18 S.E. 70 | N.C. | 1893
Upon the trial the defendants offered in evidence a deed conveying thelocus, which was objected to by plaintiff on the grounds referred to in the opinion of Chief Justice Shepherd. The objection being sustained, the defendants appealed. The question presented for our consideration is, whether there was error on the part of the court in excluding the deed which was offered in evidence by the defendants. This deed purports to have been executed in August, 1852, by one Elisha Umphlett to Henry L. Eure, and was registered on 18 January, 1861. It appears from the certificate of probate that it was proved upon the oath of one of the subscribing witnesses before R. B. G. Cowper, deputy clerk, and it is insisted that as the clerk, Henry L. Eure, was the grantee in the said deed, his deputy could not, by reason of the interest of his principal, take the probate thereof.
A deputy is usually defined to be one who, by appointment, exercises an office in another's right. He is regarded as an agent or servant of his principal, who must, as a general rule, do all things "in his principal's name, and for whose misconduct the principal is responsible." (3) Willis v. Melvin,
We are, therefore, of the opinion that the authority of the deputy in this instance was in no way affected by reason of the interest of the clerk.
There is some conflict of authority in other jurisdictions as to whether the deputy should sign the certificate in his own name or in that of the clerk, but as the decisions chiefly relate to cases in which the taking of a probate is held to be ministerial act, they can have but little practical bearing upon the present question. According to the views we have indicated, the deputy (Cowper) had the authority, under the provisions of the Revised Code, to take this probate; and as it plainly appears from the certificate that he, and not the clerk, performed this duty, the insertion of the clerk's name before the words "per R. B. G. Cowper, D.C.," cannot invalidate his act.
It is further contended that the signature of Cowper in the capacity of deputy clerk was not in itself sufficient evidence of his official character, and that, for this reason, the deed was properly excluded.
When the deed was proven and registered in 1859, the deputy of the clerk of the county court was, as we have seen, expressly authorized to take the acknowledgment and proof of deeds, etc. (Rev. Code, ch. 37, sec. 2), and the official character of such deputy was so far recognized that it was provided, as a prerequisite to the validity of his acts, that he should take an oath "to support the Constitution of the United States and of the State, and an oath of office." Rev. Code, ch. (5) 19, sec. 15; Shepherd v. Lane, supra. It is also provided in the same section that the clerks of the Superior and county courts "shall *4
keep their offices at the courthouse in their respective county, where, by themselves or their lawful deputies, they shall give due attendance, . . . and that in case of death of the clerk of any court in the vacation, his deputy shall hold the office of clerk until another shall be appointed," etc. The office of deputy clerk being thus recognized by the law, as well as the authority of such officer to take the probate of deeds, we are unable to see why he should be excluded from the presumption which generally obtains respecting the due appointment of persons purporting to discharge the duties of public official positions. Accordingly, it has been held that "if the person taking an acknowledgment styles himself an officer before whom an acknowledgment may be taken, his certificate is prima facie evidence of the fact that he is such officer." 1 Devlin Deeds, sec. 500; Tuten v. Gazan,
We are of the opinion that the deed should have been admitted in evidence, and that there should be a
New trial.
Cited: White v. Hill,