Court Opinion

ID: 3675053
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 06:22:08.254299+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:22:44.236471
License: Public Domain

The question presented for our consideration is whether the instrument, which is referred to in the pleadings as the deed of John T. Clanton and Fanny, his wife, has been so authenticated as to render it valid to transfer her estate in the lands therein mentioned. The instrument purports to have been executed by both husband and wife, and has been registered upon the fiat of a judge of the Superior Courts, on the following probate and acknowledgment:
STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA — Halifax County.
Fanny Clanton, the wife of Dr. John Clanton, was examined separate and apart from her husband and privily by me, one of the judges of the Superior Courts of Law and Equity in and for the State aforesaid, when she acknowledged that she executed the within deed freely and voluntarily, and not by the force or persuasion of her husband or any other person. Henry Wilkes, the subscribing witness, came before me              (389) and made oath that John T. Clanton and Fanny Clanton executed the within deed for the purposes therein contained. Let it be registered.
The provisions of law on which the decision of this question depends are as follows: "All conveyances in writing and sealed by husband and wife for any lands, and by them personally acknowledged before one of the judges of the Supreme or Superior Courts, or in the court of the county where the land lieth, the wife being first privily examined before such judge, or some member of the County Court appointed by the said court for that purpose, whether she doth voluntarily assent thereto, and registered according to the laws of this State, shall be as valid in law to convey all the estate and title which such wife may or shall have in any lands, tenements or hereditaments so *Page 284 
conveyed, whether in fee simple, right of dower or other estate, as if done by fine and recovery, or any other ways and means whatsoever: Provided,nevertheless, that where any such conveyance as aforesaid shall be acknowledged by the husband, or proved by the oath of one or more witnesses, before a judge as aforesaid or County Court where the land lieth, and it shall be represented to the judge or County Court aforesaid that the wife is a resident of any other county, or so aged or infirm that she cannot travel to the said judge or County Court to make such acknowledgment as aforesaid, it shall and may be lawful for the said judge or County Court by his or their order to direct the clerk of the County Court where such land leith to issue a commission to two or more commissioners for receiving the acknowledgment of any deed of such femecovert for passing her estate in any lands, tenements or hereditaments, and such deed, acknowledgment before them, after they have examined her privily and apart from her husband touching her consent, and certified by the County Court, to which the commission shall be returnable, shall by order of the County Court be registered with the commission and returns, and shall be as effectual as if personally acknowledged before the judge or County Court by such feme covert." Laws 1751; Rev. Stat., ch. 37, secs. 9, 10.
The objection mainly relied upon to the validity of the (390) fiat for the registration of this instrument as the deed of the feme is that the execution of the deed was proved before the judge, who took her privy examination, when the law requires that it should have been acknowledged before him by the parties. The question occurs now for the first time, as far as we are appraised, for judicial decision. Whatever remarks may be found that seem to bear upon it, in the opinion of the Court delivered in the case of Burgess v. Wilson, 13 N.C. 306, it is manifest that the question was not there determined. In that case it appeared by the records of the court that on Monday, 2 November, 1812, an order was passed that Caleb Perkins be appointed to take the private examination of Sarah Burgess, a feme covert, touching the execution of a deed of bargain and sale to Dempsey Sawyer; and that on the succeeding day, 3 November, the deed was exhibited in court and proved by the oath of Caleb Perkins, the subscribing witness; and further, the said Caleb Perkins then reported to the court that in pursuance of the order of the preceding day he had taken the private examination touching her free consent to the execution of said deed, and that she declared that it was done with her free consent. The acknowledgment of the feme was not made in the court, upon a privy examination by one of its members within *Page 285 
the verge of the court, but out of court, before a single magistrate acting without commission. And the execution of the instrument was not proved until after the order under which the magistrate professed to act. It would be too much to assume that when there were these conclusive and manifest objections to the validity of this authentication of the instrument as the deed of Mrs. Burgess, the Court definitely passed on that now raised, which was the subject of incidental observation only. Besides, in the opinion delivered in that case, the opinion of the late Chief Justice Taylor, as expressed in Whitehurst v. Hunter,3 N.C. 401, is mentioned with approbation; and in that there is an intimation, at least, that a probate of the deed before the court would authorize the receiving of the wife's acknowledgment. There it appeared that the deed had been           (391) acknowledged by the feme in court, and that she was there privily examined, but it did not appear that the husband had joined in the acknowledgment or that the execution thereof was proved, and the chief Justice held that the objection that the deed was not acknowledged by the husband, nor proved to be his deed, was fatal. And it was certainly supposed by this Court to be at least an open question when the late case of Sutton v. Sutton, 18 N.C. 582, was decided. It was there remarked that in certain defined cases "an examination before the commissioners, regularly taken, certified and returned, has then the efficacy of an examination before the judge or in open court. These cases are where the deed shall have been acknowledged by the husband or proved by the oath of one or more witnesses."
It may be conceded that this objection is well founded, if our attention be directed exclusively to that part of the legislative enactment hereinbefore recited which precedes the proviso. Looking no farther, the prescribed ceremonies are an acknowledgment of the deed by the husband and wife before the judge or in open court of the county, and a privy examination of the wife by the judge or some member of the court. And we hold it to be perfectly settled that no ceremonies other than those which the Legislature has prescribed can be substituted under an imaginative or even assured conviction that they would equally well answer the purpose of protecting the married woman against compulsion and imposition. But the Court is satisfied that when the rest of the enactment is taken into consideration it is manifest that a probate of the deed by a subscribing witness before the examining judge or court is declared equivalent to the acknowledgment mentioned in the preceding part. The language is explicit that upon such probate the judge or court shall *Page 286 
order a commission to issue, and a privy examination taken under such commission certified and returned, "shall be as effectual as if personally acknowledged before the judge or the court by such feme covert." It would be doing violence to the unambiguous words of this provision to hold that a privy examination (392) of the woman before the commissioners — which is but a substitute for that before the judge or the court, and which the Legislature declares shall have the same efficacy with that for which it is permitted to be substituted — shall be valid to pass her lands, and yet the preferred mode be invalid. We say the preferred mode, because it is apparent from the very nature of the provisions, as has been declared by the Court in Burgess v. Wilson andSutton v. Sutton, already cited, and Fenner v. Jasper, 18 N.C. 34, that the Legislature reposed higher confidence in the judge and the court than in the commissioners, and therefore permits the powers granted universally to the former to be delegated to the latter only when a special emergency requires it. No question can be entertained but that it is competent for the Legislature to explain or modify in a proviso language used in a previous enactment, and whenever a court can clearly ascertain the sense of the Legislature it must be governed thereby, although it should be shown that the legislative will might have been expressed in a more approved form. The duty of the court is to execute the will and not to criticise the language of the Legislature.
It has also been objected that it appears from the certificate of the judge that the acknowledgment of the feme was taken before the execution of the deed was proved. This objection we hold to be not founded in fact. The certificate states a single transaction. All therein mentioned occurred at the same time. And therefore it is immaterial what part of it is first mentioned in the certificate.
Upon the question submitted, the Court is of opinion that the deed has been duly proved and registered to pass the real estate of Mrs. Clanton.
The case is deemed to be a proper one for asking the advice of the Court, and it is declared that the expenses of the inquiry should be defrayed out of the funds in the hands of the trustee.
PER CURIAM.                                     Decreed accordingly.
Cited: Etheridge v. Ferebee, 31 N.C. 317; Beckwith v. Lamb, 35 N.C. 402;Freeman v. Hattey, 48 N.C. 119; Pierce v. Wanett, 51 N.C. 168;Robbins v. Harris, 96 N.C. 559, 560. *Page 287 
(393)