16 Ga. 102 | Ga. | 1854
By the Court.
delivering the opinion.
The Legislature, in 1847, passed an Act to require marriage settlements to be recorded.
Section I. enacts, “ That all marriage agreements or settlements, heretofore executed, cither within this or any other State
Section II. “ All marriage agreements or settlements, hereafter, made either in this State or any other State or Territory, where the husband resides in this State, shall be recorded within three months from the execution thereof, in the Clerk’s office of the Superior Court of the County of the husband’s residence”.
Section III. “ If any such instrument be not recorded within the time prescribed by this Act, the same shall not be of any force or effect, against a bona fide purchaser, without notice, or bona fide creditor, tvithout notice, or bona fide surety, without notice, who may purchase or give credit, or become surety, before the actual recording of the same”. (Cobb’s Digest, 180.)
Is this Act unconstitutional, as applicable to marriage settlements, executed before its passage ?
A judgment of the Court, and even a Statute, may be vacated for fraud. (Fermor’s Case, 3 Coke, 77.) Can it be questioned, that but for the Rescinding Act of 1796, the celebrated Yazoo Act of 1795 would have been declared null and void by the Courts ?
Whenever this shall happen, from inadvertence or otherwise, it is manifestly the duty of every Court to protect the rights of the citizen from violation, and to vindicate the Constitution. The unconstitutional Acts of the Legislature, State or Federal, are not laws; and no Court will execute them, having a proper sense of its own obligations and responsibilities.
If the Act in question, then, impairs the force of contracts, or confiscates private property, or disturbs any vested rights, we ought not to give it effect. But is this its character?
The General Assembly of Georgia have passed Limitation Acts, requiring existing judgments to be enforced lyithin a .specified period; they have abolished joint-tenancies; hid the Act for this purpose has been construed to apply to catates, ( where the execution of the deed creating them, was prioiito its 1 passage. They- have altered the law respecting divorces, and / it has been held to extend to cases prosecuted after its enact-/ ment, although the facts upon which the divorce should be ob-\ tained, were committed before. They have passed laws giving .remedies, by attachment and garnishment, against existing corporations: indeed, our Digest t abounds with retrospective .Statutes, relating to these artificial bodies; requiring them tej make periodical returns — imposing certain penalties, should they refuse to redeem their notes in specie, when demanded, &c.; priority of payment has been given to cestui que trusts, I in certain cases of insolvency, whether the trust debt was con- j tracted before or after those due to other creditors ; thereby, j it would seem, infringing the strict rights of the postponed l classes. The Statutes exempting certain articles of property belonging to the debtor, from levy and sale, belong to this same >
It is insisted, however, that the principle of this species of legislation, does not apply to a marriage settlement; and that ■should the Act of 1847 be enforced, in this case, it would not only impair, but utterly subvert the obligations of this contract. That the practical effect would be, to divest the trustee of the legal title to the negroes embraced in the settlement, iind to revest the same in the wife ; and by virtue of the marital rights, in the husband, the defendant; and that, too, in the face of his own stipulation in the deed, to which ho ivas a party, that this property should, in no event, be subject to his contracts.
The parallel is complete, with this difference: In the one case, A parts, forever, with all the interest which he had or held in the property: ivhereas, in fhe other, the settler only divests herself of the legal title, reserving the entire use to herself, to be shared and enjoyed with the husband. The case under the Registry Acts, is more objectionable, and much more questionable, as to its constitutionality, than the one under consideration.
By the 4th section of the Act of 1827, it is provided, that “ upon failure to record any mortgage, as hereinbefore required, within the time prescribed, that in such case, all judgments obtained before the foreclosure of the mortgage, and also any mortgage executed after the same, and duly recorded, shall take lien on the said mortgaged property, in preference to the older mortgage”. (Cobb’s Digest, 172.)
Thus, it will be perceived that the policy of our law makes no distinction between conflicting conveyances, under the Registry Acts, and contests between grantees and judgment creditors.
In the opinion of this Court then, the Act of 1847, as applicable to this marriage settlement, is constitutional and valid. Moreover, we believe it to be not only a reasonable, but a liberal Act. Had it declared all marriage settlements, executed before its passage, but not recorded, void, as against purchasers, creditors and securities, for one, I would have refused to enforce it. But this Act is no journeyman-work; it is drawn by a master-hand; it is a model Statute; it allows instruments of this kind, already executed, to be recorded within twelve months from its passage and publication; whereas, all settlements made since, must be registered within three months from their execution.
The marriage settlement was executed in February, 1833. It was delivered to Miss Martha Davis, the trustee, who was in bad health at the time, and died in July, 1836. Mrs. Anne Finley, another sister and a subscribing witness, took possession, of the trunk of Miss Davis, containing, among other
First, we say, the Act, itself, makes no exception in favor of feme coverts; and consequently, we can make none.
If we make this exception, we establish the principle, that whenever the elder grantee or the trustee, in the case of marriage settlements, dies within the Statutory limit for recording the instrument, the law does not apply. And this rule must extend to instruments executed since, as well as before the Act; for as to the doctrine which is claimed, it can make no difference. And yet, did any body ever know of an application to a Court, either of Law or Equity, for relief, against the law, upon any such ground ? It is a new reason for relief against the unbending severity of our Registry Acts.
Without stopping to inquire whether marriage settlements, as well as all other conveyances, both of real and personal property, do not legitimately fall within this class of legislation, allow me to say, that the very same reason operates, and with double force, in behalf of retroactive legislation.
While I concede to the Legislature even the power of expounding laws, let it be borne in mind that it is with the limitation which I have stated; that it is not the power which belongs to the Parliament of Great Britain, in this respect, but the power which belongs to an American State, where the three Departments of the Government are distinct and sepa
Holding, then, as .we do, that this Act is in furtherance of justice, and that the Legislature cannot he charged with violating its duty or exceeding its authority, in its passage, we are constrained to reverse the judgment of the Court below, in pronouncing it unconstitutional and void, as applicable to this marriage settlement.
Unless, then, notice can he brought home to these judgment creditors, they must succeed. In other words, in the absence of notice, this marriage settlement does not stand in their way, under the Act of 1847.
As to the rejection of the letter, we think the Court ruled right. The representations of the defendant were inadmissible, to prejudice the rights of the claimant.