Hilsmeyer v. Blake
| Decision Date | 25 June 1912 |
| Docket Number | Case Number: 1957 |
| Citation | Hilsmeyer v. Blake, 125 P. 1129, 34 Okla. 477, 1912 OK 460 (Okla. 1912) |
| Parties | HILSMEYER v. BLAKE. |
| Court | Oklahoma Supreme Court |
¶0 1. PLEADING--Written Instrument--Execution--Verified Denial-- Authority. Under Comp. Laws 1909, sec. 5648, providing that allegations of the execution of written instruments and indorsements thereon shall be taken as true, unless the denial thereof be verified by affidavit, it is not necessary that the pleading in question be verified where only the authority of the party to execute is involved.
2. APPEAL AND ERROR--Objections in Lower Court--Pleadings. Objections that go to the form rather than legal sufficiency of a pleading will be deemed to have been waived, unless raised in the court below in some manner prescribed by law.
3. DEEDS--Execution-- Signature by Mark--Attestation--Acknowledgment. An officer's certificate of the grantor's acknowledgment of the execution of a deed filed for record is a sufficient compliance with a requirement of attestation by witnesses to the grantor's signature by mark.
4. ACKNOWLEDGMENT--Authority of Officer-- Interest. Whether or not an officer taking an acknowledgment to a deed is or is not financially or beneficially interested in the transaction is a question of fact; the burden of proof being upon the assailant. Such issue of fact is concluded by the decree of the court in the same manner and to the same extent as are other questions of fact.
5. APPEAL AND ERROR-- Findings--Review--Weight of Evidence. Where a case is tried by the court, without the intervention of a jury, upon controverted questions of fact, and there is evidence reasonably tending to support its findings, such findings will not be disturbed on the weight of the evidence.
Lewis C Lawson, for plaintiff in error.
J. B. Patterson, for defendant in error.
¶1 This action was brought by Hannah Barnett against W. R. Blake and Fred E. Hilsmeyer, defendants below. The action was afterwards dismissed by the plaintiff, and the cause proceeded to trial between the two defendants; each claiming title to the 120 acres of land in controversy through separate conveyances from the allottee, the said Hannah Barnett. The deed through which defendant in error claimed title was executed November 6, 1909, and filed for record in the office of the register of deeds at Okemah, on November 8, 1909. The deed to plaintiff in error was executed and delivered November 9, 1909. The deed to Blake was charged by plaintiff in error to have been a forgery. The case was tried before the court, who, after hearing the testimony of a large number of witnesses, sustained the Blake deed, and in the decree specially found that on the 6th day of November, 1909, for a valuable and adequate consideration, the said Hannah Barnett sold, and by her warranty deed of that date conveyed to the defendant, W. R. Blake, all of her right, title, and interest in the lands in question; that the defendant Blake, went into the immediate possession of said lands, and that said deed was duly recorded as heretofore shown; that hereafter, and on the 9th day of November, 1909, the said Hannah Barnett attempted to sell and convey said lands to the said Fred E. Hilsmeyer; that on said date she executed and delivered to him a deed purporting to convey to him said lands, but that on said date the defendant in error, W. R. Blake, was the absolute owner in fee simple of said real estate, and that plaintiff, Hannah Barnett, had no interest therein; that her deed to Hilsmeyer conveyed no title; and that said Hilsmeyer took said deed with full knowledge of the prior deed to Blake, and the record thereof, and with notice of the possession of said real estate by the said W. R. Blake. Counsel for plaintiff in error first complains that, defendant Blake's answer, or, as it was termed by said defendant, "reply," not being verified, the admission in evidence of defendant's deed constituted reversible error. Section 4312, Wilson's Rev. & Ann. St. 1903 (section 5648, Comp. Laws 1909), provides that:
"In all actions, allegations of the execution of written instruments and endorsements thereon * * * shall be taken as true unless the denial of the same be verified by the affidavit of the party, his agent or attorney."
¶2 Apparently counsel have misconceived the issues in this particular. Defendant, Blake, did not deny that, subsequent to the time he acquired title through his deed, Hannah Barnett made a second deed to the plaintiff in error, but charged that said second deed was taken with full knowledge of the defendant's rights and possession under his prior deed. The making of a warranty deed in compliance with the provisions of the statute conveys to the grantee, his heirs or assigns, the entire interest of the grantor in the premises described. Comp. Laws 1909, sec. 1202. It mattered not that Hannah Barnett executed a second deed, except in so far as it may have constituted a cloud upon the title of defendant, as said defendant could rest secure and rely upon his prior deed. Therefore, the execution of the deed to plaintiff in error not being put in issue by a verified denial, it was unnecessary for other purposes to verify said reply. In Flesher v. Callahan et al., 32 Okla. 283, 122 P. 489, this court held that on a failure to verify a pleading as required by section 5648, supra, the execution of the instrument only was thereby admitted, and not the right or authority of the party to make it. The exact question is here presented. Hannah Barnett, having already conveyed her title, had no power or authority to execute a second deed. In Sawyer & Austin Lbr. Co. v. Champlain Lbr. Co., 16 Okla. 90, 84 P. 1093, it was said, in construing another provision of the same section, requiring verification of pleadings:
"Where the correctness of a verified account is not questioned, but some affirmative defense is pleaded, no verification to the answer is required"--citing cases.
¶3 Counsel objects to the sufficiency of the denials contained in the reply; but it nowhere appears in the record that the reply was challenged by demurrer or otherwise in the trial court, and, the objection going to the form rather than the sufficiency of the pleading, as raised, it is entitled to no consideration. Bohart v. Matthews, 29 Okla. 315, 116 P. 944. Counsel for plaintiff in error, while vigorously denying that Hannah Barnett signed the Blake deed, at the same time denies that the subscription thereto, if found to have been made, is a compliance with section 2965, Comp. Laws 1909, and charges that Willie J. Brown, the notary public who took the acknowledgment, by reason of his interest in the transaction, was disqualified to act in the premises. This court has recently held in Campbell v. Harsh, 31 Okla. 436, 122 P. 127, that an officer's certificate to the grantor's acknowledgment of the execution of the deed filed for record is a sufficient compliance with the requirement of attestation...
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Pettengill v. Blackman
...507.) It is the execution only that is admitted by an affidavit and not the right or authority of the party making it. ( Hilsmeyer v. Blake, 34 Okla. 477, 125 P. 1129; Flesher v. Callahan, 32 Okla. 283, 122 P. 489.) Acts done by an agent or trustee outside the strict scope of his authority ......
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Wheelan v. Hunt
...issue for the defendant, and there being evidence reasonably tending to support the same, it is binding upon this court. Hilsmeyer v. Blake, 34 Okla. 477, 125 P. 1129. Nation v. Harness, 33 Okla. 630, 126 P. 799, was a case in which the defendant listed his property for sale with several re......
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...testimony or pass upon the credibility of the witnesses. Moore v. First Nat. Bank of Iowa City, 30 Okla. 623, 121 P. 626; Hilsmeyer v. Blake, 34 Okla. 477, 125 P. 1129. That the sewer pipes were broken near the lands cultivated by plaintiff was not denied. That the water ran out of the manh......
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Akin v. Bonfils
...evidence reasonably tending to support its findings, such findings will not be disturbed on the weight of the evidence. Hilsmeyer v. Blake, 34 Okla. 477, 125 P. 1129, and cases cited. Also, that where a case is tried by the court without a jury, and special findings of fact are made, and th......