121 Pa. 268 | Pa. | 1888
Opinion,
It was error in the learned court below to strike out the testimony of Wm. L. Eyerly. He was examined by the de
The evidence thus stricken out explained fully what was the consideration of the mortgage, to-wit: a debt due by Mrs. Weaver’s son to the mortgagee, to secure which the mortgage was given. As this was a perfectly legitimate transaction, and as the court below appears to have laid much stress upon the fact that there was no apparent consideration for the mortgage, and strongly intimates that without such consideration the mortgage was void, the importance of the rejected testimony becomes manifest. The comments of the court upon this subject covered by the thirteenth, fourteenth and fifteenth assignments are erroneous and those assignments are sustained.
We think there was error also in holding that the scrivener who wrote the deed and took the acknowledgment was the agent of the mortgagee for those purposes. We cannot find any testimony to that effect. It is true there was evidence that the scrivener gave the mortgage to the mortgagee, but that fact was quite as consistent with his being the agent of the son of Mrs. Weaver as of the mortgagee. In point of fact it w'as Fayen Weaver, the defendant’s son, who procured the scrivener and brought him to his mother to have the mortgage executed, and who was present at, and participated in, the execution of it. As it was given to secure his debt and thus was intended for his benefit, there is ample evidence to justify the inference that it was he who employed the scrivener and who stood in the relation of principal to the latter as agent. Clew-ell, the mortgagee, was not present at the execution of the mortgage, either in person or, so far as we can discover in the testimony, by any person as his representative. He was there
We do not sustain the fourth, fifth, tenth and eleventh assignments, because all the matters covered by them were part of the res gestee and therefore admissible, without any regard to the presence or absence of the mortgagee or his agent.
Two matters of more importance remain to be considered. One is the legal sufficiency of the decision of the court. Several assignments of error present this subject. After a patient and careful study of the decision, we are constrained to say we think it is in serious and fatal conflict with our later eases and must therefore be set aside. There is no separate and distinct finding of facts, such as is required by our act of 1874 and held to be essential by a number of our rulings. The decision commences by stating the nature of the action, that it appears by the mortgage book the mortgage is there recorded, and it appears the mortgagor was the owner of the land described, and it appears by the recitals that the mortgage was given to secure payment of a bond for §500. The certificate of the acknowledgment before the notary is then copied and it is stated that with the admission as to the death of the mortgagee and grant of letters the plaintiff’s testimony was closed. The decision then proceeds to state that on the part of the defendant it was shown that the land was conveyed to Mrs. Weaver in 1867 and it was testified by Charles Weaver, defendant’s grandson, that he was present when the mortgage was signed and heard what passed at that time. So far, there is nothing in the decision which either is, or purports to be, a finding of any fact whatever. In the next sentence it is stated that “ it
It will not do to merely say in the report or decision that “the following are the facts found.” They must be actually and distinctly and separately found, and they must be the substantial and controlling facts of the case. It is not enough that the finding may be sufficient as to some one or more of the minor facts, if deficient as to the others. Nor will it be a compliance with the statute to mingle the facts with the conclusions of law. This also is done in the present case, and it produces still more confusion. Much of what is said in that part of the decision we cannot agree to, as already stated, but if we could, we would be bound to hold the decision fatally
The only remaining question is whether the testimony of the grandson of the defendant is sufficient to overcome the notary’s certificate of acknowledgment. At the time of the occurrence he was a child eight years of age. At the time of his examination he was sixteen years old, and an intervening period of eight years had elapsed. Admittedly under our own decisions, if Joseph Clewell had advanced money or parted with any property real or personal on the faith of this mortgage, the certificate of acknowledgment would have been conclusive : Heeter v. Glasgow, 79 Pa. 79, and cases there cited, Oppenheimer v. Wright, 106 Pa. 569; Singer Mfg. Co. v. Rook, 84 Pa. 442. It must be admitted here that the weight of the evidence is, that the consideration moving from Clewell had passed before this mortgage was given. The money had been previously loaned and Clewell had taken Fayen Weaver’s note or notes for the debt which the mortgage was to secure. Therefore, we are obliged to hold that as to Clewell the validitjof the acknowledgment might be impeached by parol testimony, and if that testimony were clear, satisfactory, indubitable, sufficient to move the mind of a chancellor to set aside a written instrument on the ground of fraud, it would be our duty to give it such effect, if the case were properly before us, and pronounce this mortgage invalid. But a most thorough and careful consideration of the testimoiry fails to convince us
Moreover, it is not at all certain that any fraud was practiced upon the defendant. She signed the mortgage in the presence of her husband, her son, and the notary, and without objection. It is not pretended that the husband and son were ignorant of the contents of the paper, and both the proof and the inferences are that they understood it perfectly. No one of all these persons, including the defendant, has testified, or was examined, to prove that any fraud or imposition was practiced. Only a grandson, who was then a mere child of eight years, testified as to what occurred, and that was after eight years had elapsed from the time the mortgage was executed. The allegation of fraud is based upon the assertion that Mrs. Weaver was deceived as to the character of the paper she signed. The grandson testifies that Tetter could not speak German and that his grandmother could not speak or understand English, and that what was said to her was said by her husband. He gives somewhat different accounts of what was said. Thus, at first, he said: “ They wanted her to sign it and she wanted to know wliat it was and they told her it wasn’t anything to hurt anything at all; she shouldn’t be troubled about it, that it wouldn’t be of any account.” On cross-examination he said, being asked to give the very words his grandfather used: “ I couldn’t tell you just how he spoke. Mr. Tetter sat down and wrote on that paper and told my grandfather that that there other paper what Fenen (Fayen ?) Weaver had was lost and now he should sign this ; and my
It appears by this citation of the testimony that it was explained to the defendant that the paper she was about to sign was given to take the place of a paper previously given by her son but which was lost. -As this was doubtless the fact, and there is nothing to impeach it, it is somewhat difficult to discover the fraud. She certainly knew she was assuming an obligation for her son and that is what the mortgage is. That the particular obligation she assumed included a pledge of her real estate, would be of more importance if she had refused to bind her land and had been told that this instrument would not have that effect, but it would be expecting rather too much of a child of eight years that he should understand the difference between a mortgage of land and a personal obligation for the payment of money, and hence we find no testimony on that subject, or showing that she was either expressly or impliedly deceived in relation to it. The assertion made by her husband that it would not make her trouble is the same that is always urged when a person is asked to become surety for another, and no doubt it was thoroughly believed by her husband when he made it. It does not appear therefore that the defendant was actually misinformed as to what the paper was, and it does appear that she did intend to assume an obligation for a debt or other obligation of her son, which of course she could lawfully do by way of mortgage.
Inadequate as such testimony is, to make out an allegation
It is doubtless true that there are cases in which it is proper for courts and juries to defeat a formal certificate of acknowledgment, but this is not one of them. In any such case the evidence in contradiction of the facts set forth in the certificate, should be of the clearest and most satisfactory character; it should be above suspicion; it should of course be consistent with itself and free from contradictions, and it should be intrinsically probable. It should be so persuasive in its character that the judicial mind can rest upon it, with the conviction that the ends of justice will be subserved by giving it effect as the basis of a decree. In all of these respects we feel that the evidence in the present case is gravely deficient. It is scarcely possible to imagine that a child of eight years could receive impressions, positive, definite and fixed, of an event such as tins, in which he could have no interest and wlrich he certainly could not understand. The impressions of cMldhood as to matters of business detail are of the most fleeting, evanescent and imperfect character. Surely it would be dangerous to permit important muniments of title, regular, complete and in due form upon their face, to be swept away by that kind of testimony, when a mere momentary inattention or a slight lapse of memory may fully account for the supposed omission of a formal ceremony. Especially does this feeling prevail, when it is considered that the witness was the grandchild of the defendant, maintained, nourished, educated by her from his infancy, living with her always, and no doubt at all times the object of her constant affection and protecting care. WMle the case may be one of hardship for the defendant we cannot sacrifice the interests of justice to a mere sentiment of compassion. We feel it to be our duty to say that we cannot sustain the decision of the learned court below either in the conclusions of fact or
Judgment reversed and procedendo awarded.