This action was brought by plaintiff as mortgagee to have a deed absolute in form declared to be a mortgage, and to have the mortgage foreclosed against the land of Charles H. Merrill and Mary B. Merrill, defendants and appellants. The facts, over which there is no controversy, are in their chronological order the following: In March, 1909, Charles H. Merrill borrowed five thousand dollars from plaintiff bank to pay for the real estate here the subject of foreclosure. In April of the same year Merrill and his wife executed their deed of grant of this land to the bank. It was, however, thoroughly understood and agreed that the deed was but a mortgage given as security for the five thousand dollars already advanced and for such future advances as the bank might make. Contemporaneously a letter, in effect a defeasance, was given by the bank to the Merrills declaring the deed to be a mortgage upon the conditions above noted. This letter was signed by the bank, through Moulton, its president, but was not signed by either Merrill or his wife, nor was it acknowledged by any of the parties named. The acknowledgment to the deed executed by Merrill and wife to the bank *Page 394 was taken before a notary public, who, at the time, was the assistant cashier of plaintiff bank and a stockholder of the corporation. The bank loaned the Merrills the additional sum of two thousand dollars, so that secured by this mortgage there was due the bank the sum of seven thousand dollars. Admittedly no part of this sum has been paid. The mortgage deed to the bank remained in its possession unrecorded. On the twenty-third day of February, 1911, the Merrills filed a claim of homestead covering the property. Two days afterward Charles H. Merrill was adjudicated a bankrupt, and two days after that, on February 27, the bank recorded its mortgage deed.
The Merrills are here engaged in an effort to defeat the payment of this admittedly just debt by virtue of the provisions of the homestead and recordation acts. In this effort they place great reliance upon the case of the Merced Bank v. Rosenthal,
The requirement that the defeasance be acknowledged by husband and wife in the case of an encumbrance upon an existing homestead has no application to a mortgage created under the present circumstances before the existence of the homestead, and it would be but to foster fraud to hold that it did. Nor does the fact that the mortgage was not recorded until after the filing of the homestead make it unenforceable because of the homestead rights.(Duncan v. Curry,
The second proposition advanced upon the appeal is that because the notary who took the acknowledgment of the Merrills to the mortgage which they executed to the bank was himself assistant cashier of the bank and a stockholder, therefore *Page 396
the acknowledgment is void and the instrument must be considered as unacknowledged and consequently not within the provisions of subdivision 3 of section 1241 of the Civil Code. But to this there are at least two answers. First, that the pleading of defendants does not raise any issue as to the due execution or acknowledgment of the instrument. The appellants admit its due execution, and without proper averments and issues joined upon the question in the court below they cannot be permitted here to raise the point. The second answer is that the acknowledgment was not void in law. That the mere fact that the notary who took the acknowledgment was assistant cashier of the bank did not constitute a disqualification sufficient to avoid the acknowledgment is decided in the case of Bank of Woodland v.Oberhaus,
For this additional reason, therefore, it is held that the acknowledgment is sufficient.
The judgment appealed from is affirmed.
Melvin, J., and Lorigan, J., concurred.