Wagner v. Davidson

1927 OK 210, 260 P. 37, 127 Okla. 199, 1927 Okla. LEXIS 316
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 19, 1927
Docket17529
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1927 OK 210 (Wagner v. Davidson) 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
Wagner v. Davidson, 1927 OK 210, 260 P. 37, 127 Okla. 199, 1927 Okla. LEXIS 316 (Okla. 1927).

Opinion

PHELPS, J.

This cause comes here on appeal from the district court of Pushmata-ha county. The plaintiff and defendants occupy the same relative postition here as in the trial court, and will be so referred to herein.

It appears from the allegations of the pleadings that the defendants, J. A. Davidson and Dovie D. Davidson, executed their promissory note for $1,081.50, payable to the Conservative Loan & Trust Company, to secure which they executed a mortgage covering certain real estate located in Pushma-taha county. The note and mortgage were assigned to the plaintiff, Arthur Wagner, a resident of the state of Wisconsin. It also appears that another note for $100 was executed by defendants, which latter'note was assigned IJo Grace Bussell. The plaintiff brought suit praying judgment on the note and foreclosure of the mortgage. Grace Bussell interpleaded, also praying judgment on the $100 note held by her. The defendants, J. A. Davidson and Dovie D. Davidson, filed their answer, pleading want of consideration. They pleaded, further, denying execu'ion of the note and mortgage, and alleged that the lands in question constituted their homestead.

With the issues thus joined the cause was tried to the court without the intervention of a jury, and at the conclusion of the trial the court found that one Charles L. Cole acted as agent for the Conservative Loan & Trust Company in procuring the signatures of the defendants to the note and mortgage; that said Charles L. Cole also acted as the notary public in taking the acknowledgments of defendants to the mortgage ; and that said Charles L. Cole was commissioned as notary in Choctaw county and that the purported acknowledgments were taken in Pushmataha county. The court further found that the lands in question constituted the homestead of defendants, J. A. Davidson and Dovie D. Davidson, upon which homestead they were living at the time of the purported execution of the instruments in question; that Dovie D. Davidson was unable to write and that her signature to the instruments was procured by Charles L. Cole, who acted as agent and notary public, holding the hand of said Dovie D. Davidson and writing her name on the instruments while she held the pen with which such signature was written, and concluded, as a matter of law, that, inasmuch as said Charles L. Cole was commissioned a notary public in Choctaw county, he could not legally act as notary public in Pushmataha county, and that the purported acknowledgment to the mortgage was void, and that the name of Dovie D. Davidson not having been signed to the note and mortgage as provided by law for those who are unable to write, her purported signature to such instrument was void, and that, inasmuch as the lands covered by the purported mortgage constituted the homestead of the parties, and there being no consideration therefor, the purported mortgage was void.

The court, further found and held that Grace Bussell was the holder of the $100 note as collateral security for money due her from the Conservative Loan & Trust Company, but that she failed to establish the fact that the Conservative Loan & Trust Company was in any way indebted to her, and that she, therefore, was not entitled to recover. The court then rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff on the $1,140 note as against defendant J. A. Davidson, and rendered iudgment in favor of defendants. J. A. Davidson and Dovie D. Davidson, canceling and setting aside the purported mortgage against their homestead, from which judgment the plaintiff, Arthur Wagner, and cross-petitioner, Grace Bussell, prosecute this appeal.

Counsel for plaintiff present six assign *201 ments of error, the first four of which are presented together in their briefs under what they term their first proposition, which is that the trial court erred in finding that the land covered by the mortgage was the homestead of defendants, that the acknowledgment of the notary was taaen in Push-mataha county, and that the notary who took the acknowledgment was the agent of the Conservative Loan & Trust Company.

The law in this state that, where questions of fact are presented to a jury, the jury’s verdict will not be disturbed if there is any evidence reasonably tending to support it, is so well settled that the citation of authorities is unnecessary, and it is just as well settled that where a jury is waived and questions of fact are submitted to the court, the court’s findings on such questions of fact are conclusive if there is any evidence reasonably tending to support such findings. It, therefore, follows that the question here presented is: Is there any evidence reasonably tending to support the coiu’t’s findings?

Defendants’ amended answer, upon which the cause went to trial, was sworn to by Dovie Davidson and it is there pleaded that the Davidsons were married and were living together as man and wife and that the land covered by the mortgage constituted their homestead and that Dovie Davidson did not sign the purported mortgage. In support of these allegations J. A. Davidson testified that they had been married about 30 years; that they had been living upon this land nine or ten years at the time the purported mortgage was executed, and at the time of the trial of this action they were still living upon it. There appears to have been no effort on the part of the plaintiff to question the allegations of the amended answer, or the evidence in support thereof, claiming the premises as a homestead. The record does not show that there was any positive statement or affirmative declaration in the evidence that the defendants claimed the land in question as their homestead, but from the allegations of the pleadings, and from all the evidence introduced, the court could reach no other conclusion than that this land was the homestead of - defendants.

It is further contended by plaintiff that there is no evidence to support the court’s finding that the acknowledgment to the deed was taken in Pushmataha county by a notary public commissioned in Choctaw county, but an examination of the record shows that this contention is without merit. The evidence of ,T. A. Davidson conclusively shows that all the papers pertaining to the transaction and all the negotiations had relative to the loan were had at their home in Pushmataha county and that it was there where the acknowledgment was taken.

Counsel for plaintiff cite a number of authorities tending to support their contention that the testimony of defendant J. A. Davidson was not sufficient to overcome the presumption of the regularity of the acknowledgment where it shows upon its face to have been taken in Choctaw county.

This court has, on numerous occasions, held that:

“The evidence to impeach a certificate of acknowledgment should be clear, cogent, and convincing, and such as produces a conviction amounting to a moral certainty that the certificate is false.” Past v. Gilbert, 102 Okla. 245, 229 Pac. 275.

Counsel, also cite Nickel v. Janda, 115 Okla. 207, 242 Pac. 264, holding that where the notary’s certificate is regular on its face, this is strong evidence of the facts therein stated and its impeachment can be sustained only by clear, cogent, and convincing testimony and cannot be overcome by the testimony of the grantor alone where the surrounding facts are as consistent with the truth of the certificate as they are with the denials of the grantor. We have no quarrel with this rule.

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Bluebook (online)
1927 OK 210, 260 P. 37, 127 Okla. 199, 1927 Okla. LEXIS 316, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wagner-v-davidson-okla-1927.