45 Tex. 567 | Tex. | 1876
The deed of trust was not properly authenticated for record, and was not admissible in evidence as a registered deed.
In the case of Brown v. Moore, 38 Tex., 645, an acknowledgment of a deed of trust made before a trustee, interested to the extent of his commissions, was held invalid. (See also Stevens v. Hampton, 46 Mo., 406.) In this case the acknowledgment was before an agent of the firm, for whose benefit the deed was made, his agency appearing on the face of the deed. If the fact of agency raises a presumption of pecuniary interest, the ease of Brown v. Moore is in point. But whether such be the presumption or not, we think that one who identifies himself with the transaction by placing his name on the face of the instrument as the avowed agent of one of the parties, is not competent to give it authenticity as an officer. We have been cited to no case recognizing the validity of such an acknowledgment; on the other hand, it has been assumed as too plain for doubt that a person cannot take an acknowledgment of a deed to himself. (Groesbeck v. Seeley, 13 Mich., 329; Dissaume v. Burnet, 5 Iowa, 103; Beaman v. Whitney, 20 Me., 431.)
The evidence of the execution of the deed of trust was certainly secondary in itss character, and no sufficient predicate was laid for its admission. That the residence of the subscribing witness was unknown, was not enough. The affidavit should have shown that diligent inquiry had been made for them. (1 Greenl., secs. 572-574; White v. Holliday, 20 Tex., 679; Craddock v. Merrill, 2 Tex., 494.)
■White v. Holliday establishes, as an exception to the rule requiring the execution of a deed to be proved by one of the subscribing witnesses, that the maker of the deed himself may, when called on by a litigant claiming under the deed, prove that he executed it. The evidence in the case was not sufficient under the ruling in White v. Holliday, and the deed was properly executed.
The coiut did not err in instructing the jury that the de
Aeeirmed.