39 La. Ann. 1050 | La. | 1887
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
This is a contest for the distribution of the proceeds of real estate judicially sold.
The third opponent claims to be entitled to preference over the seizing creditor, by virtue of au agreement between her aud the defendant, termed a mortgage, executed in New York and subsequently recorded in New Orleans, where the property was situated, at a date anterior to the registries ou which the plaintiff relies.
On the trial, the' opponent offered in evidence the agreement in question, which, notwithstanding objection, was admitted to prove rem ipsam.
- The opponent contends that it ought to have been received without qualification, as an authentic act, but the plaintiff insists that it should have been rejected altogether, as it is not authentic, and the signature was not proved.
The agreement purports to be signed by the defendant befo.e a notary public in New York, on November 19, 1883, aud to have been recorded in the Mortgage Office of the parish of Orleans, on December 14 following.
It whs subsequently acknowledged before a Louisiana commissioner in New York, ou November 25, 1886.
The acknowledgment before the New York notary was not made in the presence of any witne1 s, and that before the Louisiana commissioner was made before one witness only.
No proof was adduced of the signature of the parties to the agreement.
Under the terms of the law and the construction put upon the same by a previous court, the instrument, to operate as an authentic, ought to have been acknowledged in presence of two witnesses before the Louisiana commissioner.
In Langley vs. Burrows, 15 Ann. 392, in which the acknowledgment had been made before a Louisiana commissioner and one witness only, the court said:
This ruling is perfectly correct. It cannot be pretended that the Legislature intended to vest commissioners for this State, acting in other States, with powers superior or more efficacious than are conferred on home notaries, who must be citizens of the State.
Hence, it is apparent that an act acknowledged before a Louisiana commissioner acquires no authenticity in this State, unless executed in the presence of two competent witnesses. R. C. C. 2234; R. S. 596 to 603.
In Miller vs. Wisner, 22 Ann. 457, the court held that documents under private signature are inadmissible in evidence until proof of the signature. Thus reads the law. R. C. C. 2242.
The admission of the document to prove rem ipsam was barren of any effect; a white sheet of paper might as well have been admitted. It should not have gone in at all.
The district judge properly non-suited the opponent. The record is not in a condition to enable this court to pass upon the merits of the controversy.
Judgment affirmed.