Smith & Bondurant v. Meador
This text of 74 Ga. 416 (Smith & Bondurant v. Meador) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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The legal question which this record makes is, whether a deed of -assignment is void because the affidavit thereto was made before a commercial notary public a few days after the expiration of his term of office, and before the renewal of his appointment; and that question turns on this, was he then a de facto officer, and if not, then, under our statute, is he de jure an officer ? And that turns upon this, is the commercial notary a public officer ?
So that it seems clear that they are public officers, whose [418]*418duties are regulated by law, whose oaths are prescribed and recorded on the minutes of the court, and who are authorized to administer any oath not. confined by law to a particular officer, and, therefore, this oath to an assignment. It follows that, until a successor was appointed or he was removed (Code, §1499), his office continued, and he remained de jure the notary for the bank where he acted, and filled that public office for the public as a commercial notary, and empowered to administer this oath to this assignor.
It is said that, because the number of these commercial notaries is not fixed by law, therefore they are not defacto officers when holding over, because they have no successors.
It strikes us that the argument is nothing else than a non sequitur. Whether one or a hundred fill the office, it is still an office. If, at the option of the appointing power, one may be enough or one hundred may be necessary in county or city, the office is still public, and successors are appointed for those who go out. But in the case before us, this notary public was appointed and acted for and at a bank, a necessary officer there, and when it was ascertained that his term of four years had expired, he was reappointed. Suppose another had been appointed and he [419]*419had been rejected by the judge, would not that other have been his successor ? Most assuredly. So that this office-at this bank is a public office, administered by a man appointed to it, not by the bank, but by the state; not for the bank alone, but for the whole public, the bank and all dealing with it, or not dealing with it at all, but desiring: an official act to be done by this appointee of the state-about any business entrusted to him by the state; and', even if out de jure, because his term of four years was-gone, the act was that of a de facto officer, who had not • been removed and to whose office no successor had been, appointed.
The principle on which the whole doctrine of the recognition of defacto officers and their acts rests, is not how-' they happen to act de facto, — whether the cause be an illegal appointment or election, or an illegal holding over, but it is the convenience of the public — the necessity of the.thing — the impossibility of one always knowing when an-officer to whom he goes on business of a ministerial character is legally in office, was properly elected or has held too long; it is that, where the public servant is acting in' the place apparently all right, and the applicant to him-in good faith has a deed witnessed or an oath administered,, that it is better for society that the act defacto stand than-that the business of society, the title to property, be all - wrecked, because parties did not know that the term of' office of the public official expired the day before.
See 53 Mo., 334; 37 Maine, 427; 9 Am. R., 431; Cro. Eliz., 699, 533; 1 Moore, 109; 1 Ld. Raym., 658; 12 Modern, 467, cited by defendant in error. See also 19 Am. D., 63 (n); 4 Iredell, 368; 9 Am. R., 434 (n); 74 Ala., 411; 9 Ga., 314, particularly p. 316, opinion of court; 5 Id., 243 (4); 11 Id., 426 (2); 14 Id., 192 (2); 20 Id., pp. 748, 749, (3), (4); 44 Id., 454; 52 Id., 239 (6); 63 Id., 527, where the-doctrine is applied even to the intendant and commission- • ers of a town in levying taxes. The case of Cary vs. The State, determined by the Supreme Court of Alabama at its[420]*420Decembérterm, 1884, in a very able and exhaustive opinion by Somerville, Justice, was cited by counsel for plaintiff in error, who was misled by a newspaper syllabus of it; but it is fully on the line of this opinion and the authorities cited above, and we are indebted to Mr. Barnes, since his citation of the syllabus on the hearing of this cause', for the full text of the opinion. Misled himself by the syllabus, he acted as upright counsel always should when he furnished us with the opinion in full.
Judgment affirmed.
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74 Ga. 416, 1885 Ga. LEXIS 329, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-bondurant-v-meador-ga-1885.