124 Mo. App. 80 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1907
The suit is on the official bond of the defendant, who was at the time of the breach com- . plained of, circuit clerk and ex-officio recorder of deeds for Pemiscot county. The breach declared upon is that the defendant, as recorder of deeds,-permitted one Jackson to enter on the margin of the record, satisfaction of a deed of trust on certain lands which plaintiff had recently purchased, without presentation of the notes therein secured for cancellation or accounting for their absence by proper affidavit, Avhereby it was made to appear to plaintiff that such indebtedness and the lien of
“Q. You knew at that time that it was your duty to require Jackson to produce the notes cancelled in your presence, or make affidavit? A. As far as knowing it I never had examined the laws in regard to it. I had been under the impression up to that time, and after that time, that SO' long as a beneficiary in a deed of trust proffered the satisfaction of the deed of trust it was not necessary for him to produce the notes, and in case he had assigned those notes, and they were in the hands of some other persons, then it would be necessary to produce the cancelled notes.
“Q. Did you make any demand on Jackson to produce the notes? A. I did not.
“Q. Did you ask him anything about the notes? A. Not a question.
“Q. You never required him to make an affidavit, or any one for him? A. No, sir.”
It appears that on that day, May 10th, Phillips and his wife, executed and delivered to Jackson a new or second deed of trust for the purpose of correcting the error in description mentioned in the prior instrument and securing the same and indentical notes which had been delivered to Jackson sixteen days prior thereto April 24th, which deed of trust afforded Jackson a first lien on the Phillips home. All of the evidence tends to show that Phillips refused to execute this second or corrected deed of trust on his home property until Jack
“In case satisfaction be acknowledged by the payee or assignee, . . . the note or notes shall be produced and cancelled in the presence of the recorder, who shall enter that fact on the margin of the record and attest the same with his official signature. ... If such note or notes are not produced for cancellation for the alleged reason that they have been lost or destroyed, the recorder, before allowing any entry of satisfaction to be made on the record, .,or any deed of release to be placed on file or record, shall require the cestui que trust named in the mortgage or deed of trust desired to be released, or his legal representative, to make oath, in writing, stating that the notes or other evidence of debt named in the mortgage or deed of trust sought to be released, have been paid and delivered to the maker thereof or his representatives; and the recorder shall also require the maker of such note or notes, or his legal representative, to make affidavit in writing that the note or notes in question have been paid and cannot be produced because lost or destroyed, and that they are not then in the possession of any person having any lawful claim to the same; which said affidavit shall be attached to the record of the mortgage or deed of trust to be satisfied.”
These provisions point out to the recorder, and all other persons, for that matter, how a deed of trust shall be satisfied by marginal entry and, in event the note or notes are not presented, it in positive and express terms provides that the recorder shall require the affidavit mentioned, etc., before he shall allow an entry of satisfaction. His duties in the premises are thus positively fixed and defined by the statute and any negligent violation of this positive statutory duty on his part is therefore, under the universal rule, negligence per se. [Colliott v. Amer. Mfg. Co., 71 Mo. App. 163-171; Lore v.
It is suggested, however, that while it is true the law presumes the due execution of official duties by a public officer, and the relator had the right to presume ■the defendant would do his duty, yet notwithstanding this presumption, the relator himself is presumed to know the law, as is every citizen. [22 Amer. and Eng. Ency. Law (2 Ed.), 253.] And this being true, that he is charged with knowledge of the manner provided by the statute quoted for satisfying deeds of trust and that inasmuch as he was present when the release was made, without the production or cancellation of the notes or the requisite affidavit, he had actual knowledge as a matter of fact of Avhat was there done and this, together AA’ith his constructive knowledge of the laAV, affixed by the presumption mentioned, could not operate to mislead him to the effect the deed of trust was properly satisfied when in truth and in fact it was not, for he, being thus charged by presumption with knowledge of the lawful manner of satisfying deeds of trust, must know as a matter of fact that no adequate satisfaction was there made, and could not have been misled thereby