19 S.E. 99 | N.C. | 1894
On 18 December, 1875, Samuel Smith and wife sold and conveyed to the defendant Samuel Quinnerly a certain tract of land in Pitt County by deed, which was duly probated and registered in said county.
Upon the same day and date, and for the purpose of securing the unpaid balance of the purchase-money, the defendant Quinnerly simultaneously reconveyed the said land by mortgage deed to the vendor, Samuel Smith, which was recorded in the office of the register of deeds of Pitt County on 10 September, 1877. On 5 January, 1877, for money loaned, the defendants, Samuel Quinnerly and wife, Sarah P. (146) Quinnerly, executed and delivered their mortgage deed upon the said land, including therein 70 acres, more or less, not embraced in plaintiff's mortgage, to the defendants, Caroline L. Nelson and Susan *91 C. Williams; and on 13 January, 1877, said mortgage was admitted to probate, and upon order of the probate court was registered. In a commission to a justice of the peace to take the privy examination of the wife of the mortgagor was a recital that the mortgagees had "procured the same (the mortgage) to be proved by this court." There was no other recital as to acknowledgment or proof of execution by the mortgagor.
Samuel Smith assigned the mortgage executed to him, and for the foreclosure of which this action was instituted, to the plaintiff, S. S. Quinnerly. Sarah Quinnerly, the wife of the mortgagor, died before the commencement of the action.
Upon these facts his Honor adjudged that the mortgage to Mrs. Williams and Mrs. Nelson was properly proven and had priority to the mortgage to Samuel Smith, which was assigned to the plaintiff, and from this judgment the plaintiff appealed.
The plaintiff contends that the probate of the mortgage to Nelson and Williams was insufficient to render the registration thereof valid. The ground assigned is that the probate court did not adjudge that the mortgage had been acknowledged by the grantor or its execution proved by the witness thereto. It merely recites that the mortgagee had "procured the same to be proved by this court." It is true, as contended by the plaintiff, that if the probate was in fact insufficient, the registration was invalid and of no effect. Todd v.Outlaw,
The plaintiff further contends that his mortgage, being for the unpaid purchase-money, is entitled to priority over the Nelson (148) mortgage, though registered after it, and that Nelson and Williams had notice that the purchase-money had not been paid. As to this, it will be sufficient to quote from Blevins v. Barker,
No error.
Cited: Barber v. Wadsworth,