This is a suit in ejectment to recover possession of certain land in Jackson county, in which the plaintiffs had judgment, from which defendant has appealed.
It appears from the evidence that one Magowan
In support of plaintiffs’ title they put in evidence the following writing:
' “This indenture, made on the ninth day of June A. D. one thousand eight hundred and seventy-five, by and between William Groff and Nancy J. Groff, his wife, ■of the county of Jackson, state of Missouri, parties of the first part, and Lafayette Thouvenell, of the county of Jackson, in the state of Missouri, party of the second part: Witnesseth : That said parties of the first part, in consideration of the sum of five hundred dollars, to be paid by the said party of the second part, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, do, by these presents, grant, bargain, sell, convey, and confirm unto the said party of the second part, his heirs and assigns, the following described lots, tracts, or parcels of land, lying, being, and situate in the county of Jackson, and state of Missouri, to-wit: All of sixteen and two-thirds acres (16§) of land lying and being situated in the county of Jackson and state of Missouri, to be hereafter located, but now undivided, to-wit: the said sixteen and two-thirds acres is out of the following tracts or sections; the. east half of the northeast quarter of section number seventeen, and the west half of the northeast quarter of the southwest quarter of section number twenty-two, all in township number forty-eight (48), range thirty-three (38), it being the estate of Magowan Pake, deceased, and we, as heirs of Magowan Pake, bind ourselves, at some time, as soon as said deed can be
“In witness whereof thfe said parties of the first part have hereunto set their' hands and seals the day and year first above written.
“ William; Gobb. (Seal)
“Nancy Jane Gobb. (Seal)”'
The execution of this instrument, according to the-certificate of Goforth, a notary public, was acknowledged before him on the day of its date, and the certificate is in compliance with the law.
In further support of their title, plaintiffs put in evidence a deed of general warranty, from said Thouvenell, conveying to them “ sixteen and two-thirds acres-, of land, undivided out of the following described land, to-wit: The east half of the northeast quarter of section seventeen and the west half of the northeast of the southwest quarter of section twenty-two, all in township forty-eight, of range thirty-three, in Jackson county, Missouri.” This deed was dated January 24,,
Plaintiffs also pnt in evidence a lease made to said Thouvenell, by Goff and wife, to thirty-three and one-third acres of said land bearing the same date as the deed to him, and also evidence tending to show that he took possession under the deed and lease, and remained in possession till 1879, and that Goff moved off the land in 1875, and moved back on it in 1883, at which time one Jewell left twenty acres of the land, in the possession of which he had been under a lease from defendant, and which had expired. The copy of a petition in partition proceedings, instituted by Goff and wife, as plaintiffs, against said Thouvenell, in 1877, for partition of the whole of said land, was also put in evidence, from which it appears that it is there alleged that Thouvenell was the owner in fee of sixteen and two-thirds acres, or an undivided interest of one-sixth.
The material question arising on the above facts and record is, what is the effect of the instrument executed and acknowledged by Goff and wife on the ninth of June, 1875 % It is insisted, on the one side, that it took effect as a deed and conveyed to Thouvenell sixteen and two-thirds acres of land out of the one hundred acres described, or an undivided one-sixth thereof. On the ■other side it is claimed that it only amounts to a contract to convey at a future time said sixteen and two-thirds acres. The court held it to be effectual as a deed, and that it conveyed sixteen and two-thirds acres of said land, or an undivided one-sixth thereof, to Thouvenell, and this holding is assigned for error.
< We are of the opinion that .this was a correct ruling. The instrument is, in form, a deed, of general warranty, and undertakes and does convey sixteen and two-thirds acres out of the one hundred acres described in it; and after a particular description of the land conveyed, showing it to be an undivided interest in a larger
In the certificate of the notary who took the acknowledgment of the parties to this deed, it is stated that Mrs. Goff was examined separately and apart from her husband. In the progress of the trial, evidence was introduced tending to impeach this statement of the certificate and to show that no such privy examination was made. Notwithstanding this evidence, the court gave instructions over defendant’s objection, authorizing plaintiffs to recover, even though there was in fact no separate examination of Mrs. Goff by the notary when he took her acknowledgment. The court, in giving these instructions, seems to have entertained the idea that unless Thouvenell and plaintiffs, his grantees, had notice that Mrs. Goff was not in fact examined separately and apart from her husband, that the certificate of the notary was conclusive. It has been held in so many pases, as to become a rule in this state, that a certificate of acknowledgment of a married woman’s deed
The right to impeach the certificate of the officer taking the acknowledgment of a married woman to- a deed conveying her land, was not in any of these cases made to depend on the fact that the grantee either practiced a fraud on the grantor, or had knowledge that the officer taking the acknowledgment did not subject her to such an examination as the law required. This is unquestionably so as between grantor and grantee, and no reason is perceived why the principle should not be applied to one claiming under a grantee in a deed, when the officer taking the acknowledgment certified falsely that the law had been complied with in taking it. It may be proper to say, in this connection, that, to over- ■ throw the certificate of the officer, the evidence should be clear, cogent, and convincing. It is held, in case of Bartlett v. O’Donoghue, 72 Mo. 564, that a deed to the real estate of the wife, not acknowledged by her, as the law requires, can, as to her, have no effect as a conveyance of her title, nor can it be held to convey the marital rights of the husband to possession, and it follows from this, that if Mrs. Goff was not' in fact examined -by the notary separately an d apart from her husband, and that fact is made to appear by a clear and convincing preponderance of the evidence, that the deed to Thouvenell neither passed her interest nor any interest of her husband.
It is held in the case of Bledsoe v. Simms, 53 Mo. 308, that the husband is the proper and only party to be made a defendant in a suit for lands claimed to
For the error noted in giving instructions, the judgment is reversed and cause remanded.