The questions of fact which arose in the case were properly submitted to and passed upon by the jury, and, After considering the grounds, we find that the trial judge committed no error in overruling the motion for a new trial. It is not necessary that the questions so raised should be referred to in detail here, further than to say that, it being admitted that at the date of the mortgage from Heyser to Baccus title to the land in dispute was in Heyser, and it appearing that the proceedings of foreclosure were regular, the burden was on the claimant to show a title or right superior to the mortgage, provided the latter created a valid and subsisting lien on the land. To defeat this lien, it was not sufficient to show that there had been a contract for the purchase of the land by Houk prior to the date of the mortgage, without showing knowledge or notice of such contract on the part of the mortgagee. It was not attempted to show that the mortgagee had actual notice or knowledge of that contract; nor docs the evidence clearly show at what time Houk went into possession under the contract with Heyser, so as to charge the mortgagee with notice of his claim. We are not, therefore, able to say that the verdict of the jury was contrary to law and the evidence in the case. The main point in the ease and the one upon which it turns under the pleading and evidence, as shown in the record, is whether the mortgage made by Heyser to Baccus, and which was recorded, constituted a valid lien on the land. The plaintiff in error insists that the instrument created no lien, because at the time of its execution Heyser was clerk of the superior court of Morgan county, and that it was attested by another witness and Baldwin, deputy-clerk of the superior court of Morgan county, and it was upon this at-'
By section 3620 of the Civil Code it is provided, that to authorize the record of a deed, “if executed in this State, it must be attested by a judge of a court of record of this State, or a justice of the peace, or notary public, or clerk of the superior court, in the county in which the three last-mentioned officers respectively hold their appointments, or if subsequent to its execution the deed is acknowledged in the presence of either of the named officers, that fact, certified on the deed by such officer, shall entitle it to be recorded.” Our system of attesting deeds and other instruments requiring record is the equivalent of an acknowledgment of the execution of such instruments, made by the maker as required by the common law and practiced in most of the States. Under our statute, attestation by one of the officers named,, together with another witness, dispenses with the neces
The cases of Goodwynne v. Goodwynne, 11 Ga. 178, and Graves v. Warner, 26 Ga. 620, do not, as we understand them, conflict with our reasoning in this case. If they did, it would be sufficient to say that the provisions of our Code as they now exist on the subject, in more explicit terms, enlarge the authority given to deputy-clerks; and we are constrained tó rule that, under these provisions, a deputy-clerk of the superior court appointed in the manner prescribed by the Code, who is given general authority by the appointment, and who has complied with the provisions of law in his qualification as deputy, has the same authority to officially attest the execution of deeds and other instruments requiring record and taking acknowledgments of the execution of such, instruments as is given to the principal clerk, and that he has this power by virtue of his office as deputy-clerk ; in the exercise of this power he uses his own name and authority and not those of the principal clerk; he may therefore attest a paper executed by the individual who is the principal clerk in the same manner and it will have the same effect as his attestation to papers executed by any other individual. And the court committed no error in admitting the mortgage in evidence and in charging the jury as set out in the motion.
Judgment affirmed.