Rolando v. Everett

165 P.2d 33, 72 Cal. App. 2d 629, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 1084
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 22, 1946
DocketCiv. 7176
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 165 P.2d 33 (Rolando v. Everett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rolando v. Everett, 165 P.2d 33, 72 Cal. App. 2d 629, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 1084 (Cal. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

ADAMS, P. J.

On January 16,1943, plaintiff Rolando lent $5,000 to Everett-McEachern Lumber Co., a copartnership consisting of Lyle B. Everett and J. L. McEaehern. A promissory note evidencing the indebtedness was executed and delivered to plaintiff. Thereafter and on August 2, 1943, a chattel mortgage on certain described equipment belonging *630 to the copartnership was executed. It recited that it was “By Lyle B. Everett and J. L. McEachern, co-partners by occupation Lumbermen, mortgagors, to Rolando Lumber Company, by occupation Lumber dealers, mortgagee.” It was signed “ J. L. McEachern For Everett-McEachern Lumber Co. A Co-Partnership, ’ ’ and bore a certificate of acknowledgment which read: ‘ ‘ On this 2nd day of August in the year of our Lord one thousand nine hundred and forty-three, before me, Lewis H. De Castle, a Notary Public . . . personally appeared J. L. McEachern known to me to be the person described in and whose name is subscribed to the within instrument and acknowledged to me that he executed the same. ’ ’ Said mortgage was recorded on September 1, 1943.

On January 26, 1944, plaintiff brought this action to foreclose the aforesaid chattel mortgage, only $1,000 having been paid upon the note. A keeper was placed in charge of the property mortgaged. Defendants defaulted, but Edward Miller, with permission of the court, filed a complaint in intervention seeking to quiet title to certain of the chattels which had been included in the chattel mortgage, alleging that he had become the owner of same about March 27,1944, by virtue of an execution sale on a judgment in an action against the Everett-McEachern Lumber Co. brought by him in Mendocino County. Miller- also filed an answer to plaintiff’s complaint, admitting the execution of the chattel mortgage, but denying that it was made in good faith without intent to defraud creditors. Plaintiff filed an answer to the complaint in intervention denying the allegations of the same. After trial of the issues, by the court sitting without a jury, findings were made and filed in which the execution of the mortgage was recited, but it was found that it did not bear the acknowledgment required by section 1190a of the Civil Code -of the State of California. It was further found that Miller had purchased at execution sale the articles claimed by him and that he, “by reason of such Execution Sale and by reason of the fact that no legal partnership acknowledgment has been had on said Chattel Mortgage, became the owner of said property so purchased under said Execution Sale.” Plaintiff was given judgment for the balance due on his note, and the property included in the chattel mortgage, other than that sold to intervenor, was ordered sold to satisfy the mortgage debt.

Plaintiff has appealed from said judgment, contending first that the certificate of acknowledgment of the mortgage was sufficient.

*631 Section 1190a of the Civil Code provides that the certificate of acknowledgment of an instrument executed by a partnership “must be substantially” in the following form:

“On this .... day of......, in the year ...., before me (here insert the name and quality of the officer), personally appeared.........., known to me (or proved to me on the oath of............) to be one of the partners of the partnership that executed the within instrument, and acknowledged to me that such partnership executed the same.”

It is apparent that the certificate appended to the mortgage is in the general form provided for in section 1189 of the Civil Code, which section provides:

“The certificate of acknowledgment, unless it is otherwise in this article provided, must be substantially in the following form:
“ ‘State of.........., county of.........., ss. On this .... day of........, in the year ...., before me (here insert name and quality of the officer), personally appeared...... ...., known to me (or proved to me on the oath of........) to be the person whose name is subscribed to the within instrument, and acknowledged that he (she or they) executed the same.’ ” (Italics ours.)

While appellant concedes, as he must, that the certificate upon which he relies is not in the form provided in section 1190a, he contends that it is “substantially” the same and that even assuming that the certificate was defective the mortgage was recorded and such recordation was sufficient to give respondent notice. But it is obvious from the language used in section 1189, and the fact that a different form of certificate of acknowledgment by a partnership is prescribed, that it cannot be said that the one form is substantially the same as the other. Appellant cites eases in which forms of certificates of acknowledgment used were held to comply substantially with statutory requirements, and cases which hold that a certificate is to be sustained wherever it can be done by a fair and reasonable interpretation of the statute. But in none of the cases cited by him was it held that the substitution of one statutory form of certificate for another constitutes substantial compliance. It was said in Eahriman v. Jones, 203 Cal. 254, 255 [263 P. 537], that the provisions of the Civil Code relating to chattel mortgages should be strictly construed. If the use of the form prescribed in section 1189 were *632 to be held to be substantial compliance with the form prescribed by section 1190a, then the latter section would be rendered entirely superfluous. Also see Wolf v. Fogarty, 6 Cal. 224 [65 Am.Dec. 509] ; Kelsey v. Dunlap, 7 Cal. 160, and Malloye v. Coubrough, 96 Cal. 649 [31 P. 622], in which certificates of acknowledgment were held insufficient to admit instruments to record or to operate as notice to third parties.

Appellant further argues that respondent had actual notice before he purchased at the execution sale; that as under section 2973 of the Civil Code a defective mortgage of personal property, though not made in conformity with statutory requirements, is nevertheless valid between the parties and persons who before parting with value have actual notice thereof, the mortgage was valid as to respondent; and, finally, that since he had caused a keeper to be placed in charge of the property before its seizure under the execution on Miller’s judgment, he had taken the mortgaged property into his possession, and, in effect, transformed his invalid mortgage into a valid one giving him priority over Miller as an attaching creditor.

Respondent’s reply to these arguments is that he did not have actual notice until the foreclosure proceeding was commenced; that the certificate of acknowledgment being defective the mortgage was not entitled to recordation (Civ. Code, § 1161) and even though recorded was ineffective as to him; and that, as he extended credit to the partnership before and subsequent to the execution and the recording of the mortgage it is, as to him, entirely void regardless of whether he had actual notice of it prior to this proceeding, citing Old Settlers Investment Co. v. White, 158 Cal. 236, 240 [110 P. 922].

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165 P.2d 33, 72 Cal. App. 2d 629, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 1084, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rolando-v-everett-calctapp-1946.