(after stating the facts as above). There is much in the evidence in this case to support the claim of the plaintiff.. We are satisfied, however, that there is no such clear and convincing proof of fraud or duress as would justify us in setting aside the mortgage. There *592is evidence to the effect that the plaintiff was sixty-seven years old, that she had five living children, that Cassius Englert was the youngest son. She testified that she had not seen him since the 5th day of August, 1910, when he left the country, charged with having sold a mortgaged threshing machine, that they had lived together up to that date for a number of years upon his farm; that on the 21st day of December, 1908, between 1 and 2 o’clock p. m. one P. L. Higgins drove to the farm with a liveryman by the name of Johnson; that he knocked at the door, and asked where the boy, Cassius, was; that she told him that he was at Columbus after coal; that Higgins next said that “Cad (Cassius), he wanted — he had some papers that he wanted me to make out — said he had committed a criminal offense and he would send him to state prison — Mr. Dale could send him to state prison, and would if I didn’t fix them up — Mr. Dale thought if he came to me I would fix it up;” that she believed what he said; that she asked Higgins to wait until her boy came home, but he said he could not wait; that she was pretty badly scared, and thought that perhaps he would send her boy to the penitentiary; that her health was bad at the time and she was excited; that she signed the notes and mortgage to save her son from going to state prison; that she did not owe Mr. Dale anything; that she had no reason for signing the notes and mortgage except to save her boy; that she thought Higgins drew up the mortgage while he was at her house, that he was writing for quite awhile, he said he was a notary public and had authority to handle these papers; that after she signed the mortgage she asked Higgins to wait until the boy would come; that John Johnson, the liveryman, was out in the barn at the time of the talk about putting her son into the penitentiary. She testified that Higgins told her that her son “had mortgaged property and didn’t tell Mr. Dale, and had taken the bankrupt law,” and that she believed if she didn’t sign the mortgage that they would put her son in the penitentiary; that Higgins didn’t tell her that her son had sold mortgaged property, he said that he had mortgaged property; that she didn’t have any knowledge of any agreement between her son and with Mr. Dale for the giving of this mortgage, and that Mr. Higgins didn’t tell her about any such agreement; that Mr. Higgins didn’t tell her that Mr. Dale wanted her to give this mortgage so that he could release the preliminary mortgage on Cad’s homestead; that she didn’t *593complain to Mr. Dale until two years after (last fall) ; that she had written to him in the May before, and asked him if he had canceled the mortgage or released the mortgage; that she didn’t see Mr. Dale before, because she supposed that as long as Mr. Dale held that (the mortgage), he wouldn’t make him (Cassius), any trouble; that Higgins talked with her, and the threats were made about half an hour before Johnson came in, and that he did not hear them; that at the actual time she signed the papers there wasn’t anything said about putting her boy in the penitentiary, nor was anything said at the time that Johnson witnessed them; that her son at this time, or prior to this time, started to go through bankruptcy, but she did not know whether he went through. She said “that Higgins told her that her son had mortgaged property and had taken the benefit of the bankrupt law, and didn’t tell Mr. Dale, and Mr. Dale could send him to state prison, — that is just exactly what he said to me.” The witness Johnson, the liveryman, testified that he witnessed the mortgage, and that while he was in the house nothing was said about sending the plaintiff’s son to the penitentiary. He, however, fully corroborated the plaintiff in her statement that he was absent for quite a little while at the barn, taking care of his horses. He also testified that when he and Higgins drove away from the house, Higgins told him to “keep still about what was going on.” The witness Higgins denied having used any duress or coercion. He testified that an arrangement had been made with the son for a release of the mortgage on the government homestead and the taking of a mortgage on the mother’s premises, and that the mortgage was executed by the mother in furtherance of such agreement. He does not deny, however, that he told Johnson to keep still about what was going on. The defendant, Dale, also testifies to an agreement having been made with the son for the transfer of the mortgages. There is also testimony that the son, after the execution of the mortgage in question, sold an engine, on which the defendant had a chattel mortgage, and left the country. There is evidence to show that before he left he went to the office of Mr. Sinkler, attorney for the plaintiff, to make arrangements for bringing the action at har, and that the said Sinkler never saw the plaintiff until the morning of the-trial. Sinkler testifies that in the month of February, 1910, Cassius Englert told him. about the matter, and that later one Wallie George came to his office and said he was acting for Mr. Dale in the *594matter of the mortgage, and also told him that Cassius Englert had been guilty of selling mortgaged property, and that if he didn’t fix the matter up he would send him to the penitentiary; that the said Sinlder thought the mortgaged property was a team of horses, and that they didn’t say anything to him about an engine. It is also shown that about this time the said Sinlder communicated with the defendant, Dale, about the mortgage, and that on the 3d day of January, 1910, over a year after the giving of the mortgage, and more than a month after Dale had been notified that proceedings were going to be instituted against him, the release on the mortgage on the homestead of Cassius Englert was recorded.
The defendant’s contention is that there is no proof of duress in the case. He also contends that the evidence shows laches on the part of the plaintiff, the action not being brought until over two years after the giving of the mortgage. He also contends that the evidence shows that the sons were the parties chiefly instrumental in starting the suit, and argues that the proof shows conclusively a conspiracy on the part of the sons not merely to have the mortgage on Cassius’s farm released, but subsequently to have that on the farm of his mother declared void. He contends that this action was really brought by the sons, and not by the mother.
Upon a careful perusal of the record, we see much in this contention. We are, at any rate, well satisfied that no clear and convincing proof of fraud or duress is shown, such as must be furnished before we are justified in setting aside an instrument of the nature of the one before us. In the place, indeed, of being convinced that a fraud was committed upon the plaintiff, we read in the record evidence of a fraudulent attempt on the part of the plaintiff and her two sons to defraud the defendant. Plaintiff must have known that the prior mortgage on her son’s homestead was to be and had been released. She testifies that she was induced to sign the mortgage upon her own farm, because of some threat that her son Cad would be prosecuted by Dale for mortgaging property and then going into bankruptcy, when the evidence shows that Dale was a witness for her son in those very bankruptcy proceedings. She admitted that she lived with her son on his place at the time, and had never been absent from him, and had lived with him there for two years after signing the mortgage and until he left *595the country, for the reason, as given by his brother, that “he was getting himself into trouble by staying.” Yet at no time before the bringing of the suit did she take any steps to cancel the mortgage, and never said anything about it until May 27, 1910, when she merely wrote Mr. Dale to ask if the “mortgage had been released,” or that “she wanted to see him (Dale) about the mortgage.” It is inconceivable that during these two years she should not have spoken to her sons of the visit to her and her execution of the papers, and that at least one of her sons should not have acquainted her with the facts. There are only two conclusions to be had, and these are, either that she executed the mortgage voluntarily, or that the criminal offense that she referred to was not a bogus one, but a real one, which the evidence shows that her son may in fact have committed before the visit, that of mortgaging her horses for his own debt and in his own name. In the latter case her mortgage would not have been deemed to have been executed under duress. Gregor v. Hyde, 10 C. C. A. 290, 27 U. S. App. 75, 62 Fed. 107 ; Compton v. Bunker Hill Bank, 96 Ill. 301, 36 Am. Rep. 147 ; Hilborn v. Bucknam, 78 Me. 482, 57 Am. Rep. 816, 7 Atl. 272 ; Landa v. Obert, 45 Tex. 539 ; Sanford v. Sornberger, 26 Neb. 295, 41 N. W. 1102. Added to these are the facts that the action was started hy the sons, and all the negotiations with the attorney were had by them, and even then not until after Cad had left the country and just after the recording of the release of the mortgage on his own land. It is to be remembered that the plaintiff in her testimony was incoherent as to what crime Higgins had charged her son with having committed. The only suggestion of fraud, indeed, that there is to be found, is in her report of a conversation with Higgins, which is flatly contradicted by him, and the fact of the visit of Higgins and his driver, Johnson, in the absence of her sons. It is to be remembered, however, that these parties stopped at the farms of both sons on their way out, and did not find them in; and the inference, if any, is that they desired that the sons should know of their intended visit to their mother. There is also, of course, evidence of fraud in Higgins’ admonition to Johnson to keep quiet about the matter, but this admonition can well he accounted for by the fact that Cad was in financial straits, and the natural desire of Dale to keep his negotiations with him hidden from other creditors. We, too, do not approve of the practice of an agent acting as a notary public in mort*596gages and deeds which are taken on behalf of his principal, and such is condemned in many jurisdictions. The practice, however, seems to be common in North Dakota, and seems to be sanctioned by the weight of authority (1 Oyc. 555) ; and in view of the practice and the sanction of the weight of authority, we can hardly at this time set aside a conveyance for this reason. We do not, on a perusal of the record, see that clear and convincing evidence of fraud which will justify us in setting aside the mortgage, especially as to do so would be to deprive the defendant of his security for his debt, and leave the two farms to be inherited by the two sons, free from all debts and encumbrances, though the debt from Oad is unpaid and he has left the country as a practical fogitive from justice.
But counsel for respondent contends that there was a lack of consideration for the mortgage, or at any rate a failure of consideration. He contends that the release of a mortgage 'given on an unproved homestead is no consideration. He also contends that the respondent was simply a surety in the transaction, and that such contract required a consideration, • and that the promise to release was not complied with, and that therefore there was a failure of consideration, which avoided the mortgage. We think, however, that there' is nothing in this contention. The evidence shows that a release of the mortgage was executed by Dale on April 22, 1909, and nearly two years before the bringing of the action at bar. It also shows that immediately after the execution of the mortgage by the mother, Dale told the son Cad that he could have the release whenever he desired it. It is true that the release was not recorded until January 19, 1910, and probably after Dale had some knowledge that proceedings might be instituted against him. There was no obligation, however, on the part of Dale, the mortgagee, to record the release, provided that it was executed and acknowledged in proper form, which it was. See .§ 6113, Rev. Codes. There was no failure of consideration, and the delay in recording is evidence against, rather than in favor of, the respondent. The inference, if any, is that Cassius Englert kept the release until the last moment, so that his creditors would know nothing of its existence, and did not record the same until he was about to start proceedings against Dale for the cancelation of the second mortgage, and in which case he would naturally desire the record to show a release of the prior one. Counsel, too, is *597in error in thinking that a mortgage upon a government homestead on - which patent has not issued is a nullity. Section 2296 of the U. S. Eev. Stat. U. S. Comp. Stat. 1901, p. 1398, which provides that “no lands acquired under the provisions of . . [the homestead act] shall in any event become liable to the satisfaction of any debt contracted prior to the issuing of the patent therefor,” has repeatedly been held as intended as a prohibition on the involuntary appropriation of the homesteader’s land by way of execution or attachment before final proof, but not to contemplate a restriction upon his power to voluntarily mortgage his interest therein. Webber v. Ladlier, 26 Wash. 144, 90 Am. St. Rep. 726, 66 Pac. 400 ; Dickerson v. Bridges, 147 No. 235, 48 S. W. 825 ; Stark v. Duball, 7 Okla. 213, 54 Pac. 453 ; Adams v. McClintock, 21 N. D. 483, 131 N. W. 394.
The judgment of the District Court is reversed, and judgment ordered in favor of the defendant and appellant, and dismissing the. action of plaintiff and respondent.