25 S.W.2d 51 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1930
Affirming.
A.R. Schoffner was a notary public for Jefferson county, Ky., and the Ætna Casualty Surety Company was surety on his official bond. In an action predicated upon the negligence and fraud of the notary, a judgment was rendered against the surety. It has prosecuted this appeal, insisting that it is not liable, because the fraudulent act of the notary public was not done in his official capacity, but as a real estate agent, and that the certificate of the officer was not the proximate cause of the damage. The terms of the bond followed the language of the statute (section 3721, subsec. 4), to the effect that the notary should "well and properly discharge all the duties of said office as required by law." Shoffner was associated with H.B. Earl in a real estate agency. In the capacity of real estate agents they negotiated a transaction between Caroline Andres and Margaret Ewing. Mrs. Ewing valued her property at $2,500, and authorized the agents to sell it for that price on terms of $750 cash and the balance in monthly payments of $25 each. Mrs. Andres was induced by the real estate agents to offer for the property of Mrs. Ewing $1,000 in cash and $1,750 in deferred payments of $25 each, payable monthly, and also her farm in Indiana, valued at $1,600. The total amount of the offer was $4,350, or $1,850 more than Mrs. *144 Ewing asked for her property. Neither Mrs. Andres nor Mrs. Ewing knew anything about the fraud of the real estate agents. Each paid them a commission on the trade. The agents concealed the facts from both parties, and prevented them from meeting during the negotiations. The notes of Mrs. Andres for $1,750 were delivered to Mrs. Ewing and she was paid $750 of the cash, for which she conveyed her property to Mrs. Andres. The agents kept $250 of the cash payment in addition to the commissions collected. Shoffner prepared a deed conveying the farm of Mrs. Andres, but named no grantee therein. He procured her to sign and acknowledge the blank deed before him as a notary public, and certified the acknowledgement. Mrs. Andres was not advised that the deed was in blank. She could not read or write, but signed the deed by mark. She supposed the farm was going to Mrs. Ewing as a part of the purchase price for her property. Shoffner, of course, was fully advised of the fraud. He gave the deed to his partner, who caused the name of Elwood M. Earl, father of H.B. Earl, to be filled in as grantee, and the Indiana farm was then sold to innocent purchasers.
The instrument, as executed and acknowledged by Mrs. Andres, was not a deed to Elwood M. Earl. It was void for lack of a grantee. Huntsman v. Bryant,
The certificate of the notary in this case was essentially false. The grantor did not sign or acknowledge a deed to Elwood M. Earl, but the notary uttered a certificate to that effect. By reason of that certificate, in part at least, the title of Mrs. Andres was divested, and her property was lost. State, etc., v. American Surety Co. (Mo.App.)
The cases relied upon by the appellant are essentially different and easily distinguished. In People v. Nederlander,
The principle running through the authorities is the same. The divergence arises in its application to the particular facts of the different cases. Where a notary is called on to perform an act which he is authorized by law to perform, and he does so carelessly or fraudulently, he and his surety are liable for any loss proximately resulting therefrom. 20 Rawle C. L. Sec. 17, p. 335. A notary public is not an insurer, but he is under a duty to his clients to act honestly, skillfully and with reasonable diligence. 46 C. J. p. 524, Sec. 38; Com. etc., v. Johnson,
In this case the notary took and certified an acknowledgment to a void deed, knowing that it was void, and knowing that the grantor would not sign or acknowledge the deed if advised of the facts known to the officer. It caused a loss to the grantor in depriving her of the farm. The fact that the fraud of the notary in his capacity as real estate agent operated concurrently with his official act did not defeat the liability on the official bond. The very act of the notary public in his official capacity was an essential factor in divesting the title to the land, and it enabled the real estate agents to consummate the fraud. The act was plainly a breach of the covenant in the bond that the notary would well and properly discharge his duties. The duty of the officer is owed to any one who may employ him officially, and undoubtedly Mrs. Andres was within the purpose, purview, and protection of the bond. 46 C. J. p. 528; Lacour v. National Surety Co.,
It is complained that incompetent evidence was admitted. The trial court permitted several witnesses who were experienced notaries to testify, in substance, *148
that they would not take an acknowledgment to a deed in which no grantee was named. The record presents no question concerning the liability of a notary who innocently certifies an acknowledgment without an examination of the instrument, or without knowledge of its contents. In this case the notary wrote the deed, knew that it named no grantee, and concealed from the grantor facts within the knowledge of the officer, which, if disclosed, would have defeated the fraud. A custom among notaries may or may not be admissible as excusing a negligent act, but the absence or existence of a custom could not be established by the testimony of particular notaries as to their individual practices. 17 C. J. Sec. 93, p. 525. The testimony should have been excluded, but it is plain that it was not prejudicial to appellant. The vital question to be determined was whether the fraudulent act of the notary public was within the terms of his official bond, and whether the injury to plaintiff proximately resulted therefrom. We entertain no doubt that upon these questions the lower court ruled correctly. The erroneous ruling regarding the admission of immaterial evidence is insufficient to warrant a reversal of the judgment. Civil Code Prac. Sec. 756; Louisville Ry. Co. v. Sweeney,
The judgment is affirmed.
Whole court sitting.