Watts v. First National Bank

1899 OK 85, 58 P. 782, 8 Okla. 645, 1899 Okla. LEXIS 113
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedAugust 24, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1899 OK 85 (Watts v. First National Bank) 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
Watts v. First National Bank, 1899 OK 85, 58 P. 782, 8 Okla. 645, 1899 Okla. LEXIS 113 (Okla. 1899).

Opinion

*648 Opinion of the court by

Irwin, J.:

The first ground for reversal urged by the defendant is: “No finding of the amount due the plaintiff is made by the jury.” But counsel say the court undertook to cure this failure by the finding of such fact. We do not think the finding of the court is susceptible of this construction. We think the verdict of the jury was broad enough to authorize the court’s finding. True, the jury do not, in so many words, say there is due the plaintiff from the defendant the sum of $346.50; neither could they render such a verdict in this class of a case. But we think that the language used by the jury in their verdict, “that the same are wrongfully and unlawfully detained by the defendant, and are of the value of $346.50,” would sustain the alternative judgment for the return of the cattle, or the payment of the amount which is found by the court, based thereon.

We cannot agree with the counsel for the plaintiff in error that there is nothing in the verdict of the jury indicating the time when the jury fixed the value of the cattle, because we think the language of the verdict clearly indicates that the value fixed by the jury was at the time of the commencement of the suit.

Counsel for plaintiff in error insist that the fact is undisputed that this mortgage was given upon the cattle which were mingling with large numbers of other c attl ? of the same kind and character, similarly branded, and of the same grade and description, and that the cattle described in the mortgage could not have been identified or distinguished from the others at the time this mortgage was given; but we think a careful reading of all the evidence in the case will not bear out this contention, but *649 will rather tend to establish the contrary. The language of the mortgage itself tends to show that the mortgagor had no other property of the same description in his possession. The testimony of Wilson is that Wilson and Coffey sold Madison 56 head of cattle in November or December, and at that time Madison had' no other cattle; and the mortgagor describes the cattle mortgaged as those bought of Wilson and Coffey. True it is that Wilson says Madison was wintering some other cattle for him, which were in the same field with the mortgaged cattle, but he says they were of a poorer grade and an inferior quality; in fact, to use his language, he says: “They were the poorest in the bunch; they were the tailings, — the sorriest cattle,” — so they were easily to be distinguished from the others, and were not of the same grade or of the same description.

The next contention is that, at the time the cattle in question were purchased by Watts, the record does not show that the mortgage of the bank was recorded as required by law, and consequently was no notice to Watts, and that his purchase was in good faith, and without notice, either actual or constructive, of the mortgage to the El Reno Bank. The record shows that it is admitted by the defendant’s counsel that the intsrumem; offered in evidence by the plaintiff is a certified copy of the original instrument on file in the office of the register of d' The only objection there raised was that the instrument was not a chattel mortgage; but, in our judgment, this agreement of counsel amounts to this: that the copy might be treated in every respect as the original. In fact, under our law, a copy was all that could be produced by the plaintiff, as the Statutes of Oklahoma of *650 1893, (section 24, ch. 51,) prohibit the removal of the original mortgage from the office of the register before the same is canceled. The question then is, does the copy introduced, together with the indorsements thereon, show a legal recording? It is contended that the recording of the mortgage was improper, because the mortgage does not show that it was executed before two witnesses, as required by tbe statute of this Territory. While it is true that on the instrument there appear the signatures of two persons as witnesses thereto, yet it is urged by the defendant that the two witnesses thereon, to wit, 33. 33. Burrell and T. J. Stewart, were incapacitated from acting as witnesses to said instrument, by reason of their interest, as it is alleged they were the president and cashier of the bank to whom the mortgage was given, and hence were interested parties; and, if so, it is contended that they could not legally act as witnesses. An inspection of the Statutes of Oklahoma of 1893, (chapter 51, section 23,) will s/mw- the following provision: “A mortgage of personal property must be signed by the mortgagor in the presence of two persons who must sign' the same as witnesses thereto, and no- further proof of ■acknowledgment is required to admit it .to be filed.” The statute makes no express limitation or prohibition as to any class or kind of persons who shall act as witnesses. It is silent as to- the interest or lack of interest of the witnesses, and the only requisite expressly required is that it shall be signed by two- persons as witnesses, and, when this is done, it shall be admitted to filing in the office of the register of deeds.

The question is, can or should the courts enlarge upon the requirements of the legislature in this particular? *651 Should the courts add to or require other or different qualifications on the part of such witnesses thqn such as the legislature in its wisdom has seen fit to prescribe? It is contended that this act of the witnesses takes the place of acknowledging, and should be governed by the ■same rules, and held to the same degree of strictness, ■and that impliedly, at least, interested persons cannot be witnesses- or take the acknowledgment to such an 'instrument, and authorities are cited to sustain this contention. Among- the many authorities cited by the plaintiff in error’s counsel is a case from our own supreme ■court, in the case of Campbell v. Richardson, 6 Okla. 375. But an examination of that case will show that all that is held there is that two witnesses to the execution of a mortgage on personal property was an imperative re•quirement of the law, in order to render such a mortgage good as against the interests of creditors or bona fide purchasers without notice, and, as this contention is settled beyond controversy by the express terms of the statute, we are unable to see that this case throws any light on the case in hand. We have cai*efully examined the authorities cited, and as many others -as were at our command, and,' so far as we can ascertain, the holdings of the courts on this subject have been that an interest such as will invalidate an acknowledgment -to an instrument like the one in question must be a personal interest. We do not think that the fact alone that a person was an officer of a bank, or a corporation, would necessarily make him an interested person, in the meaning of the law, so as to render an acknowledgment taken by him, where the bank or a corporation was a party, necessarily void.

*652 In the case of Groesbeck v. Seeley, 13 Mich. 329, cited, by counsej, this question is not discussed to any great extent, nor does it seem to have been relied upon to any great extent, by counsel, and it was mot the controlling point on which that case was decided.

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Bluebook (online)
1899 OK 85, 58 P. 782, 8 Okla. 645, 1899 Okla. LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/watts-v-first-national-bank-okla-1899.