Irwin brought ejectment against plaintiffs in error for a parcel of land in Van Burén county.
*148The case was tried before a jury who, by direction of the court, returned a verdict against the plaintiffs in error, and they now question some of the rulings at the trial. When the defendant in error closed his evidehce in chief, he was entitled to a verdict, and that right remained when the case went to the jury, unless the court erred in excluding some ground of the defense. The evidence proposed by the plaintiffs in error was directed to three points:
First — To establish an adverse title either in themselves or. in some third party;
Second — To show a valid right of possession outstanding and inconsistent with any right of possession in defendant in error; and—
Third — To prove and maintain their right to recover under the law allowing compensation for improvements, to defendants in ejectment who claim title by virtue of a sale for non-payment of taxes.
We are first to inquire whether the agreement by Buddington and Montanye to sell the land to Booher, and the parol evidence offered in connection with it were admissible. It was clearly inadmissible under the first point, because it had no tendency to show any legal title in the plaintiffs in error, or in any third party. As evidence of a mere equitable title it was wholly irrelevant. — Smith v. Allen, 1 Blaclcf., 22; Hopkins v. Stephens, 2 Randolph, 422; Roe v. Reade, 8 T. R., 118; Doe v. Wroot, 5 East, 132; Jackson v. Sisson, 2 Johns. Cases, 321; Jackson v. Pierce, 2 Johns. R., 221; Jackson v. Deyo, 3 Johns. R., 422; Jackson v. Van Slyck, 8 Johns. R., 487 ; Sinclair v. Jackson, 8 Cow., 543 ; Jackson v. Harrington, 9 Cowen, 86-88; Jackson v. Parkhurst, 4 Wend., 369; Moore v. Spellman, 5 Denio, 225; Crary v. Goodman, 9 Barb., 657; Johnston v. Jones, 1 Black (U. S. S. C.), 209, 221, 222; Greer v. Mezes, 24 How., 268.
When the agreement was tendered in evidence, the offer *149was coupled with a proposition to show that plaintiffs in error had connected themselves with the agreement, by an assignment to Wesler of so much of it as related to the land in question, on the 23d of March, 1870, which was long after issue had been joined in the cause, and the ruling objected to, was upon the offer so made, as a whole. It is certainly questionable whether, in any view of the intrinsic bearing of the proposed evidence, the offer should not have been rejected as embracing an element not admissible in the situation of the case. If the assignment of the agreement to Wesler furnished any ground of defense, it was one he had acquired after issue, and was not connected with the case by plea or notice. — Jackson v. Rich, 7 Johns. R., 194 ; Jackson v. Ramsay, 8 Cow., 75, and cases cited; LeBret v. Papillon, 4 East, 502.
Since, however, upon the argument, the plaintiffs in error have laid no stress upon their connection with the agreement, but have based their right to its admission upon the distinct ground that it showed a right of possession in-a third party, and by consequence precluded the defendant in error from asserting a like right; and since it seems desirable to pass upon this question, the point just noticed may be waived.
Without passing upon the validity of the position the evidence was offered to support, we proceed to consider whether the agreement so offered was any evidence in favor of that position. The plaintiffs in error maintain that it was. They contend that it was specifically suited to show an exclusive right of possession in a third party. But this view is believed to be incorrect. The agreement does not purport to convey any legal possessory interest in or upon the land. It created no term. It granted no easement. It assured no authority to hold for an hour. It did not invest Booher with the legal ownership of the right to occupy for *150any period. It did not attempt to sever the legal right of possession from the.- ownership of the fee. And the only conveyance which it required the vendor to give upon performance, was a quit claim deed.
By its terms it undoubtedly implied the vendor’s permission to enter to make improvements. But it went no farther. It implied a bare license, which at law was revocable; and the subsequent conveyance to John D. Smith was sufficient to revoke it. — Jackson v. Babcock, 4 Johns. R., 418; Hazleton v. Putnam, 3 Chand., 117 ; Rice v. Roberts, 24 Wis., 461; Drake v. Wells, 11 Allen, 141 ; Coleman v. Foster, 37 E. L. & E., 489 ; Wallis v. Harrison, 4 Mecs. & W., 538. We need not inquire whether any equities may or might have arisen from an entry and improvements in virtue of the license, which would bo protected in a case which might occur. It is enough for this case that the agreement had no tendency to show any legal right of possession o.ut of the owner of the fee, and was therefore irrelevant under the second point. It was not claimed to be pertinent to the third point; whence it follows that -it. was rightly excluded from the jury. The matters offered with it were of course properly ruled out. By themselves they were immaterial.
To maintain the first and third points, the plaintiffs in error gave in evidence the record of a deed from the auditor-general to Jamos M. Adsit, upon a sale made in 1846 for delinquent taxes for the 'year 1844, and then traced this title to themselves through the record of several deeds, among which was one from Ira Davenport to Bobert Burns. The validity of the evidence of this last named conveyance, will be considered presently. When the defendant in error produced his rebutting evidence, it appeared that the warrant on the roll of 1844, to collect the tax for which the land was sold to Adsit, 'commanded the treasurer *151to collect, for his fees, four per cent, over and above the amount named on the roll.
The court ruled, in effect, that this was not warranted by the law in force at the time; that it involved an illegal charge against the tax-payers, and vitiated the sale of land made as a consequence of non-payment. It is true, as claimed by plaintiffs in error, that the warrant in this particular was in accordance with the form given as a schedule to the act of 1843. But this part of the schedule to the act of 1843 was made inapplicable by amendments in 1844 of §§ 25 and 42 of the body of the act of 1843 (Act No. Jfi of 1843, §§ 25 and 1$; Act No. 96 of 1844, § ?)• Before these amendments the treasurer received as compensation such percentage, not exceeding four per cent, on the amount collected, as the township board allowed; and this he was to collect of each tax-payer, over and above the amount specified in the warrant. The effect of the amendments was to leave the treasurer’s compensation to be fixed by the board, as before; but to require the sum of four per cent, for collection expenses, to be carried into the roll, and to cut off the power to collect, as a stipend, of each tax-payer the compensation allowed by the board, and instead, to require the treasurer to retain the compensation allowed him, out of the tax collected. Accordingly, if the amendment of 1844 was observed, which required four per cent, for collection to be carried into the body of the roll, which seems not to be doubted, it follows that eight per cent, was exacted under the roll in question as collection expenses, when four was the largest per cent, allowed by law.
The ruling of the court was correct, and the deed to Adsit was rightly considered as invalid. We have no need to examine the other objections to that instrument. As the invalidity of this deed, however, did not preclude the asser*152tion of a claim for improvements by the plaintiffs in error, we shall next consider the propriety of the ruling which excluded the record of the deed from Davenport to Burns. This was one of the links in the chain of tax-title running from Adsit to the plaintiffs in error.
We have no copy of the record of this deed before us, but the bill of exceptions states that the deed bore date on the 30th of November, 1859,. and was recorded on the 3d day of December, 1859. A copy of the certificate of acknowledgment is set forth, with a statement that no seal was attached to it. The certificate is in these terms:—
“ State of New York, Steuben County — ss.
“On the 1st day of December, 1859, personally appeared before me, Ira Davenport, to me known to be the person described in, and who executed the above deed, and aclcnovdedged that-, executed the said deed.
[Signed] “K. B. Van Valkenburgh, commissioner appointed by the governor of the state of Michigan to take acknowledgments of deeds, etc., for the state of New York.”
Apart from the curative act of 1861, this certificate was plainly insufficient to authorize the deed to be recorded. To entitle a deed to registry, its execution by the grantor must be proved or acknowledged, and when acknowledged the evidence of the acknowledgment of execution by the grantor must appear by the certificate, and if the acknowledgment is taken abroad, before a Michigan commissioner, his certificate must be authenticated by his seal.
In this case, the certificate does not show that the grantor acknowledged that he executed the deed, and hence, if otherwise regular, the certificate would be bad, and the proof of execution of the deed, required by the statutes as a prerequisite to registry, would be wanting. — Hayden v. Wescott, 11 Conn., 129.
*153But what is called- the “ certificate ” is not shown to be such, without the seal. The seal is made requisite to connect the instrument with the appointed official agent— to show that the paper emanated from the proper authority, and is entitled to recognition and credit, as the legitimate official act of the identical officer whose sanction it purports to bear. The statute is express in requiring the seal, and the regulation is one which ought not to be eluded. Some of the observations in Marston v. Brashaw, 18 Mich., 81, on a kindred subject, are suitable here.
It was urged, however, upon the argument, that these defects were cured or obviated, by the third section of the act of 1861 (Sess. L. 1861, p. 16). But this provision cannot be made to reach the case without enlarging and changing its terms. It is open to question whether the first branch of the section named has reference to acknowledgments beyond the state. But if it has, it only cures imperfections in the certificate when it sufficiently appears ly it, that the person making the same was legally author-wed, and that the grantor was personally known to him, and acknowledged such deed to be “his free act.” The testimony of the seal being here lacking, it cannot be said that it sufficiently appears from a “certificate,” that Mr. Van Valkenburgh was “legally authorized;” nor can it be said that it sufficiently appears that the grantor acknowledged the deed to be his “free act’’ since the supposed certificate contains nothing of the kind, and it is by no means certain that a court would be justified in holding that it sufficiently shows that the grantor was personally known to the commissioner.
The last branch of the section very clearly does not relate to acknowledgments taken in other states by Michigan commissioners. As no aid can be derived from this *154statute, it necessarily follows that the deed- was not entitled to be recorded, and that the registry was not evidence.
The exclusion of this matter was therefore correct, and as a consequence there remained no evidence of any legal title, apparent or colorable in plaintiffs in error, and no evidence of any outstanding adverse legal title, or of any basis for an allowance for improvements. The plaintiffs in error were in no better situation to raise tbe claim for improvements than if the land had never been sold for delinquent taxes. The defendant in error was 'entitled to the verdict, and we have no occasion to examine objections not already disposed of. The plaintiffs in error were not prejudiced by any ruling which has not been considered. The judgment should he affirmed, with costs.
The other Justices concurred.