This action.is upon the official bondof a notary public for a false certificate of acknowledgment of a deed made and delivered by said notary to one Greene, who thereby secured plaintiff’s indorsement of a note,' which said deed purported to secure and which plaintiff w.as compelled to pay.
It was stated in the petition that no such persons as the grantors named in the deed existed, and that the acknowledgments attached to said deeds were fraudulently taken by said notary, whose duty it was to certify as to his personal acquaintance with the grantors.
Two other cases were tried with this one, from which they differed only in that in them the parties plaintiff directly loaned the money, whereas in this one plaintiff indorsed and paid the note secured by one of pretended deeds of trust.
Separate answers of several denials were filed by the notary and his sureties.
It was admitted by the sureties on the trial that, at the dates of the acknowledgment of the three deeds of trust out of which this action arose, no such persons as Morrell and Whipple, the ostensible grantors therein, existed.
The evidence tended to show that the notary filled out said acknowledgments in the absence of said pretended grantors, and gave the deeds and acknowledgments to one E. W. Greene. The latter says the notary did not know him. • The notary says he had been introduced to Greene.
Plaintiff’s evidence was, in substance, that he Indorsed the note handed him by Greene solely on the faith of the acknowledgment and certificate to the deed securing it, knowing that the “property was good security for the amount ;” that neither he nor the bank (which advanced the money on his indorsement) made *150any examination 'of the title to the property; that “they thought the certificate of the notary and all being signed, sealed and delivered, looked sufficient for them;” that he relied entirely on the deed of trust and note in making the indorsement; that just before this suit was brought he called on the notary, who told him that he kept no record at that time of his official acts, and remembered nothing about the occurrence, and did not know whether he knew Greene or not.
The notary testified that Greene had been introduced to him by someone, and that he did not know then that he had to keep a record of his official acts.
The deeds of trust were offered in evidence. The acknowledgments were in the statutory form.
The court sitting as a jury found for the defendants, from which judgment this appeal is prosecuted.
The duties of a notary public in taking acknowledgments of deeds and certifying thereto are ministerial not judicial.
Judicial action is the power to decide rights of' person or property in specific cases. It implies impartiality and disinterestedness on the part of the officer in weighing adverse claims. Although his decision in the first instance is according to his own conception of the law, it is ultimately controlled by the rights of the parties according to the law of the land. Saline Co. v. Thompson, 45 Mo. 53.
A duty is ministerial, when ' the law defines the time, mode and occasion, of its performance, so as to leave nothing to the exercise of judgment or discretion beyond the ascertainment of the facts which render the performance of the act a clear'and specific duty. 19 Am. and Eng. Encyclopedia of Law, pp. 478, 479; 2 Shearman & Redfield on Negligence, sec. 594.
The only ■ remaining question is whether or not plaintiff’s failure to have the title examined was such *151negligence on his part as to deprive him of the right of the present action.
It was the duty of the notary who certified to the acknowledgments of the deeds of trust, in case he did not personally hnoio the identity of the party making the acknowledgments before him, to take evidence respecting it in a prescribed form, and to preserve that evidence, and the name of the witness, in a particular mode. State to use v. Meyer, 2 Mo. App. 422; R. S. 1889, secs. 2408, 2414, 2415. For failure to do this he is liable for any injury occasioned thereby.
It is also well settled that plaintiff had a right to assume that the notary’s certificate was true, and that the veritable persons therein mentioned appeared before him and acknowledged the instruments as therein recited.
The law presumes that every public officer acting under the sanction of an oath, or in whom the government reposes a trust, does his duty until the contrary is proved. 19 Am. and Eng. Encyclopedia of Law, p. 459, and cases cited.
, There can be no recovery in an, action for negligence, where the plaintiff’s negligence caused the injury.
Applying these principles to the facts of this ease, our conclusion is that plaintiff can not recover any substantial damages. The allegations of his petition and admissions on the trial show that the Morrell and Whipple were myths. There is not a particle of evidence that the title to the lands conveyed in trust was in'any person bearing either of-these names; indeed, plaintiff admits of record to the contrary.
Plaintiff had a right to assume that these suppositious characters were real personages; that deduction, was & prima facie inference from the statements of the notary’s certificate. If, therefore, it appeared from the *152evidence that the loss to' plaintiff could have been prevented, if the notary’s certificate had been- true, then plaintiff’s right to recover would be unquestioned. That could not, however, be inferable, unless it is permissible first to presume that the pretended grantors existed, because the notary so certified; and, secondly, upon that presumption to found another, i. e., that they owned the land because they existed.
The rule is that a presumption must be based upon a’fact, and not upon inference or any other presumption. Buie 118, Lawson on Presumptive Evidence, p. 569. Besides the latter presumption, i. e., that such persons (Whipple and Morrell) would have been owners of the land, if alive, is directly negatived by the express admissions of plaintiff in this case, that no persons of their names ever owned the land.
We think it demonstrable, therefore, that the injury could not have been caused to plaintiff by the false certificate of the notary, but that it was occasioned by plaintiff’s failure to exercise ordinary care in examining the title to the land upon which he loaned his credit and money.
That a loss suffered by one’s own negligence destroys his cause of action for substantial damages for the negligence of another, is elementary. This principle is, of course, applicable to the misfeasance of notaries. 2 Shearman & Redfield on Negligence, section 602; Hatton v. Holmes, 97 Cal. 208; Heidt v. Minor, 89 Cal. 115; Bank v. Murfey, 68 Cal. 460.
That the notary in this case was guilty of a flagrant breach of duty is not denied. This being an action 'on his bond given for the faithful performance of his duty as a public officer, it is clear that plaintiff is entitled to recover nominal damages for its breach. Fulkerson v. Eads, 19 Mo. App. 620; 1 Sutherland on Damages, p. 13.
*153To that end the judgment of the trial court is r.eversed, and the cause remanded with directions to the circuit court to render judgment therein for nominal damages. It is so ordered.
All concur.