Court Opinion

ID: 7131461
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 15:19:15.656133+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:14:19.850098
License: Public Domain

CHIEP JUSTICE HARGIS
delivered the opinion of the court.
The mortgage for $3,400 was signed by Heil and wife. Their acknowledgment was taken by a deputy clerk, who •entered upon the mortgage the following memorandum: “1875, October 26, acknowledged by Heil and wife, and or. and recorded in deed-book 194, page 349,” which was not signed by him, or subsequently written out in full by the clerk. A recorder employed in the office to record deeds, who was not a deputy clerk, supposing the unsigned memorandum would be perfected after recording the mortgage, recorded a certificate in due form, as if it really existed and had been upon the mortgage. The defect •consists in a failure of the deputy to sign the memorandum, and of the clerk to allude to the manner in which the acknowledgment appeared to have been taken. Section 38 of chapter 24, General Statutes, requires the clerk to write out and sign a certificate setting forth the facts, including the •endorsement made by a deputy where the latter fails to write one, and sign the certificate himself. And when the clerk shal.1 have done this, that section makes it lawful to record the deed and certificate, as if the deputy had certified and *515signed it. This statute was not complied with in any respect. From it, and sections 21 and 23 of the same chapter, it is fairly deducible that the legislature intended to require that the memorandum should be signed by the deputy, and appear upon or attached to the instrument, and so with a complete certificate, whether written out by the deputy or the clerk. When, therefore, there is neither a signed memorandum nor a completed certificate on or attached to the deed or instrument, or in existence, there is no certificate of acknowledgment, in the sense of the statute, that will render the deed or mortgage of a married woman effectual to pass the title. (McCormack v. Woods, &c., 14 Bush; Franklin v. Becker and wife, 11 Bush; Womack and Wilson v. Hughes, Littell’s Sel. case.) We are of the opinion that the certificate entered on the deed-book has no validity, because there was no original from which it was copied.
In cases like the present there is no danger to arise from •disregarding the recorded certificate, for the original mortgage, after it was recorded, was withdrawn from the clerk’s office by the mortgagee, its proper custodian, and made the basis of the suit for its foreclosure. In addition to this, it is conclusively shown that the original, with the unsigned memorandum, are precisely in the condition they were when improperly put to record. It is truly said in the case of Elliott, &c., v. Peirsol, &c. (1 Peters), that “it is the fact of recording, and not of acknowledgment, that makes the deed effectual;” but here we have a different state of facts, and may with equal correctness say that the fact of recording a legally certified acknowledgment is the essential prerequisite to the conveyance of the title of a married woman, and this is believed to be universal, and the conclusive facts which' render her deeds effectual in the absence of averment and *516proof of fraud, or mistake in certifying the acknowledgment. The record should be a correct manifestation of the-original instruments required to be recorded, and for this-reason, which is clearly shown-by the original itself, the-recording, by the clerks employed, of an anticipated but nonexistent certificate, in violation of the clerk’s duty and contrary to the object of the registry laws, imparted no validity to the unofficial memorandum entered upon the mortgage, and furnishes of itself, not being a copy of such a certificate, no evidence of an acknowledgment by Mrs. Heil.
Appellant’s counsel insist that there was a conveyance of the property embraced by the mortgage pendente lite by Heil and wife to his father-in-law, Bischoffi Delivery and acceptance of the deed were denied by the parties to it, and there is no evidence that Bischoff accepted the deed, or did any act equivalent to or tending to prove actual .acceptance, nor do the circumstances afford a reasonable presumption of the fact. The mere fact that Heil and wife executed and caused the deed to be recorded does not raise any presumption of law in the absence of facts showing that the deed was beneficial to the grantee, and that it was to his interest to accept it, that he accepted the deed. Such a presumption is never conclusive, and partakes of the nature of a, presumption of fact rather than law, and when relied upon by a third party, whose conduct has been unaffected by the existence of the deed, or disputed by those whose rights have attached to the property embraced by the deed before its actual acceptance, that question is open for inquiry, and the execution and registration of the deed then are mere facts competent with other evidence to prove the fact of actual acceptance. Consequently there is not enough evidence, there being nothing but execution and registration. *517•of the deed to prove its acceptance by Bischoff, which he -emphatically denies.
Mrs. Heil was not a party to the original suit for foreclosure, and, according to Wing v. Hayden (10 Bush), she was not precluded by the judgment of foreclosure from asserting, with her husband, the right to $1,000 of the proceeds of the sale in lieu of homestead, the property being indivisible, and had necessarily been sold as a whole to satisfy the mortgage, which was legally acknowledged and recorded. The case of Harpending’s ex’r v. Wylie, &c. (13 Bush), is not applicable to this case. Sixty days from "the chancellor’s decree of foreclosure and sale had not expired when the petition of Heil and wife was presented; hence,- for that reason and others not necessary to enumerate, the matter they asked to be adjudicated was not res .adjudicata, and there was no error in allowing the petition -.to be filed.
Wherefore, the judgment is affirmed.