Williamson v. Doe

7 Blackf. 12, 1843 Ind. LEXIS 146
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 16, 1843
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 7 Blackf. 12 (Williamson v. Doe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williamson v. Doe, 7 Blackf. 12, 1843 Ind. LEXIS 146 (Ind. 1843).

Opinion

Dewey, J.

— This was an action of ejectment on the demise of Crawford against B. H. Williamson, for a half quarter of a section of land. Verdict and judgment for the plaintiff. Motion for a new trial overruled.

The lessor of the plaintiff gave in evidence the following documents, viz., A mortgage of the premises in dispute, bearing date Nov. 22, 1839, executed by B. A. Williamson to one Carle, school-commissioner of Montgomery county, to secure the payment of a loan of 100 dollars in three years, with interest thereon at the rate of ten per cent, per annum, payable in advance annually; a deed executed by Carle, as school-commissioner, to Crawford, the lessor of the plaintiff, dated July 26, 1841. This deed commences, “Whereas John Crawford has paid the sum of one hundred and fourteen dollars and thirty-seven cents in full for the east half, ” &c. (the land in dispute,) and proceeds, “Now know ye, that in consideration of the premises, and in conformity with the statute in such case made and provided, I, Daniel Carle, school-commissioner, Sec., for, and in the name of, the inhabitants of congressional township, Sec., do give and grant the sa.id east [13]*13half, &c., to the said John Crawford, his heirs and assigns forever;” and an entry on the record of deeds for mery county, signed by Carle as school-commissioner, dated July 26, 1841, in the following language, “I do hereby acknowledge full satisfaction on the within annexed deed of mortgage, (that before stated,) by sale of the mortgaged premises at public auction, after advertising the same according to law, and after forfeiture of the same for non-payment of the interest for six months after the same fell due, at which sale John Crawford was the highest and best bidder, and was the purchaser; and I have executed a' deed to him for the same. ” The official character of Carle was also proved. This was all the evidence on the part of the plaintiff. The defendant claimed the disputed premises under a deed from the mortgagor, executed after the date of the mortgage.

The defendant moved the Court to instruct the jury substantially as follows : That unless they believed from the testimony, the land in question was duly advertised and sold according to law, they must find for the defendant; and that the mortgage to the school-commissioner, the commissioner’s deed to Crawford, and the entry made by the commissioner on the record of deeds, did not, nor did any of them, prove that the commissioner took all the steps necessary to enable him to convey a valid title to the land. The Court refused to give the instruction, or any part of it.

The solution of the question arising from this rejected charge to the jury, depends upon the nature of the powers conferred upon school-commissioners by the laws of this state, and how far those laws make the deeds, which they are authorized to execute, evidence of the regularity of their proceedings in the execution of their powers.

The act incorporating congressional townships, and providing for public schools therein, authorizes the commissioner to loan the school-funds on mortgage -security, retaining out of the money loaned one year’s interest in advance; R. S. 1838, p. 522; and the form prescribed for the mortgage shows that each year’s interest is to be paid in advance until the principal be paid. Id. 536. It is also provided, that if default be made in the payment of the interest for the space of six months after the same shall become due, no further credit [14]*14shall be given, but the whole debt, principal as well as inteshall be immediately payable; and the commissioner shall forthwith proceed to sell the mortgaged premises, havinS Siven twenty days’ notice of the time and place of sale, by posting up written advertisements thereof in three of the most public places in the township in which the land is situate, and also by publication for three weeks successively in the newspaper printed nearest to the land, if any be printed in the county; the sale to be at the court-house door; upon the payment of the purchase-money, the commissioner, or his successor, is to make a deed to the purchaser, which shall vest in him the title of the mortgagor. Id. pp. 524, 525. By a statute passed in 1835, and reprinted in the revision of 1838, school-commissioners’ deeds are made prima facie evidence of all the facts which they state. R. S. 1838, p. 548.

It is evident that the powers of the commissioner above specified are limited, special, naked powers not coupled with an interest. The law respecting such powers is, that they must be strictly pursued to render valid the act of. the agent possessing them. The facts on which the right to exercise his powers depends must exist, or his transactions will be without authority and void. Williams et al. v. Peyton's lessee, 4 Wheat. 77. This Court has frequently recognized this principle in adjudications respecting the powers given by the revenue laws; and also in Chill v. Hornish et al. 4 Blackf. 454, where we decided that the agent of state for Indianapolis exercised special powers only in the disposition of the public land under his control, and that to make his acts valid he must conform strictly to the requisitions of the statutes prescribing his duties. This principle, we think, is applicable to this cause; and that, therefore, the- school-commissioner was not authorized to sell the mortgaged premises, unless there had been a failure to pay the interest due on the mortgage for six months after it became payable, nor unless he had advertised the time and place of sale in the manner pointed out by the statute, nor at any other place than the court-house door; and that if any of these prerequisites was wanting, a sale made by him on a forfeited mortgage is void. It is true, that the mortgage given in evidence, which is substantially in the form prescribed by the statute, contains a [?]*?clause conferring upon the commissioner the power to sell the premises, provided default should be made in the payment _ of the principal or interest. This power, however, which is granted in general terms, must be understood as corresponding with that given by the statute under which the mortgage was executed, and as requiring the same prerequisites which are prescribed by the law. If we do not give this construction to the mortgage, it would follow that the commissioner might sell the mortgaged premises before the lapse of six months after the interest became due, without giving previous notice, and wherever he pleased. The express enactments of the statute would thus be rendered nugatory.

It remains to be inquired whether the commissioner’s deed to the purchaser of the mortgaged premises, or the entry of satisfaction of the mortgage on the record of deeds, and the other matters contained in that entry, were any evidence that the commissioner took the previous steps necessary to the validity of his sale ? The mortgage was evidence that interest was due, and of the time. when it became payable, but with regard to notice and to the place of sale it most evidently can have no bearing.

The recitals contained in a deed are ordinarily evidence of the facts recited against the maker of the deed ; and we do not doubt the power of the legislature to make such recitals evidence also as to strangers.

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Bluebook (online)
7 Blackf. 12, 1843 Ind. LEXIS 146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williamson-v-doe-ind-1843.