98 S.E. 721 | N.C. | 1919
The action is against the register of deeds of Bladen County and the surety on his official bond to recover damages alleged to have been caused by the register's negligence in failing to properly index and cross-index a prior mortgage whereby the relator of plaintiff, holding a record mortgage and contract, suffered substantial damage.
The court ruled that liability on the part of defendant was admitted in the pleadings and the issue was only on the question of damages. The cause was then submitted to the jury on the following issues, defendant excepting:
1. Did the plaintiff advance money to Moore Moore upon the execution of the mortgage by Moore Moore to the plaintiff to secure the same, and if so, what amount?
2. Were Moore Moore entitled to any credits on the amount so advanced by the plaintiff, and if so, what was the amount of such credit?
3. What amount is the plaintiff entitled to recover?
The court then charged the jury if they found the facts to be as testified to by the witnesses they would answer the first issue, "Yes, $2,000;" second issue, "Yes, $758.85;" third issue, $1,241.15, with $15 accrued interest."
Judgment for plaintiff, and defendant excepted and appealed. (611)
It may be well to note that the recent decisions to the contrary, Ely v.Norman,
Recurring to the answer there are allegations to the effect that the prior mortgage was indexed in the name of the grantees therein, showing also the book and page of the registry. In the deed or written bargain and sale, conveying the timber to Moore Moore, the immediate grantors of plaintiff, there was distinct reference to the prior mortgage to Carter Keith from Jackson Blackburn, vendors, to Moore
Moore; that plaintiff's attorneys, in making their examination and whose knowledge and opportunity to know will be imputed to plaintiff, took a copy of the bill of sale and included same in their report on the title, and that "any sums of money advanced to Moore Moore was done with full knowledge of said paper-writing and in face of the recitations that Carter Son and Keith held a mortgage on the timber for $6,000; and further, that if plaintiff did not have actual notice of said mortgage it was due to his own negligence and carelessness and not to any act or conduct of this defendant" (the register of deeds), and under the principles heretofore stated the issue of liability is, in our opinion, distinctly raised and must be determined on the question whether the default, charged and admitted by the register, or not fully (614) indexing and cross-indexing the prior encumbrance, was the proximate cause of pecuniary loss to plaintiff or was the same due to his own negligent default on the facts known to him or which he should have known if reasonably attentive to his own interest. And on the question of damages, it does not necessarily follow that plaintiff is entitled to recover the sum of $1,241.15, with some accrued interest, the difference between the amount advanced and that paid back by the debtor, as his Honor ruled. The jury may award that sum but it does not follow as a conclusion of law from the facts in evidence. On a breach of duty of this kind, causing injury, the plaintiff may recover *646
the damages that were probable under the facts as they existed and which can be ascertained with a reasonable degree of certainty. The default complained of here was the failure to index and cross-index a prior mortgage, by reason of which plaintiff was misled and induced to take a second contract and mortgage, to his injury, and the damages would properly be referred to the existence of such prior mortgage and its effect on plaintiff's security. The only witness examined on the trial was J. N. Bryant, one of the plaintiffs, and, while his evidence tended to show that the Moores, plaintiff's debtors for their outlay, were insolvent, it is not an inference that the court can draw from his testimony, and while there is allegation that the prior mortgage had been foreclosed, leaving nothing subject to plaintiff's claim on the timber, that allegation is denied in the answer, and we do not recall any evidence tending to show such a foreclosure. In addition to this, it is admitted that plaintiff held the second mortgage on this timber to reimburse him for the $2,000, and it is nowhere shown in the evidence that the timber is not of sufficient value both to satisfy the prior encumbrance and also to reimburse the plaintiff. In an action of this character it is incumbent on plaintiff to establish both the injury and the amount of the loss, and though liability be established, the damage will be only nominal unless the loss be shown or facts presented from which it can be reasonably ascertained. Johnson v.Bryce et al.,
On the record, we are of opinion that the cause must be referred to the jury both on the question of liability and the amount of damages, and to that end a new trial is awarded.
New trial.
Cited: Wilkinson v. Wallace,
NOTE — BROWN, J., did not sit in any case at this term, being absent on account of illness.
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