State v. Bauer

214 N.W. 262, 171 Minn. 345
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMay 20, 1927
DocketNo. 26,073.
StatusPublished

This text of 214 N.W. 262 (State v. Bauer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Bauer, 214 N.W. 262, 171 Minn. 345 (Mich. 1927).

Opinion

Lees, C.

Appellant was indicted, tried and convicted of the crime of forgery in the first degree. He moved for a new trial and has appealed from an order denying the motion and also from the judgment of conviction.

The indictment charged appellant with violating G. S. 1923, § 10323, which provides that an officer, authorized to take an acknowledgment of an instrument which may be recorded, who wil-fully and falsely certifies that the execution of the instrument was acknowledged by any party thereto, shall be guilty of forgery in the first degree.

Appellant was a notary public in and for Ramsey county and on June 15, 1925, as such notary public, he certified that J. W. Unton and Helen B. Unton, his wife, personally known to him to be the persons described in and who executed a mortgage running to one Fred Mueller, appeared before him in person and acknowledged the *347 execution of the mortgage. Appellant was then a practicing attorney having an office in the city of St. Paul, but, prior to his conviction, he was disbarred for unprofessional conduct. In re Disbarment of Bauer, 167 Minn. 350, 209 N. W. 31. The land mortgaged was described as part of lot 5, sec. 15, town 30, range 22, Ramsey county, Minnesota, without specific designation of the part of the lot mortgaged. The mortgagors are referred to as residents of Ramsey county. The amount of the mortgage was $700. Appellant owed Mueller $483 and received $217 from him when he delivered the mortgage to Mm. Mueller learned that the mortgagors lived in Minneapolis and had the mortgage recorded in Hennepin county.

J. W. Unton and his wife were witnesses for the state. Mrs. Unton testified that her true name was Hilda but that appellant was in the habit of calling her Helen. The Untons live in Minneapolis. They knew no one in St. Paul named J. W. Unton. They did not sign or acknowledge the mortgage in question and had no interest in the land described therein, but appellant was acquainted with them and had transacted some business for them. Unton testified that after he heard of the mortgage he had a conversation with appellant in the course of which appellant said that he thought he knew him and his wife well enough to use their signatures whenever he wished to do so.

Specimens of appellant’s handwriting, conceded to be genmne, were received in evidence and were compared with the writing in the mortgage and the signature thereto, and an expert, well qualified to express an opinion, testified that in his opinion the appellant had written the names of the Untons where the same appeared at the place for the signatures of the mortgagors.

Appellant was the only witness in his own behalf. He testified that in May, 1925, his wife had an interest in part of lot 5 under an unrecorded deed; that she advertised the property for sale; that a person answered the advertisement, bearing the name of James W. Unton; that he agreed to buy part of the lot; that a deed was executed by Mrs. Bauer, but not delivered; that the mortgage to *348 Mueller represented part of the purchase price; that Unton was unable to raise tbe money needed to pay tbe balance and reconveyed tbe land to Mrs. Bauer; and that neither deed was recorded. He repeatedly testified that tbe Untons who were witnesses for tbe state were not tbe persons who executed tbe mortgage to Mueller.

In support of tbe motion for a new trial, appellant presented an affidavit by bis wife stating that she lived in a suburb of Los Angeles at tbe time of tbe trial and, not until after appellant was convicted, did she bear or know of bis trouble; that in February, 1923, she received a deed of part of lot 5, subject to a mortgage; that she paid and satisfied tbe mortgage; that neither tbe deed nor tbe satisfaction was recorded; that she bad posted a “For Sale” sign on tbe land, giving her St. Paul address; that a man and bis wife called in May, 1925, to negotiate for tbe purchase of tbe land; that they said their name was Unton; that she took them to her husband’s office, where tbe negotiations were concluded with him; that she signed a deed conveying one-balf of tbe land to Unton for a consideration of $2,500; that her husband informed her that Unton bad paid $550, executed a mortgage for $700, and was to pay $1,250 more on tbe delivery of tbe deed; that a few weeks later be informed her that tbe Untons bad “backed out;” that she knew a man who went by the name of Jack Unton and bis wife Hilda, and that they were not tbe Untons with whom tbe transactions above mentioned were bad.

Appellant also presented an affidavit by a stenographer be bad formerly employed. She stated that in May, 1925, while in appellant’s office, be asked her to witness a deed from him and bis wife to James Unton; that in June, 1925, she saw a man and woman in conference with appellant in bis private office and beard tbe man say be wanted a certain mortgage to run to Mrs. Bauer; that appellant replied it made no difference whether tbe mortgage ran to her or to Mueller; that there was some conversation about tbe description of tbe land to be mortgaged, and appellant said that if anything was left out it would be inserted in tbe mortgage before delivery to Mueller; that in July, 1925, tbe same man and woman came in again and inquired for appellant, and while waiting for him, in tbe course *349 of a conversation with her, said they were the purchasers of Mrs. Bauer’s farm.

A third affidavit, made by appellant, explained his failure to produce his wife and the stenographer as witnesses at the trial.

Appellant is in prison, prepared his briefs there and is not represented by counsel on this appeal, and asks us to search the record, insisting that, when carefully examined, it will show that he should have been given a new trial.

His first contention is that the words “may be recorded” in G. S. 1923, § 10323, mean “shall be recorded;” that the record of the mortgage in Hennepin county was unauthorized and, since it was never recorded in Ramsey county, no offense was committed. The mortgage could have been legally recorded in Ramsey county. It was an instrument of the character defined by the statute. It was not an essential element of the offense that there should have been a recording in Ramsey county or at all.

It is suggested that, since no registration tax was paid on the mortgage, it was error to receive it in evidence. See (1. S. 1923, § 2328. Clearly the provisions of that section did not prevent the state from introducing the mortgage in evidence in the prosecution of the officer who took the acknowledgment in violation of G. S. 1923, § 10323.

Section 6946, G. S. 1923, makes it a misdemeanor for an officer to take an acknowledgment when the parties executing the instrument do not appear before him in person. The offense defined by that section is not the one defined by § 10323. The evidence for the state shows that appellant violated both sections. He was prosecuted for the more serious offense. He cannot be heard to say that he was not guilty of a felony because, as an incident of his unlawful act, he also committed a misdemeanor; but, of course, to be convicted of a felony, the proof must show that he certified to the acknowledgment wilfully and falsely.

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Related

In Re Disbarment of William Bauer
209 N.W. 31 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1926)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
214 N.W. 262, 171 Minn. 345, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-bauer-minn-1927.