delivered the opinion op the codrt.
In 1883, S. H. Jenkins, husband of the appellee, L. A. Jenkins, and the said appellee, L. A. Jenkins, executed a mortgage on a house and lot, the property of S. II. Jenkins, situated in West Point, Hardin county, Ky., to secure the payment of borrowed money. Thereafter, S. H. Jenkins, in contemplation of insolvency, made an assignment for the benefit of creditors. The assignee instituted suit in the Hardin Circuit Court to have the estate settled and distributed among the creditors. Emily Davis, as creditor and mortgagee, was made defendant to that action. She instituted a cross-action against S. II. Jenkins and the appellee, L. A. Jenkins, by which she sought to have her mortgage lien on the house and lot enforced. Summons on the cross-petition was duly executed on S. II. and L. A. Jenkins, and judgment by default was thereafter rendered on the cross-petition against S. H. and L. A. Jenkins for said mortgage debt, and foreclosing the mortgage lien on the house and lot to satisfy said debt. More than a year thereafter, and after the term of court at which the judgment foreclosing the mortgage was rendered, the appellee by petition made known to the court that her husband, S. II. J enkins, had been, since the execution of the mortgage, adjudged a lunatic and was then confined in the lunatic asylum. She also alleged that her name did not appear in the granting clause of the mortgage, and that her husband had procured her signature thereto and acknowl*356edgment by duress; hence she and her infant children were entitled to a homestead in said house and lot. The court, upon final hearing of that part of the case, set aside the judgment theretofore rendered foreclosing the mortgage, and adjudged that L. A. Jenkins, by reason of the matters set up by her, had not relinquished her homestead in said house and lot, and consequently allowed her a homestead therein. From that judgment Emily Davis appeals.
It is true that L. A. Jenkins’ name does not appear in the clause granting the title to said house and lot. She had no title thereto, but she did have an inchoate right to homestead and dower in said house and lot, which she could not be deprived of except by her own act exercised in the manner pointed out by the statute. The statute upon these subjects provides that the right to a homestead shall not be waived nor dower relinquished, except by a written conveyance thereof signed by the husband and wife and acknowledged by them and recorded, etc. Now, the title to the real estate was in the husband, S. H. Jenkins, and the wife, L. A. Jenkins, owned no interest therein whatever; she was only entitled to an inchoate right to homestead and dower therein, which she could waive and relinquish by deed signed by herself and husband for that purpose, and duly acknowledged and recorded, etc. Now, if she joins in that part of the body of the deed conveying the homestead and dower, by apt words to convey said interests, that is a compliance with the statute upon that subject. The mortgage, in reference to the waiver of homestead and dower by Mrs L. A. Jenkins, reads: “ And Mrs. L. A. Jenkins, wife of S. H. Jenkins, hereby *357waives right of homestead and dower in and to the real estate mentioned in this mortgage.” S. PI. Jenkins and she signed and acknowledged the mortgage, which was recorded. The rule above laid down was complied with. As said, judgment was rendered by default, subjecting the house and lot, which included the homestead, to the payment of the mortgage debt and about a year there.after the court allowed L. A. Jenkins to set aside the judgment and assert and obtain a homestead in the same. This court, in the case of Harpending’s Executor v. Wylie, 13 Bush, 158, decided that a judgment by default rendered against a married woman, in conjunction with her husband, at one term of court decreeing the sale of their homestead, could not, at the instance of the married woman, be set aside at a subsequent term of court, except by proper proceedings to vacate or modify the judgment; that the judgment rendered at the former term, .after that term had expired, was res judicata even as to a married woman. See also Honaker, etc., v. Cecil, 84 Ky., 203, and Hill v. Lancaster, 88 Ky., 343. According to these cases the appellee, L. A. Jenkins, had no right, upon the state of case presented by her, to have the judgment subjecting the homestead set aside at a subsequent term of court. Besides, section 17, chapter 81, General Statutes, provides that “ unless in a direct proceeding against himself or his sureties, no fact officially stated by an officer in respect of a matter about which he is by law required to make a statement in writing, either in the form of a certificate, return or otherwise, shall be called in question, except upon the allegation of fraud in the party benefited thereby, or a mistake on the part of the officer.”
*358The statute supra relates to the certificate of the officer who is required to make it, and except for the fraud in the* party benefited, or a mistake in the officer, the certificate is conclusive as to the matters therein contained, unless in a direct proceeding against the officer or his sureties. See Pribble v. Hall, 13 Bush, 61.
It is not alleged, nor is there any proof, that there was fraud in the mortgagees in obtaining certificate of acknowledgment, nor of a mistake by the officer. Now the certificate of the clerk being conclusive that L. A. Jenkins freely and voluntarily executed and acknowledged the mortgage, and there being no fraud or notice of the alleged fraud by S. II. Jenkins on the part of the mortgagees, and they being otherwise, innocent purchasers for value, they are not affected by the alleged fraud; and the mortgage must be held valid and as passing the appellee’s homestead. See the case supra, page 66.
The judgment is reversed and cause remanded with directions to proceed consistently with this opinion.