73 Ind. 17 | Ind. | 1880
— Action by the appellee against the appellant, on a complaint showing the following facts :
The plaintiff was liable, as surety for one Sylvester B. Jones, on a promissory note for one hundred and forty dollars, and said Jones, having agreed to execute to the plaintiff a mortgage on certain growing wheat to secure him against loss on account of his said liability, they employed the defendant, who was an attorney and a notary public; and the defendant, on said employment, undertook and agreed, for a reasonable reward in that behalf, to draw up said mortgage and take the acknowledgment of said Jones thereto, in such manner as to make the samo a valid and legal lien on said property, in favor of the plaintiff; and the defendant did accordingly draw a mortgage, which was duly signed and acknowledgéd by said Jones, and appended thereto his certificate of such acknowledgment as a notary public ; that thereupon, to wit, on the 5th day of February, 1877 (the day on which said mortgage was executed), in ■consideration that he, plaintiff, did then and there deliver-said mortgage to the defendant, to be by him delivered to the recorder of Gibson county to be recorded, the defendant undertook and promised, without reward in that behalf, to deliver the same to said recorder, and pause the same to be recorded within ten days from that time ; that, though the defendant then and there received said mortgage of the
Answer in general denial; trial by the court; finding and judgment for the .plaintiff.
The only error assigned is upon the overruling of the appellant’s motion for a new trial.
The appellant claims that the verdict is contrary both to the law and the evidence, and, in support of this proposition, contends that the gist of the complaint is the failure to deliver the mortgage for record, and that the averments concerning the appellant’s employment to draw the mortgage, and take the acknowledgment of its execution, are surplusage and play no part in the case ; and that, as thei-e ■was no notarial seal attached to the certificate of acknowledgment, the recording of the mortgage would have been a nullity, and that the plaintiff had, therefore, not been injured by his alleged negligence in not having, the mortgage recorded in time.
The mortgage and the certificate of .acknowledgment, and the indorsement of the recorder of the county, showing that the instrument, had been received for record on February
If, however, it were conceded that the acknowledgment now under consideration was defective for the want of the notarial seal, the conclusion contended for by the appellant does not follow. The gist of the complaint is not simply that the appellant undertook to deliver the mortgage to the recorder for recoi’d, but also to. cause the same to be recorded ; and in this connection it is not without significance that the appellant, an attorney and notary, for a consideration, on the employment of the plaintiff and said Jones, drew the mortgage, and took and made a certificate of the acknowledgment thereof. If in truth he had not stamped the certificate with his official seal, he still had the power to do it (Jordan v. Corey, supra), and having undertaken to cause the mortgage to be recorded within the time allowed therefor by law, his failure can not be excused on account of the absence of a seal which he had the power, and was under a double duty to the plaintiff, to attach — a duty arising from the original employment to take the acknowledgment, and also from the undertaking to cause the instrument to be recorded ; and, upon the charge of the failure to perform the latter undertaking, the averment and proof of the former are pertinent, and perhaps necessary, under the circumstances, to make the cause of action complete.
Another ground on which it is claimed that a new trial should be granted is that the court erred in allowing certain writings endorsed on the execution on which the wheat was
We can not say that the court awarded excessive damages. The price for which the wheat was sold by the constable was not conclusive on the plaintiff, who was a stranger to the writ, and adversely interested, and there was abundant evidence to show a greater value than the price so obtained.
•Judgment affirmed, with costs.