3 Vt. 281 | Vt. | 1831
And now after argument the opinion of the Court was pronounced by
The first question is, whether the deed from Oliver Phelps to Noah and Israel Smith was legally acknowledged. Without this requisite it would be inóperativer as against the defendant, and would moreover appear to have passed in evidence without any proof of its-execution. It is not indispensable that the place of taking should fully appear from the acknowledgement itself, provided it can be discovered with sufficient certainty by inspection of the whole instrument. And if we can infer, beyond any reasonable doubt, that the acknowledgement endorsed' upon this deed was taken in the county of Hartford and state of Connecticut, it is to be regarded as a legal acknowledgement; it being in proper form, and taken by a magistrate of competent authority by the laws of that state. We deem it a fair presumption, in the absence-of all evidence to the contrary, that the deed was executed at the time it bears date, and at the place of the grantor’s residence. And finding the acknowledgement taken so soon af-terwards in the county of Hartford, we can intend no other than the same county of Hartford in which the deed is supposed to have been executed. Questions of this sort have frequently arisen, and have always received a similar determination, when the instrument has furnished equal means for ascertaining the place of acknowledgement.
It is also urged for the defendant, that as his possession was commenced before he received his deed from Farrington, oris proved to have been in communication with him for the purchase, he has a right, on failure of that title, to rest upon, his antecedent
Judgement of the county court affirmed.