This certificate, if genuine, is clearly defective in form and substance under the statute. It does not set forth that the grantor acknowledged the execution of the conveyance. The defect is fatal to the validity of the certificate. The statute is imperative that the officer shall indorse a certificate setting forth among other things that the execution of the conveyance was duly acknowledged by the grantor. (2 R. S. 756, §§ 4, 15.) Without this requisite no record could be made, and at law no title would pass.
The question arising is whether the crime of forgery can be predicated upon such a certificate. I think it can not. The invalidity of the instrument is apparent upon its face, and to be the subject of indictment, the certificate should be so far-perfect in form and substance as to be valid if genuine. It is not the falsity of the writing alone, but also its supposed fraudulent effect, which makes a forgery criminal. If the forged instrument is so obviously defective in its form as this is, the law will not presume that it can accomplish the fraud which is perhaps intended. The law presumes a competent knowledge to guard against any such effect, and that no person can be injured thereby in his rights or property. This certificate has doubtless been used to perpetrate a gross wrong upon the grantee named in the conveyance. He has been induced to accept the deed as valid, and to part with the purchase money for the land. It has been used as a false token, by which money has been fraudulently obtained; but the defendant has not been convicted under the statute in relation to cheats. If he had been, the conviction would have been good as well as merited. If the forgery, however, is not such as the law condemns as criminal, *563it can not be made so by the want of prudence or circumspection on the part of the person actually defrauded.
The rule of law seems to be well settled both in our own courts and in those of England, that a writing void in itself and which can not be made good by averment, if it were genuine, is not the subject of forgery. The case of The People v. Sholl, (9 Cowen, 778,) is directly in point. The marginal note, which the facts of the case and the opinion of Cowen, circuit judge, fully sustains, is as follows: “ The forgery of a writing purporting to be a mere naked promise to pay a sum of money in labor, expressing no consideration, and being connected with none by averments in the indictment, is not an indictable crime.” In the case of Galloway, (17 Wend. 542,) the doctrine is held “ that in prosecuting for forgery it is material that the instrument should not upon its face appear to be illegal or void.” ■ Galloway was indicted for having obtained the signature of his wife to a deed of certain land in this state whereof she was seised in her own right in fee, by the false pretence that it was a deed of lands belonging to him in the state of Illinois. The deed was executed by the wife but not acknowledged. The court held, on a bill of exceptions after conviction, that the defendant could not have been convicted of the offence of forgery, if he had affixed the signature of his wife without authority ; that the deed was invalid, for the want of a proper acknowledgment. And likening the statute in relation to false pretences to that of forgery, it was held that the conviction was erroneous. Justice Bronson, in delivering the opinion of the court, says, “ This statute, like that against forgery, was made to protect men in , the enjoyment of their property; and if the instrument obtained can by no possibility prejudice any one in relation to his estate, it will not be an offence within the statute.”
There are a number of English cases clearly sustaining the same doctrine. (2 East's P. C. 883.) Jones was indicted for • forging a bank note, and because it wanted certain statutory requisites to render it apparently valid, it was held that the indictment for forgery could not be sustained. So also in Moffatts case, (2 Easts P. C. 954,) the conviction was for uttering as *564true a forged acceptance on a bill of exchange void by the statute. It was held that the conviction was wrong for the reason that had it been a genuine instrument, it would have been ablutely void, and nothing could have made it good. In 2 Easts ' P. C. 953, Wall was indicted for the forgery of a will attested by only two witnesses, when the statute required three to make it valid. He was acquitted of the alledged crime, on that ground.
The authorities above cited, although there are others of the same import, are sufficient for the purposes of this case. There are no conflicting adjudications that I am aware of. The rule seems therefore firmly established, that a written instrument, to be the subject of indictment for forgery, must be valid if genuine, for the purpose intended ; if void or invalid on its face, and it can not be made good by averment, the crime of forgery can 1 not be predicated upon it. The certificate in question is of this ; description. Its invalidity, if genuine, is apparent, and by no averment or proof could it be made a good certificate of ac-i knowledgment for the conveyance of real estate under the statute.
It follows that the charge of the court to the jury on the trial was erroneous, and that a new trial must be granted.