82 Ky. 475 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1885
delivered the opinioh op the court.
The mortgage by Edwin Francis and his wife upon her land to the appellant, J. S. Butler, and which he is now seeking to enforce, was acknowledged by her on February 22,1871, but not recorded until September 19, 1878, a period of over two and a half years.
It was never re-acknowledged by her. On February '26, 1878, she and her husband sold and conveyed the land to one Kelly, and he, on April 6, 1876, to the ; appellee, Wheeler.
The petition alleges that both Kelly and Wheeler had full notice when they purchased of the existence of the mortgage. This is admitted by the demurrer to be true, ■ and the sole question is whether the delay in recording it was fatal to its validity.
If it was a nullity when they purchased, then their knowledge of it avails nothing for the appellant.
The question must be determined by the provisions of the Revised Statutes, and not by those now in force.
“Deeds made by residents of Kentucky, other than deeds of trust and mortgages, shall not be good against a purchaser for a valuable consideration not having notice thereof, or any creditor, except from the time the same shall be legally acknowledged or proved and lodged for record, unless the same be so lodged within eight months from the date thereof.”
Section 23 says:
“Where deeds have been or may be legally executed, but not recorded or lodged for record in proper time,, such deeds may be proved or acknowledged and recorded, and be as effectual from the time of so recording as if recorded in proper time.
“ This section shall not apply to the deed of a married looman, unless re-acknowledged by her, and recorded thereafter in proper time.”
Prior to the act of 1831, relating to this subject, the law in force was substantially like the sections supra ;■ and it was then held by this court that the deed of a married woman was not valid unless it was recorded or lodged for record in the proper office within eight months from the date of its acknowledgment; and if this were not done, it could only be rendered obligatory by her own act. (Applegate v. Gray, 9 Dana, 215 Scarborough v. Watkins and Wife, 9 B. M., 540.)
The sections above quoted have received the same construction, and not only has the way been blazed, but so long followed that it would not be safe to depart from it. (McGuire v. Bowman, 6 Bush, 550; Dugan v. Corn, Law Rep., volume 6, page 10.)
But it is urged that the same rule does not apply to-
The power, however, of a married woman to make •either a deed or a mortgage, is derived solely from the ■statute (sections 20 and 21), and, ip giving it, either the term "■conveyance” or "deed” is used in the statute, .and not the word “mortgage;” thus showing that, so far as married women were concerned, the latter was intended to be comprehended in the former, otherwise it follows that she had no power to make a mortgage, ■ and the power being thus given, it must be strictly pursued. ■
The same form of acknowledgment and certificate was prescribed by-the statute as to married women, whether the instrument was a deed or simply a mortgage.
Section 22, of said chapter, provides that “a deed of a married woman, to be effectual, shall be acknowledged before some of the officers named in the preceding sections and recorded in the proper office.’’'1
We conclude, from a careful comparison of the different sections, that wherever the word “deed” occurs in those relating to married women, that it embraces a mortgage, and that section 15, supra, relates only to the deeds of persons sui juris, save so far as a time for recording is named; otherwise no effect whatever can be given to the latter clause of section 23, which says : “This section shall not apply to the deed of a married
The statute made a difference between the deed of a married woman and that of a person sui juris. In the latter case it was always valid inter partes, although never recorded; but in the former this was not true under the Revised Statutes, while it is under the Gfeneral Statutes, the last clause of section 23 having been omitted from the latter.
Under the Revised Statutes the purpose of recording in the one case was to give notice of the existence of the instrument; while in the other it was necessary to its validity; and if the deed of a feme covert was not recorded in proper time, it was a nullity even inter p>artes.
If the recording of the feme's deed was necessary to pass her right, we see no reason why it was not equally as necessary in the case of a mere mortgage. If it was needful in the one case, because there had to be a privy examination, then it was equally so in the other, as the same formality of execution was requisite.
The section of the statute which fixes the eight months’ limit for recording uses the term “deeds” in doing so; and the sections empowering a married woman to execute a mortgage use the same term. Hence the limitation in the one section must have been intended to apply to the other, and this is the more evident, because section 23, supra, speaks of a “proper time” within which the deed of a married woman must be recorded, and no time whatever is fixed by the statute, save said eight months.
When .the entire statute relating to the subject is
The husband, Edwin Francis, has no interest in the land liable to the mortgage. He acquired none at the death of Ms wife, as they had previously sold it, and under the statute he could only become a tenant by the curtesy in the real estate owned or possessed by her at her death.
Judgment affirmed.