
    Richmond.
    Davis and als. v. Beazley and als.
    April 28.
    1. A grantee in a deed or a beneficiary unde» it is not allowed, as an officer, to take an acknowledgment of the deed by the grantor with a view to-its registration. The certificate of such acknowledgment is invalid as authority to admit the deed to record, and hence a recordation based upon it is without effect as notice by construction under the registry laws.
    2. The clerk of' the county court cannot take his own acknowledgment of a deed executed by him so as to render it valid as against a subsequent purchaser for value from him, as a deed admitted to record.
    3. A trustee and the creditor secured by a deed are purchasers for valuable consideration within the meaning of the statute (Code of 1873, ch. Ill, § 5), and their title is not affected by a prior deed of the grantor unless they had notice at the date of their purchase; and a prior deed not legally admitted to record cannot give them constructive notice.
    This was a suit iu equity in the circuit court of Greene county, brought by J. G. E. Davis and others, trustees of the Greene Humane Society, to enforce a deed of trust made by Bobert Pritchett, dated the 17th of January, 1859, by which he conveyed to John Graves his intest in the La Fayette hotel property, in the town of Stanardsville, to secure a debt of $678.37, which said Pritchett had borrowed from the Greene Humane Society. The defendants were Wyatt S. Beazley, in his own right and as administrator of Bobert L. Pritchett and Elizabeth his wife, who had been the wife of Bobert L. Pritchett, and the other heirs of said Bobert L. Pritchett, deceased.
    It appears that Bobert Pritchett and his son Bobert L„ Pritchett were the joint and equal owners of the said hotel property, and Robert Pritchett was the clerk of the county court. In September, 1855, a deed was prepared by which Robert Pritchett and Laura Pritchett, his wife, conveyed to Robert L. Pritchett all interest and title they have in the tavern house and lot now in possession of said Robert L. Pritchett. This deed is only signed by Robert Pritchett, and there is a certificate in the name of Arthur Stephens, notary public, of the privy examination and acknowledgment of Laura Pritchett; but it is not signed by the notary. And there is an endorsement on the paper in the handwriting of Robert Pritchett, as follows : “1855, September 13th; filed and acknowledged in office by Robert Pritchett, a party thereto.”
    Robert Pritchett died in 1863, and some time after his death this deed was found among his papers, and delivered to "Wyatt S. Beazley, who was then the clerk of the county court of Greene, and had married the widow of Robert L. Pritchett; and he upon the said acknowledgment entered it upon the record.
    By deed dated the 17th of January, 1859, Robert Pritchett conveyed to John Graves, the said tavern property in trust to secure a debt of $678.37, due to the Greene Humane Society; and the certificate of acknowledgment is as follows : “In Greene county court clerk’s office, 17th January, 1859.
    “ This deed was this day filed and acknowledged in office by Robert Pritchett.”
    The cause came on to be heard on the 13th of June, 1877, when the court dismissed the bill with costs. And the plaintiff obtained an appeal.
    
      James U. Dooley, for the appellants.
    
      James G. and W W. Field, for the appellees.
   Burks, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The controversy in this case is between adverse claimants, under two several deeds of the same grantor conveying the same property—the one a deed of bargain and sale dated September 13,1855, and the other a deed of trust bearing date-January 17, 1859, given to secure a debt of the grantor, with power to the trustee to sell the property in default of payment of the debt. It is admitted that the debt is just and has never been paid. According to repeated decisions of this court (see Williams and others v. Lord & Robinson and others, decided during the present term, and cases there cited) the trustee and the secured creditor are purchasers for valuable consideration within the meaning of the statute (Code of 1873, ch. 114, § 5), and their title is not affected by the prior deed unless they had notice of it at the date of their purchase. It is not pretended that they or either of them had actual notice, but the contention is that they had constructive notice by registration—not by the actual recordation of the deed, for it was not recorded in fact until some years after the trust deed was executed—but by the admission of the deed to record by the clerk of the registry court, which took place, as alleged, anterior to the execution of the deed of trust. If it was duly admitted to record, notice in contemplation of law was thereby given as effectually as if it had been then spread on the deed book (Beverly v. Ellis & Allan, 1 Rand. 102), and the certificate of the clerk, written on the deed, that it has been so admitted to record, would be evidence of the fact. Harkins v. Forsyth, 11 Leigh 294; Carper v. McDowell, 5 Gratt. 212; 2 Minor’s Inst. 870. But in the case before us Robert Pritchett, the grantor in the deed, was the clerk who made the certificate and admitted the deed to record, if it was admitted at all. The endorsement on the deed is in the words and figures following:

“ 1855, September, 13th.
“ Filed and acknowledged in office by Robert Pritchett, a party thereto.”

There is no signature to this endorsement, but it is conceded to be in the handwriting of the clerk.

There is no other certificate and no other evidence of acknowledgment or of admission to record. Can it be said, upon this evidence, that the deed was duly admitted to record” within the meaning of the statute ?

The clerk of the registry court, in his office, may admit to record any deed or other writing (authorized to be recorded) as to any person whose name is signed thereto, when it has been acknowledged by such person or proved by two witnesses as to him before such clerk in his office; and he may also admit any such writing to record as to any person whose name is signed thereto, upon a certificate of such person’s acknowledgment before certain officers designated by the statute. Code of 1873, ch. 117, §§ 1, 2, 3.

But how can a party to a deed acknowledge it before himself ? The act to be done implies ex necessitate rei that there are at least two parties—one who makes the acknowledgment and another who receives and certifies it. The law contemplates no such anomaly as that of a party to a deed taking his own acknowledgment of it before himself in his official character. No adjudged case has been cited, if any such there be, in support of the remarkable proposition that a party to an instrument may acknowledge it before himself as an officer, and that such acknowledgment certified by him is sufficient under a statute authorizing recordation of instruments on certificate of acknowledgment before such officer; and if any such case could be found we do not hesitate to say that it would not control our judgment in the construction of the registration acts of this State.

It is a fundamental maxim in our jurisprudence that no man can be a judge in his own cause. Under the influence ■of this principle it has been frequently held that a grantee in a deed or beneficiary under it, is not allowed as an officer to take an acknowledgment of the deed by the grantor, with a view to its registration. The certificate of such acknowledgment is invalid as authority to admit the deed to record, and hence a recordation based upon it is without effect as notice by construction under the registry laws. Groesbeck v. Seeley, 13 Mich. 329; Beaman v. Whitney, 20 Maine, 413; Wasson, Adm’r v. Connor, Trustee, 54 Miss. 351: Brown and al. v. Moore, 38 Texas, 645. For further illustrations of the maxim, see Broom’s Leg. Max. 117; Bowers’ Adm’r v. Bowers and others, 29 Gratt. 697.

The scope of the maxim is wide enough to take in the case we are dealing with. It is the duty of the clerk of the county and corporation courts to take and certify acknowledgments of deeds and other writings in his office, and to admit them to record.- These functions involve inquiry and determination, and partake of a judicial character. The admission to record is in law notice of the deed to the world. After it is “admitted to record” it is the duty of the clerk to “record” it in the deed-book (Code of 1873, ch. 117, § 8); and the admission to record is equivalent to actual recordation for the purpose of notice. Beverly v. Ellis & Allen, supra. For this purpose the admission to record is effectual, though the clerical act of spreading the instrument in extenso on the deed-book be never performed.

Under these cifcumstances, it would seem to be against the spirit of the rule referred to if the clerk were allowed to act officially where his private interest might conflict with his duty to third parties and the public.

There was no propriety in Pritchett’s taking and certifying his own acknowledgment, and there was no necessity .for it. He might have acknowledged the deed in the county court of Greene or in pais before some disinterested officer authorized by the statute to take and certify acknowledgments of deeds, and, in either case, the deed might have been duly admitted to record. But as it was not thus admitted to record, there was no notice by operation of law, and as there was no actual notice, it was void as to the claimants under the deed of trust.

It seems that the certificate of the admission to record of the deed of trust is similar to the certificate endorsed on the other deed. But that is an immaterial circumstance in the case. The trust deed is good between the parties, and,, if not duly admitted to record, is void only as to creditors and subsequent purchasers. . Code of 1873, ch. 114, § 5. The title under it, acquired bona fide and for valuable consideration, is good against a prior purchaser, though the deed was never recorded nor duly admitted to record.

In addition to the views which have been presented, we-deem it proper to say that the circumstances of this case tend strongly to show that it was never intended that the instrument in question should take immediate effect, if at all, as an absolute deed. It purports to be the deed of the grantor and his wife, and a certificate of her privy examination by Arthur Stephens, a notary public, bearing even date with the deed, is appended, but the deed is not signed by the wife, nor is the certificate signed by the notary.. The endorsement by the clerk does not state that the deed was admitted to record, or that it was acknowledged for that purpose, nor is it signed by the clerk. It does not appear that it was ever in the possession of the grantee. On the contrary, it is charged in the bill that it was kept by the grantor and was found among his papers after his. death; and the latter allegation is substantially admitted by the answer of Beazley and wife. The grantor lived seven years and more from the time the deed bears date,, and was clerk of the court, yet he never recorded the deed,. nor was it recorded until three years and upwards after his death, and tea years from its date, when it was copied into the deed-book by Mr. Beazley, the then clerk.

These circumstances tend very forcibly to induce the belief that the instrument never took effect as a deed of conveyance, and was never considered by the grantor as admitted to record. They would seem to indicate a purpose which was never carried out, but for some reason was abandoned. This is consistent, too, with the execution in good faith of the deed of trust some three years after the date of the deed of bargain and sale. If, on the other hand, the latter deed was intended to be effectual, then Pritchett was guilty of the grossest fraud in borrowing money and pretending to secure its payment by a lien on land which he had already sold and conveyed to his son. In the view taken, however, no fraud is imputed. The courts will never infer fraud in fact from circumstances which are consistent with an honest intent.

The circuit court dismissed the bill brought by the complainants to declare the prior deed void as to them and to enforce the deed of trust.

The decree, for the reasons stated, is, in our opinion, erroneous, and must be reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings.

The decree was as follows:

This day came again the parties by their counsel, and the court, having maturely considered the transcript of the record of the decree aforesaid, and the arguments of counsel, is of opinion, for reasons stated in writing and filed with the record, that the deed in the bill and proceedings mentioned from Robert Pritchett to Robert L. Pritchett, bearing date September 13, 1855, is void as to the appellants claiming under the deed of trust bearing date January 17, 1859, also in the hill and proceedings mentioned; and the said circuit court erred in not so declaring and in not proceeding to execute the said deed of trust, instead of dismissing the said bill; therefore it is decreed and ordered that the decree aforesaid be reversed and annulled, and that the appellees Wyatt S. Beazley and Elizabeth, his wife, out of their proper goods and chattels, and the said Wyatt Beazley, as administrator de bonis non of Iiobert L. Pritchett, deceased, out of the goods and chattels of his intestate in his hands to be administered, pay to the appellants their costs by them expended in the prosecution of the appeal aforesaid here; and this cause is remanded to the said circuit court with directions to execute the said deed of trust, and subject the property therein conveyed to the payment of the debt thereby secured, and otherwise proceed in order to final decree, in conformity with the opinion hereinbefore expressed; which is ordered to be certified to the said circuit court of Greene county.

Decree reversed.  