34 Ky. 325 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1836
delivered the Opinion of the Court.
This case presents a contest between creditors contending for a priority of lien upon the property of A. G. Henry, their common debtor.
On the 19th of September, 1832, Henshaw & Co. filed their bill in the Jefferson Circuit Court, setting up two bills of exchange which had been drawn by them and accepted by A. G. Henry, for nine hundred and five dollars forty cents each, and payable to D. Henshaw, by whom they were endorsed over. The bill alleges that Plenry failed to pay the bills at maturity; that they were regularly protested, and afterwards taken up by the complainants.; and that Henry has removed from the state* leaving certain property in the hands of J. W. Breeden, a resident; vvhich property they pray may be taken into the hands of the sheriff, and by decree subjected to the satisfaction of their debt. The usual process issued on the bill, against Henry and Breeden, and on the same day (the 15th of September,) the property ip question was taken into possession by the sheriff.
In an amended bill, subsequently filed, the complain-, ants state, that H. J. Miller and G. Pulling assert claim to the property, under a mortgage, or deed of trust, which they allege to be fraudulent,'and at any rate void; and by this bill, Miller and Pulling are made defendants, Their answers set up and rely upon a deed of trust purporting to have been executed by A. G. Henry, on the 18th of August, 1832, and to convey the property (consisting of medicines, drugs, and all the articles and furniture belonging to an apothecary and drug store,) to J. C. Henry, with power to sell them, and out of the proceeds, to satisfy certain debts stated in the deed to be Aue to Miller and Pulling, in case those debts should not
The attached property was sold, by consent, before the hearing; and the proceeds falling greatly below the sum stated in the decree to be due to the complainants, the whole is appropriated exclusively to their demand. From this decree the defendants, Miller and Pulling, and A. G, Iienry, the debtor, have appealed to this Court.
The first objection which, under the assignment of errors, requires notice, is, that Edward Shippen, the last indorsee of each of the bills of exchange, was not made a party. But if it be true, as stated by the complainants, that they took up the bills after protest for non-payment, they acquired, by that fact, the perfect right of suing the acceptor in their own names; and by the same fact, the subsequent parties to whom the bills may have been endorsed, ceased to have any farther interest or right in them; and were, therefore, neither necessary nor proper parties.
So far as A. G. Henry, the acceptor, is concerned, the complainant’s bill having been taken for confessed against him, for want of answer, this allegation with all its consequences stands admitted. And conceding that the other defendants have a right to make the question, th^t they are pnaffected by the admission of Plenry, and that this allegation of the bill was put in issue by their general requisition of proof of the complainant’s demand against Henry: still, we apprehend, the production on the part of the complainants, of the bills of exchange and protests, is sufficient, in the absence of all pi’oof to the contrary, to establish the fact as alleged by them, and to sustain their title to the bills, and to a suit on them. Duncan vs. the United States, 3 Wheaton, 172;
The evidence, moreover, sufficiently proves, that the bills of exchange were accepted by Henry, in consideration of goods furnished to him by the complainants, and that the same goods constitute a considerable portion of the property now in contest. The indebtedness of Henry to the complainants, being thus established, to an amount exceeding the proceeds of the attached property, and Henry being shown to have been absent from the state when the bill was filed; the propriety of postponing the demand of Miller and Pulling—who are also proved to be real creditors, to that of the complainants, presents the only remaining point of serious enquiry. And this involves, in the first place, the question whether the deed under which Miller and Pulling claim,'has been sufficiently proved by regular authentication or otherwise.
The deed bearing date on'the 18th of August, 1833, was lodged for record in the proper office, on the 17th day of October following, being the 60th day after its date. The statute of 1820 (1 Slat. Law., 449,) requires it to be lodged “within sixty days after its executiori;” and, according to the mode of computation universally adopted in this country, excluding one of the days and including the other, the requisition in this particular seems to have been complied with.
But, by the same statute, the deed is declared not .to be good or valid against any creditor, unless within sixty days after its execution, it was, upon the acknowledgment of the parly, or proof by two subscribing witnesses, “according to thé existing laws,” deposited for record in the proper office.
As this deed appears to have been acknowledged in the state of Missouri, and to be certified by officers of that state, we are to enquire what were the existing laws regulating the proof or acknowledgment of conveyances executed out of this Commonwealth. In the multitude of statutes regulating conveyances, there are but few provisions'relating expressly to deeds of personal
The acknowledgment, of the present deed is certified, but not under seal, by two persons styling themselves justices of the peace in and for the county of St. Louis, Mo. And their official character is attested by the certificate of the Clerk of the county court of St. Louis county, authenticated by the seal of the Court, and concluding with the following attestation: “In testimony whereof, I have hereunto set my hand and affixed the seal of said Court, at the city of St. Louis, this 10th day of October, 1832.” We are strongly inclined to the opinion that, the statement in this attestation, that the seal was affixed at the city of St. Louis, coupled with the legal presumption that the seal of the Court of St. Louis county is kept and used in the county to which it belongs, furnishes prima fads sufficient evidence that, the city of St. Louis is in the county of the same name, or that the two are identical. The only question is, whether the statement that the seal was affixed at the city of St. Louis, is any evidence of that fact; and, as it is a part of the authentication on which the party relies for supporting the deed, we are disposed to think that it should be taken as at least pt'ima facie evidence, It appears then, that there is a city in the county in. which the maker of the deed resided; and in that case, the statute •gives no authority to two justices of the county, either •to receive or certify the acknowledgment or proof of the deed; and their certificate furnishes no evidence of its execution, either for the purpose -of admitting it to record, or of proving it before any legal tribunal.
But if we are mistaken in supposing that the statement in the Clerk’s attestation, furnishes some evidence that there is a city or town corporate within the county of St. Louis, and if it must be admitted that, in the absence’of all affirmative proof to that effect, two justices of the county have authority to take and certify the
If the deed had been read without, exception in tha Circuit Court, the question here would have been different; but it was in fact rejected, in that Court, on exceptions taken to it for want of sufficient authentication,, and proof, and it is made a part of the record by a bill of exceptions taken to the opinion of the Circuit Court op that point. It is suggested in argument, that the amended bill, which notices the claim of Miller and Foiling as being set up under a mortgage, or deed of trust, and charges that it is fraudulent, or otherwise void, is such a recognition of its actual existence and genuineness as dispenses with direct proof of the fact; and that, at any rate, it was calculated to throw the defendants off of their guard on this point. It is apparent, however, that
If the language of the amended bill had, in fact, been such as to mislead the defendants, and throw them off of their guard as to the necessity of making exact proof of the deed, they might, on that ground, have asked, and ■yvould probably have obtained, leave to take the requisite proof, when by the exceptions taken to the admission of the deed as evidence, they were apprised of their mistake. Their omission on this third occasion, to resort to the direct evidence of the subscribing witnesses, exposes them still more to those unfavorable inferences which the law establishes under such circumstances.
Upon the whole, we are of opinion that, the deed is not sufficiently proved, and that it was properly rejected by the Circuit Court. This opinion, of course, puts an.end to the claim of Miller and Pulling to have their debts first satisfied out of the attached property, upon Which, so far as the complainants are concerned, they cannot be considered as having any lien. The rejection of the deed, for want of proof, cuts off the enquiry into its fraudulency, and all discussion of the question made in the argument, as to the effect which a Court of Equity should give to it in the present contest, as an unrecorded deed, and leaves no other enquiry affecting the merits of the decree.
A question is made, by the assignment of errors, as to jthe refusal of the Court to reject the deposition of C. pi. Lewis, a witness for the complainants, excepted to, .on the ground that he was their surety in the bond executed on their part, for securing costs and damages, in case the restraining order prayed for by them, should be dissolved. We have no doubt this witness was incompetent, as being interested in the event of the suit. And the Court erred in not rejecting his deposition. But as his testimony has no relation to the questions which have been discussed, and on which, in our view of it, the decision of the case as presented in this record, depends, this error is entirely immaterial, and is no ground for reversing the decree: which is therefore affirmed.