4 F. Supp. 425 | D. Maryland | 1933
The matter now before the court in the above case arises on the petition of the trustee in bankruptcy to review the order of the referee filed September 5, 1933, directing the trustee to pay the sum of one thousand dollars ($1,000) with interest, out of the proceeds of sale of certain chattel mortgaged property, to the petitioners, Lula J. Buch and Eloise Buch, as chattel mortgagees. The question presented is whether the chattel mortgage is legally sufficient, the alleged defect being in the acknowledgment. The problem is clearly and concisely stated in the referee’s find, ings of fact and conclusions of law filed September 5, 1933, and in his certificate on petition to review filed therewith. After hearing oral argument of counsel I was of the opinion, subject to further examination of the law, that the referee’s order and conclusions of law should be affirmed. I adhere to this view after the further examination. In view, however, of the difficulty of the question (as recognized by the referee) some further elaboration of the reasons for sustaining the chattel mortgage is desirable.
The original mortgage with certificate of record stamped thereon was filed in the case on June 2, 1933, annexed to the petition of the mortgagees. The mortgage was prepared on a printed chattel mortgage form customarily used in Baltimore City but designed for execution and acknowledgment by an indimidual, whereas the particular mortgage was made by the bankrupt, a Maryland corporation, called the Universal Storage and Transfer Company, Inc. It is not disputed that the contents and execution (apart from the acknowledgment) of the mortgage is legally valid and sufficient. It names the corporation as the mortgagor, is dated January 3, 1933, recites the receipt of the consideration' — $1,-800 — describes the mortgaged property and is signed by the President and See. & Treas. of the corporation with the corporate seal thereto affixed. The acknowledgment, the legal sufficiency of which is challenged, partly in print and partly in typewriting, is as follows (the typewritten portions being italicized) :
"State of Maryland, City of Baltimore, to wit:
“I hereby certify that on this 3rd day of January in the year one thousand nine hundred and thirty-three, before me, a Notary Republic of Baltimore and State of Maryland, in and for the City aforesaid, personally appeared
"the mortgagor named in the foregoing mortgage and acknowledged the aforegoing mortgage to be their aet. At the same time also appeared Lula J. Buch and Eloise Buch, joint tennants with right of swrvvoorship and not as tennant incommon. And made oath in due form of law that the consideration set forth in said mortgage is true and bona fide as therein set forth.
“Marguerite Herzog,
“Notary Public”
—with her seal annexed.
If the mortgagor had been an individual instead of a corporation, the sufficiency of the acknowledgment could not be disputed, but the defect is said to lie in the fact that the mortgagor is a corporation which can acknowledge a mortgage under the Maryland statute only by an attorney named in the instrument for that purpose or by the president or vice president. The exaet language of the statute (article 23, § 127, Maryland Code Pub. Gen. Laws 1924) is as follows:
“A corporation may acknowledge any instrument required by law to be acknowledged, by its attorney appointed under its seal, and*427 such appointment may be embodied in the deed, or such instrument may be acknowledged by the president or any vice-president of such corporation without such appointment.”
There is no statutory form for an acknowledgment of deeds or mortgages by a corpora^ tion in Maryland. But in practice the approved and customary form which should properly have been used, reads substantially as follows:
“State of Maryland, Baltimore City, to wit:
“I hereby certify that on this 3rd day of January, in the year one thousand nine hundred and thirty-three, before me, a Notary Publie of the State of Maryland in and for Baltimore City, personally appeared Justin G. Buch, President of the Universal Storage and Transfer Co., Inc., the mortgagor named in the foregoing mortgage, and acknowledged the foregoing mortgage to be the act and deed of the said corporation. At the same time also appeared Lula J. Buch and Eloise Buch, the mortgagees therein named, and made oath in due form of law that the consideration set forth in said mortgage is true and bona fide as therein set forth.
“Marguerite Herzog,
“Notary Publie”
- — with seal.
Section 70 of article 21 of the Maryland Code provides “the following forms of acknowledgments shall be sufficient.” Then follows a form for the acknowledgment of a deed by an individual taken within the state which reads as follows:
“State of Maryland,-county, to wit:
“I hereby certify, that on this-day of-, in the year-, before the subscriber, (here insert style of the officer taking the acknowledgment,) personally appeared (here insert the name of the person making the acknowledgment,) and acknowledged the foregoing deed to be his act.”
Section 73 of the same article provides “any form of acknowledgment containing in substance the aforegoing forms shall be sufficient.”
The effect of the failure to substantially comply with the requirements of the Maryland law as to chattel mortgages is stated in section 44 of article 21:
“No personal property, of any description whatever, whereof the vendor, mortgagor or donor shall remain in possession, shall pass, alter or change, or any property therein be transferred to any purchaser, mortgagee or donee, unless by bill of sale or mortgage acknowledged and recorded as herein provided 5 but nothing herein shall be construed to extend to any sale or gift, where the same is accompanied by delivery, nor to invalidate such transfer as between the parties thereto.”
As provided by the mortgage in question, the possession of the property was retained in this ease by the mortgagor.
To be good, therefore, the chattel mortgage in this case must be “acknowledged and recorded as herein provided.” It was admittedly so recorded on the following day after its execution, January 4, 1933. The question, is whether it was properly acknowledged. By section 49 of article 21, it is provided “a mortgage of personal property shall be executed, acknowledged and recorded as bills of sale.” By section 46 of article 21, it is provided “a bill of sale or chattel mortgage, if acknowledged within this State, may be acknowledged before any officer authorized to take acknowledgments of deeds within this State in the same manner as deeds are acknowledged, or acknowledged as certified.”
With regard to the acknowledgment of deeds, it is provided in section 6 of article 21 that “every officer, before whom any acknowledgment shall be made .shall give a certificate thereof and endorse on or annex to the deed such certificate, and the certificate shall be recorded with the deed.”
And by section 8:
“The certificate of acknowledgment shall contain:
“1st. The name of the person making the acknowledgment.
“2d. The official style of the officer taking the acknowledgment.
“3d. The time when it was taken.
“4th. A statement that the grantor acknowledged the deed to be his act, or made an acknowledgment to the like effect.”
It is thus apparent that the only defect in the acknowledgment to this chattel mortgage is the failure to expressly name in the notary’s certificate the officer of the corporation who made the acknowledgment, with a statement to the effect that it was made for the corporation.
With respect to chattel mortgages, it is also provided by section 53 of article 21 that to be valid the mortgagees, “or some one of them, or the agent of some one of them, shall make an affidavit that the consideration in said bill of sale of mortgage is true and bona fide as therein set forth.” -
Here, therefore, we have a case where a mortgage loan is actually made by the mortgagees dealing with the authorized officers of the corporation, expecting to receive a valid security for the loan and the corporation intending to give the valid security. The question is, however, in no way affected by any doctrine of notice in fact to, or estoppel of, creditors. The trustee’s objection to the acknowledgment is, under these circumstances, obviously highly technical in character, but the question nevertheless remains as to whether the technicality is sound. We are dealing with a subject governed by statutes of the state of Maryland and the question is necessarily to be determined by the proper application of those statutes and decisions of the Court of Appeals of this State which have construed and applied them. Sapero v. Neiswender (C. C. A. 4) 23 F.(2d) 403; Collier on Bankruptcy (13th Ed.) vol. II, p. 1038, note 4.
The Maryland statute (section 44, article 21) provides that no title shall pass to the mortgagee unless the mortgage is acknowledged as provided by the statutes. It is quite clear that the compliance in this case was not literally correct and we turn therefore, to the Maryland cases to ascertain what principle has been announced by the Court of Appeals of Maryland in applying the state statutes to kindred or analogous cases. We find it most clearly stated that the point of approach is not of strict construction and required literal compliance but a broad and liberal construction for the purpose of upholding rather than striking down the validity of such conveyances. Basshor v. Stewart, 54 Md. 376, is the leading and most fully considered ease upon the subject in the Maryland Reports. There a corporate mortgage purported to be acknowledged by an attorney, appointed for that purpose in the instrument itself. The notary’s certificate of acknowledgment was perfect except in its omission to include the statement that the attorney “acknowledged the said mortgage.” This, of course, was the essential thing to be performed by the attorney. Nevertheless looking at the mortgage and the certificate of acknowledgment the Court found that the omission of the vital words was merely a clerical misprision and should be supplied by inference and intendment, Judge Alvey saying:
“In aid of this certificate we are required to read it in connection with the other parts of the instrument; and we must, moreover, bear in mind that every reasonable intenidment should be made in support of the certificate, and the instrument to which it is attached. And so reading the certificate, is there a doubt left in the mind as to what was done by the attorney before the justice, and what act was intended to be certified by that officer? * * * Wliat may be fairly and clearly understood or implied, in reading the acknowledgment in connection with the deed, is of the same effect as if it had been in terms expressed.”
And the court quoted with approval from the case of Van Ness & Jones v. Bank of U. S., 13 Pet. 17, 10 L. Ed. 38, a case arising under the statutes of Maryland in force in the District of Columbia and presenting a somewhat analogous situation, where Mr. Chief Justice Taney in delivering the opinion of the court, upholding the sufficiency of the acknowledgment, said:
“The soundest principles of justice and policy would seem to demand that every reasonable intendment should be made to support the titles of the bona fide purchasers of real property; and this Court is not disposed to impair their safety, by insisting upon matters of form, unless they were evidently required by the legislative authority.”
And Judge Alvey added:
“By the Code, Art. 21, sec. 71 [now section 73 of article 21 above quoted], any form of acknowledgment containing in substance the contents of the forms prescribed, are declared to be sufficient. We are not, therefore, restricted by mere matter of form. We must look to what will reasonably and substantially gratify the requirement of the statute. Of course, we are not to be understood as giving sanction to any loose 'construction of these certificates. On the contrary, if we perceived that there was reasonable doubt as to the meaning and real import of the certificate in question, we should feel bound to declare it invalid.”
And in the same case Judge Alvey reviews other decisions of the Court in which material
“It is the policy of the law to uphold certificates when substance is found, and not to suffer conveyances, or the proof of them, to be defeated by technical or unsubstantial objections.”
And again quotes with approval an extract from the opinion in Herron v. Harbour, 75 Okl. 129, 182 P. 243, 29 A. L. R. 905, as follows:
“In determining the sufficiency of a certificate of acknowledgment, technical rules of construction will not be applied. A substantial and not a literal compliance with the statute in the certificate of acknowledgment to a deed, mortgage, or contract relating to real estate is all that the law requires, and, although words not in the statute are used in the place of others, or words in the statute are omitted, yet, if the meaning of the words used is the same, or they represent the same fact, or if the omission of a word or words is" immaterial, or can be supplied by a reasonable and fair construction of the whole instrument, the acknowledgment will be held sufficient.”
See, also, Bank of Hampton v. Wright (C. C. A. 8) 35 F.(2d) 321; Hauser v. Callaway (C. C. A. 8) 36 F.(2d) 667. The rule of substantial and not literal compliance is indeed general throughout the United States. 29 A. L. R. 923, note; 72 A. L. R. 1293; 1 C. J. 839. It was so applied by the Circuit Court for this 4th Circuit in regard to the law of West Virginia and North Carolina in Davis v. Seybold (C. C. A.) 195 F. 402, 407, and National Bank of Goldsboro v. Hill (D. C.) 226 F. 102, 108.
Of course, a vital defect in the positive requirements of the statute cannot be supplied if entirely omitted, as for instance, where the statute requires a seal in the execution of the instrument by the corporation, which is missing (Tyler Co. v. O’Ferrall, 153 Md. 353, 138 A. 249); or where the name of the person making the acknowledgment is left blank and there is no possibility of supplying the omission by reference to other parts of the whole instrument (Coale v. Harrington, 7 Har. & J. 147).
It may also be noted that it has been the policy of the Maryland Legislature to validate from time to time by special act previously defectively executed or acknowledged deeds and other similar instruments which must be recorded, saving accrued rights of creditors. Thus, see Maryland Code, article 21, §§ 84-91, inclusive. And this policy has been consistently pursued in later years. See 1929 Supplement to the Maryland Code, including the Acts of 1927 and 1929 in article 21, §§87 and 91, and the Maryland Acts of 1933, ch. 50, referred to by the referee
There appears to be no Maryland decision dealing specifically with a literally imperfect acknowledgment of a deed or mortgage by an officer of a corporation although two eases of analogous nature have already been referred to where the. alleged legally defective acknowledgment was by an attorney for the corporation, and, as already noted, there is no statutory form prescribed for the acknowledgment of a corporate deed or mortgage by either attorney or officer. But a recent decision has dealt with the statutory requirement of the required affidavit by a corporate mortgagee. Buck v. Gladfelter, 122 Md. 34, 89 A. 317. By sections 33 and 34 of article 21 this required affidavit to the mortgage where a corporation is the mortgagee may be made by the president or other officer of the corporation. In the case cited the certificate* of the notary was merely that one Charles D. Fenhagen (not stating his official relation to the corporation) made the affidavit. The court held that the affidavit was nevertheless good and that parol proof could be submitted to show that the person named in the certificate was in fact an officer of the corporation at the time.
The ultimate question to be decided here is whether, within these principles of the Maryland íaw, it is possible to find from the body of the mortgage and the notary’s eertifi
Of course, it is clear from the Maryland statutes that an acknowledgment to a paper of this kind must be an individual and personal act. The law looks to the personal responsibility of some individual acting either for himself or in a representative capacity. If it is not possible to find from the paper as a whole that some identified individual did make the acknowledgment, the paper would be fatally defective. For instance, in my opinion, a mere recital in the certificate that the mortgagor (a corporation) personally appeared without other internal evidence in the paper to show what individual made the acknowledgment, would make the paper fatally defective.' And it is at least very doubtful whether any extrinsic evidence could be resorted to to cure the defect. The object of the recording law is, of course, to give constructive notice to those who do not have actual notice and it is clear that constructive notice is only effective to the extent that it appears from what is recorded. But in this case, as above pointed out, I think this particular instrument is saved by its very crudities because (and only because) reading the paper as a whole, and without the aid of external evidence of facts as found by the referee, it becomes possible by a liberal interpretation of the paper to know with reasonable certainty that the certificate in substance meant that the officers of the corporation, including the president, personally made the acknowledgment as officers of the corporation.
An examination of very'many of the decided cases collected in the notes in A. L. ft. above referred to, fails to present a case very closely similar on its facts to this instant ease. It may fairly be said that many of the cases reviewed in the annotations show a less lib