Goodykoontz v. Olsen

Adams, Ch. J.

i. aokuo-wlomuayiíui¿e: offiee. A tax deed conveys nothing unless acknowledged. Eevision, § 784. It is not claimed that the clerk of the board of supervisors had authority by virtue of his office, as such, to take aeknowledgments of deeds, but it is claimed that Samuel Tennis, before whom the deed purports to be acknowledged, was county judge; that as such officer he was authorized to take acknowledgments, and so the defect in this case, if any, is a mere defect in the certificate, which should not have the effect to invalidate the deed.

It appears that Tennis had been elected and qualified judge of the county court, and had served as such during the year 1868. Before the acknowledgment, however, of the deed in question, the county court was abolished, and the office of county auditor was created, and each county judge was made ex officio county auditor from January 1, 1869, and required to qoerform the duties of county auditor and act as clerk of the board of supervisors until the office of county auditor should be filled by election.

Now, although Tennis held the office of county auditor, and performed the duties of clerk of the board of supervisors, *176by virtue of his having been elected and qualified judge of the county court, yet when the court was abolished he ceased to be judge of the court, and he did not, we think, carry forward any of the powers which he exercised simply as judge. It follows that, in our opinion, at the date of the deed in question he had no power to take acknowledgments.

2.--:legal-deef.aot'tax The appellees, however, insist that even if this is so the acknowledgment must be deemed good now, because by section 2, chapter 160, of the Acts of 1870, all acknowledgments of deeds which had been duly recorded were legalized.

Whether it was competent for the legislature to pass an act which should have the effect to divest a title where nothing had been done by the owner with that intent, we need not determine. It is manifest that to uphold such legislation would he going very far. But the act in question does not necessarily embrace that class of acknowledgments which by statute are virtually made a part of the execution of a deed, and without which there is no deed. We ought to be cautious about putting a doubtful construction-upon a statute if, when so construed, it would become of doubtful constitutionality.

Now the class of acknowledgments under consideration is a very narrow one. It may well be believed • that the legislature did not have it in mind at all. It is true the language is “ that the acknowledgments of all deeds * * * are hereby declaré! legal,” but we think that the act was designed to apply only where there was a legal deed antecedent to any attempted acknowledgment. We think, therefore, the curative act does not apply, and the judgment must be

Affirmed.