appellations, passed into surnames. The Normans added Eitx to the father’s Christian name, to distinguish the son, as Fitz-herbert or Fitz-gerald. And among *694 the Celtic inhabitants of Ireland and Scotland, where each separate clan or tribe bore a surname, to denote from what stock each family was descended, Mac was added to distinguish the son, and O to distinguish the grandson; and generally, where names were taken from a place, the relation of the individual to that place was indicated by a word put before the name, like the Dutch Van or French De, or a termination added at the end, which additions were in time merged into and formed but one word, until,- from these various prefixes and suffixes, numerous names were formed and became permanent. So, as suggested, something in the appearance, character, or history of the individual gave rise to the surname, such as his color, as black John, brown John, white John, afterwards transposed to John Brown, etc.; or it arose from his bulk, heighth, or strength, as Little, Long, Plardy, or Strong; or his mental or moral attributes, as Good, Wiley, Gay, Moody or Wise; or his qualities were poetically personified by applying to him the name of some animal, plant, or bird, as Fox or Wolf, 'Rose or Thorn, Martin or Swan; and it was in this way that the bulk of our surnames, that are not of foreign extraction, originated and became permanent. They grew into general use, without any law commanding their adoption, or prescribing any course or mode respecting them; for I know of but one instance of a positive statute commanding the taking of names or regulating the manner of selecting them, and that was limited to a particular locality. In the fourth year of the reign of Edward IV.

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Bluebook (online)
1913 OK 207, 132 P. 678, 35 Okla. 691, 1913 Okla. LEXIS 147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roberts-v-mosier-okla-1913.