Blair v. Sayre

JOHNSON, PRESIDENT:

This is an action of ejectment brought, in the Circuit Court of Jackson county in 1879 by Blair and wife against Mark Sayre to recover a certain tract of land in said county. The defendant demurred to the declaration, and his demurrer was overruled, and he pleaded “not guilty.” On the 8th day of November, 1881, the issue was tried by a jury, and a verdict, for the defendant was rendered. The plaintiffs moved to set aside the verdict, which motion was overruled, and the court entered judgment. On the trial the plaintiff took several bills of exceptions to the ruling of the court. The first bill of exceptions was to the admission of certain evidence; the second to the refusal to admit certain evidence; and the third certifies the facts proven. To the judgment the plaintiffs obtained a writ of error.

The defendant, to maintain the issue on his part and to rebut evidence, of the plaintiffs’ tending to show, that, when the deed from Blair and wife to the defendant offered in evidence by the defendant, was executed, the said Nancy was a minor, offered in evidence the record of the marriage of *606the father and mother of said Nancy, which is in the following words: “Wirt County Clerk’s Office. — I hereby certify, that the following is a true copy from the marriage-record of the aforesaid office — ‘March 29th, 1853, Kingsbury Dulin to Elizabeth Lee — April 10th, 1853, (married by A. Beatty) — Copy—Teste—O. L. Williams, Clerk County Court Wirt County, West Ya.” ’

The defendant further offered in evidence a copy of the record of births of the said county of Wirt showing the date of the birth of Henry A. W. Dulin and -Dulin, female, as certified by the said clerk. — “ Wirt County Court Clerk’s Office. — I hereby certify, that the following is a true copy from the record of births now on file in the office aforesaid, to wit: — ‘ June 27th, 1855, Henry A. W. Dulin, father, Kingsbury Dulin, mother, Elizabeth Dulin, — Sept. 6th, 1857, -Dulin, female; father, Kingsbury Dulin; mother, Elizabeth Dulin.’ — -I further certify, that the above blank named Dulin, female, was born alive, as shown by said record. — Given under my hand this 25th day of July, 1881, — ■ O. L. Williams, Clerk County Court Wirt County, West Va.”—

To the reading of the said copies and each of them the plaintiffs objected, which objection was overruled, and the said copies were permitted to be read to the jury, except the words in the last certificate“ I further certify, that the above-- named Dulin, female, was born alive, as shown by said record,” — which said words were not permitted to be given in evidence to the jury.

The defendant further offered to prove by his own evidence and the evidence of one Cherry, that the consideration for the land mentioned in the deed from plaintiffs to defendant, being the land in' controversy, had been fully paid by the defendant to the plaintiff, E. F. Blair; but that the consideration was paid in lumber, with which a house was built on the female plaiutiff’s land, in which house the plaintiffs lived. To all which evidence the plaintiffs objected, and the court overruled the objection and permitted all the said evidence to go to the jury, to which the plaintiff excepted.

Section 14 of chapter 63 of the Code provides for the issuance of marriage-licenses by the clerk of the County Court *607and the return thereof to his office. The 16th section of the same chapter provides: — “ The clerk of the County Court, to whom such license and certificate shall he returned, shall file and preserve the same in his office, and within twenty days after receiving the same record a full abstract thereof in his register of marriages, and the minister’s certificate and the name of the person signing the certificate, and make an index of the names of both the parties married, which may be done by additions in appropriate columns to the record made at the time of issuing the license.” — The same chapter requires the assessor to make an annual registration of the births and deaths in his district. After he has made out his books and returned them to the office of the county clerk, section 32 requires such clerk to “ enter upon the record a full abstract of the contents of the said books, containing a record of births, in said register of births, setting forth in convenient tabular form all the circumstances hereinbefore required to be recorded' with reference to the assessor’s books,” &c. Section 29 is as follows: “ The said book to be kept by the clerks of the County Courts and copies or any part thereof certified by the clerk lawfully having the custody thereof shall ¡prima facie evidence of the facts therein set forth in all cases.” Such are the provisions of the statute now, and, when the records were made, which we are now considering, they were substantially the same. (Acts 1852-3; Code 1860, chap. 108, p. 526). Section 28 of chap. 108 is in the same words as section 27 of chapter 63 of the present Code, which we have referred to. There can be no doubt, that under the statute the abstract of the records of marriages and the abstract of the records of births were both admissible in evidence.

But was the evidence, that the plaintiffs had been paid for the land admissible? It is insisted by counsel for defendant in error, that it was admissible, for the purpose, for which it was introduced. The counsel says : — “ The plaintiff, Nancy J. Blair, in her evidence to the jury denied any knowledge of the deed, which statement was calculated to prejudice the jury in her favor; and, to counteract this statement, the defendant gave evidence, that she had paid to herself part at least of the consideration for the land in materials for the *608bouse in which she then lived, showing that her pretended ignorance of the transaction was false.” — It is true, in the certificate of facts it is shown, that Nancy J. Blair did testify, that she never signed the said deed nor acknowledged it. She also said, she had positively refused to do either. This evidence was admitted without objection. We will not here consider, whether such evidence was or was not admissible. It was before the jury, and, to rebut it, the defendant offered in evidence the fact, that Mrs. Blair had herself received a part at least of the consideration, for which the land was sold. It seems to us, that under the circumstances this evidence was proper.

In the second bill of exceptions it appears, that the plaintiffs, to maintain the issue on their part, offered in evidence the record of the marriage showing, when they were married, and what was the age of the female plaintiff' at that time, which record is as-follows : — “Jackson County Clerk’s Office, Dec.[ 5th, 1876. — Marriage-license issued to Elihue F. Blair aged 27 and Miss Nancy Dulin aged 17 years, both of Jackson county, West Ya. — Teste—J. L. ARMSTRONG, Clerk.”— The defendant by counsel objected to said marriage-record going in evidence to the jury, and the -objection was sustained, and the plaintiff's excepted. It is insisted, that this ruling was correct., because the return of the marriage was not the the best evidence of Mrs. Blair’s age, which the nature of the case would admit. The clerk issuing a marriage license, it is said, requires information only, that the parent is willing, the age of the party being in such case immaterial the certificate of marriage is as to the age of the party mere hearsay evidence. The statute declares: “It shall be the duty of every clerk of every county issuing a marriage license to ascertain from the party obtaining the same and to make a record thereof before delivering the said license, as noar as maybe, the full names of both parties, their respective ages and their places of birth and residence.” As we have before seen in considering the first bill of exceptions, the clerk was bound to make an abstract of these facts in a book, and the 27th section provides that the said book * * or any part thereof certified by said clerk lawfully having the custody thereof shall he prima facie evidence of the facts *609therein set forth in all cases.” It is objected, that this evidence is mere hearsay. This would be a good objection but for the statute ; but by this statute the objection is entirely removed. The record is by the statute made prima facie evidence only and of course can be contradicted, if untrue. In the face of the statute the fact, that it was a statement of the female defendant made in her own behalf, is no objection. The statement was not made'with reference to this case; ,and if it had been, that would make no difference. The other side might show, if they could, that the representation of her age was false. We cannot confine the section to evidence directly proving the marriage, birth or death, but it is prima facie evidence of any and all facts required by law to be stated therein; and it is primary and not secondary evidence {Woods, J., in Battin v. Woods 27 W. Va., 58,) The court erred to the prejudice of the plaintiffs by refusing to admit the evidence.

Did the court err in overruling the motion for a new trial? As to the ground of surprise in the reading of the depositions of Lee and Reed and of after-discovered evidence we will not consider the question here as it can not arise on another trial. Ordinarily we will not say anything as to the sufficiency of the evidence or any part of it, when a new trial is to be had; because it might prejudice the party in the new trial. Neither will we consider the question, which would have arisen, had no error been found in the rulings during the trial, that is, whether we would consider on the motion for a new trial the legal effect of the deed from Blair and wife to Sayre, on which alone Sayre depends for his title, so far as the record discloses, it appearing from the bills of exceptions, that the deed was admitted without objection. But as the case will have to go back for a new trial, and as objection will then certainly be made to the admission of the deed on the ground insisted on here, that the certificate of acknowledgment is fatally defective, we think it our duty under the constitution and our own decisions to pass upon the validity of that acknowledgment. If it is bad, the defendant may have another and better title, which he can produce. If it is good, he will know, that he can safely jrisk his case on that deed.

*610Is the acknowledgment fatally defective? — The requirement of the statute is, that the certificate shall contain words to the following effect: — “And being examined by me privily and apart from her husband and having the said writing fully explained to her, she the said - acknowledged the said wriii/ng to be her act and declared, that she had willingly executed the same and does not wish to retract it.” (Code, chap. 73, sec. 4.) The certificate here is :— “I further certify, that Nancy J. Blair, wife of the said E. E. Blair, being examined by me privily and apart from her said husband and having the writing aforesaid fully explained to her, she, the said Nancy J. Blair, acknowledged., that she had willingly executed the same and does not wish to retract it.” It is here insisted, that this certificate is a substantial compliance with the statute. It is admitted, as contended by counsel, that, if by any reasonable interpretation of the language used in the certificate, taking the whole certificate together, it sufficiently appears, that she was examined privily and apart from her husband, and that during such privy examination the writing was fully explained to her, and that she then acknowledged the said writing to be her act, and then .declared, that she had willingly executed the same and does not wish to retract it, the certificate is sufficient, and the title under the deed passed to the grantee.

The following authorities are cited to show, that the certificate in question is a substantial compliance with the statutory requirement: Langhorne v. Hobson, 4 Leigh 225; Tod v. Baylor, Id. 498; McClanachan v. Siter, 2 Gratt. 280; Dennis v. Tarpenny, 20 Barb. 371; Dundas v. Hitchcock, 12 How. (U. S.) 256; Dury v. Craig, 5 Wall. 795; Belcher v. Weaver, 46 Tex. 292.

In Langhorne v. Hobson the certificate was as follows: “In obedience to the within commission to us directed we have personally waited on the within named Susannah Langhorne, wife of the within named William Langhorne, and examined her privily and apart from her husband; and she, the said Susannah, acknowledged the deed hereto annexed to be her act and deed, and declared, that she did the same freely and voluntarily without the persuasion or threats *611of her said husband, and also relinquished her right of dower in the land within mentioned conveyed by the said deed, and is willing that the same with this her acknowledgment should be recorded in our County Court- of Cumberland.” The statute at that time required, when a commission was issued, of those receiving their authority thereunder, “to examine her privily and take her acknowledgment, the wife being examined privily and apart from her husband by these •commissioners, and shall declare, that she willingly signed and sealed the said writing, to be there shown and explained to her by them, and consenteth, that, it may be recorded; and the commissioners shall return with the commission and thereunto annexed a certificate under their hands and seals -of such privy examination by them and of such declarations made and consent yielded by her.” The court below held thé certificate sufficient, and the Court of Appeals without any opinion affirmed the judgment. It does seem to me, that this was a substantial compliance with the statute.

In Tod v. Baylor it was held, that the certificate showing on its face, that, the feme made her acknowledgment of the conveyance of the land contained in the conveyance thereto -annexed freely and voluntarily, and that she was willing, that the same should be recorded, without stating, that the feme had declared, that she had willingly signed and sealed the deed, and without stating, that it was shown and explained to her by the commissioners, if the .feme had in fact signed the deed, such certificate of privy examination is substantially a compliance with the requisitions of the statute and good, and the feme is bound by the deed; but, if the feme had not signed the deed, it was insufficient. At this time the statute did not require the certificate to show, that the deed was explained to the wife. (Carr, J., p. 508.)

In McClanachan v. Siter the certificate was: — “She, the said Virginia A., having been by us first made acquainted with the contents of said deed and examined separately and out of the hearing of her said husband, whether she executed the same freely and voluntarily and without any compulsion or undue influence of her said husband or fear of his displeasure, she acknowledged-, that she executed said deed *612freely and voluntarily and without any compulsion or influence of her said husband, and that she does not wish to retract it.” The statute at that timé (1831) provided, that, when the deed was acknowledged, the certificate should show, that the married, woman “being examined by us privily and apart from her husband and having' the writing fully explained to her, she, the said ——, acknowledged the same to be her act and deed and declared, that she had willingly signed, sealed and delivered the same, and that she-' wished not to retract it.” (1 R. C. 365.) There seems to have been in this case no objection whatever made to the certificate, because the clause, “acknowledged the same to be her act and deed,” was omitted. I find no such objection either in the arguments of counsel or the opinion of the court. It is certainly a much more serious objection than the one, that was made. From the opinion of Baldwin, J., there seems-to have been only one objection made to the certificate, and that a very trivial one, which was thus disposed of by the Judge, who delivered the opinion of the court: — “There is no substance, I think, in the objection taken to the certificate- of the justices of the privy examination of the feme. They certify, that she was examined ‘ separately and out of the hearing of her husband.’ This, I consider, equivalent to the words used in the form given by the statute, ‘ privily and apart from.her husband.’ ” This is-all, that the court says about the certificate. The objection made was disposed of in a few sentences, as it deserved to be. This can not be regarded an authority holding, that the omission of the clause, “ acknowledged the said writing to be her act and deed,” is substantially supplied by the clause,, “ acknowledged that she executed said deed freely and voluntarily.” If this could be regarded as- an authority on this question, then everything overlooked or inadvertently done by an Apirellate Court would have the force of authority. It has sometimes occurred, that a cause has been decided in an Appellate Court, when the court had no jurisdiction thereof, but the question of jurisdiction not having been argued by counsel was overlooked by the Court and jurisdiction assumed. Would any one say, that in such a case the court had rendered a decision which would be an *613authority, that it had jurisdiction in such cases ? I think the point now relied on as having been decided in 2d Grattan was in no way brought to the attention of the court and-was therefore not passed upon in such a way as to make the de-cisión a rule of law. Stevens v. Van Cleve, 4 Wash. C. C .262.

In Dennis v. Tarpenny, 20 Barb. 371, it was decided, that a certificate of acknowledgment of the execution of a deed by a married woman stating, that on an examination before the officer “separate [and apart from her husband she acknowledged the execution of the deed without fear or compulsion from him” is a sufficient compliance with the statute requiring the officer to certify upon an acknowledgment, of a feme covert, that on “aprivate examination apart from her husband she executed the conveyance freely and without any fear or compulsion from her husband.”

In Dundas v. Hitchcock, 12 How. (U. S.) 269, Mr. Justice Grier in delivering the opinion of the court, said: — “ It is objected also, that this acknowledgment is not in the very words of the statute. ” (of Alabama). “In place of the words ‘ as her voluntary act and deed, freely ’ it substitutes the words,4 freely and of her own accord. ’ That the words of acknowledgment have the same meaning with those used in the statute, it needs no argument to demonstrate. ” It seems to me very clear, that saying she “ freely and of her own accord ” executed the deed, was the same as saying, she executed it 44 as her voluntary act and deed freely. ”

In Dury v. Craig, 5 Wall. 795, it was held, that a certificate by the proper officer, that a feme covert “ being privately examined apart from and out of the hearing of her husband acknowledged, ” &c., is a sufficient compliance with the Maryland statute of 1807, which requires the examination to be “out of the presence of” the husband, 44 The expressions are equivalent. ”

The only case precisely in point, which has been cited to* sustain this certificate is Belcher v. Weaver, 46 Tex. 293. The requirement of the Texan statute was precisely the same as ours, except that in the place of the words — “willingly executed”, are the words — “willingly signed, sealed and delivered.” The certificate in that case is almost precisely the same as-the certificate in this case. It is: — “She, *614the said. Ellen Belcher, acknowledged, that she signed said deed without any bribe, threat or compulsion from her husband, and that she does not wish to retract the same.”— The court held the certificate to be a substantial compliance with the statute. In delivering the opinion of the Court Roberts, Chief Justice, said “It is contemplated by the enacting clause of tire statute, that after the deed has been fully explained to her, and she has declared, that she signed it freely and Avillingly, she should then acknowledge the deed to be her act. This may be designed as a means of impressing on her, that she has not made it her deed by having signed it previously, but that she is now doing that, which makes it her deed by acknowledging it to be her act. In this certificate what is termed the declaration and the acknowledgment are blended together by the expression that she, Ellen Belcher, acknowledged, that she signed the said deed without any bribe, threat or compulsion from her°husband.”

In Ellett Richardson, 9 Baxt. 294, the court by Freeman, J., said : “It is settled by our decisions and laws to be the principle, on which most of them rest, that, a set form being prescribed, all implication as to eAmry material fact made necessary by laAvis excluded.” In Watson v. Michael, 21 W. Va. 568, the Virginia decisions as well as our own are referred to.

It was said in that case, that none of the cases required a literal compliance with the statute; butitis insisted in them, that eAmry requisite of the statute shall be substantially complied with. The compliance Avith all the reqnirements save one will not justify the inference, that it also Avas complied with, although it might be thought, that there was but a shade of difference between that and some other, which was included. Each requisite has its purpose, which can not be effected by compliance with any of or all the others. It seems to me, that the purpose of each of the requisites is apparent. The purpose of the privy examination is to ascertain what the wife may have to say about the deed, while she is away from her husband, free from his control; she must therefore be examined privily and apart from him. In that privy examination she is first to bej fully informed as to the nature of her act in executing the deed. She must *615know what she is doing ; therefore the deed must “be fully explained to her” by the officer. After this explanation, after she is fully informed of the consequence of ratifying the act, which she has performed, she has yet an opportunity to recede, when she is asked, if she acknowledges said deed to be her act, that is, in the definition of Worcester “to approve,” “to own the validity of” the deed.' If she is willing to proceed after being thus fully informed as to the consequences of her act, now being free from the control of her husband she acknowledges the writing to be her act, that is, I now here in my privy examination approve and own the validity of it. But this was not regarded as sufficient. Although she may be at that moment free from the control of her husband, yet she may fear to meet him, if she should not acknowledge the deed, and for that reason may “acknowledge it to be her act.” Therefore the statute requires a direct question to be asked her by the officer, a truthful answer to which will have the effect to discover, whether she signed and sealed the deed voluntarily or under the threats and coercion of her husband. This question does not relate to her state of mind, while she is undergoing the privy examination, but-to her state, when she executed the deed; and therefore the question is asked her, if she willingly executed it. If she did, she “declares, that she willingly executed the same.” Now then having had the writing fully explained to her' and having acknowledged it to be her act and having declared, that she had, before she came to acknowledge it, “willingly executed the same,” she still has one more [opportunity to recede. If she recedes now, the act to pass the title to her property is incomplete. She has one moment to repent of what she has done, though she has gone this far and complied with every requirement but one necessary to divest her of her property. She must declare here and now, that “she does not wish.to retract it”— she says : — I have had the writing fully explained to me ; I know all about it; I acknowledge the writing to be my act.— I approve it — I own the validity of it — I willingly executed it — I do not wish to retract it.

Is it not clear, that there must be a substantial compliance with every one of these requirements ? Is any one of them *616synonymous witli any other ? Can it then be said, that the words — “acknowledged, that she had willingly executed the same arid does not wish to retract it” — are equivalent to the words — “acknowledged the said writing to be her act, and declared, that she had willingly executed the same and does not wish to retract it ? Either the acknowledgment or the declaration is wanting, or they are both expressed in the word acknowledged. The reasoning of the Texas court is entirely unsatisfactory. If we could read the word “acknowledged” to mean, “she had acknowledged the writing to be her act” and then read the same word to mean, “declared” she had willingly executed the same and does not wish to retract it” we still would not be out of the difficulty; for iihad acknowledged the writing to be her act” would not be sufficient, as that would refer to an act done before the privy examination; and we have decided, that the statute positively requires the acknowledgment of the writing, to be her act to be made during the privy examination and not before. (McMullen v. Eagan, 21 W. Va. 233; Laidley v. Knight, 23 W. Va. 735.)

In Pickens, v. Kniseley, supra, p. 1, we held, that, where the married woman had “acknowledged the writing to be her act” during the privy examination, and then “declared that she had willingly acknowledged, the same and did not wish to retract it,” there was a substantial compliance with the statute; because the word “acknowledged” as there used meant “executed,” as it manifestly referred to an act done previously to the privy examination. But here the word “acknowledged” evidently refers to a previous act on her part, and therefore the word, as here used, can only mean declared, and clearly shows, that during the privy examination she did not acknowledge the writing to' be her act; and therefore that important requirement of the statute was entirely omitted as it was in McMullen v. Eagan, 21 W. Va. It is impossible to sustain the certificate, as it is fatally defective.

The judgment of the Circuit Court of Jackson county is reversed with costs, the verdict of the jury set aqide, and the case remanded for a new trial.

REVERSED. REMANDED.