3 Wash. Terr. 168 | Wash. Terr. | 1887
delivered the opinion of the court. In the year 1869 one William Thomas Gibson, a male
The plaintiffs in their complaint averred the second deed from Gibson to Chandler as the foundation of the,ir title, and made no mention therein of the first deed, or of any claim founded thereon, nor was there any general allegation of title which might be referred to the first deed. The plaintiffs prayed, among other things, that the deed by Gibson and wife — meaning the second deed — be decreed to be the deed of William T. Gibson, and to have passed the title to Chandler, their grantor, in fee-simple; that the property described in the complaint be decreed to be the property of plaintiffs, free from all claim of the defendant or the said Clara Foltz, and that the plaintiffs be let in possession thereof; that the pretended conveyance from Gibson to Foltz and from Foltz to the defendant be set aside and declared null and void, and that the defendant be enjoined, etc.
On the trial, the first deed from Gibson to Chandler, which at the time of the filing of the complaint appears to have been forgotten, if ever known, was offered in.
In the. certificate of the notary taking the acknowledgment of the first deed there was an omission. He described himself as a notary for “ — — Territory.” If this omission was material, the defect was cured by the act of legislature entitled “An act curing defective acknowledgments,” approved November 10, 1873. (Laws of Wash. Terr. 1874, p. 481; Kenyon v. Knipe, 2 Wash. 422.)
The first deed was made by Gibson to Chandler on the same day that Gibson received his patent certificate at the land-office. It is claimed that said deed was void under section 2262 of the Revised Statutes of the United States. The fact that the deed was made on the same day that the patent certificate was received will not authorize us to presume that it was made prior to the receipt of the certificate, but in the absence of contrary proof, we must presume that it was made after. The deed, therefore, must be presumed to have been a valid deed. (Meyers v. Craft, 13 Wall. 291.) In this case we have nothing to do with the alleged collusion of Gibson and Chandler to enter the land in the name of the former for the benefit of the latter. The law does not avoid a deed made after receipt of patent certificate because of such collusion, if it exist. The United States, undoubtedly, may do so in such a case* by action for that purpose, so long as the title remains in the guilty parties. The last objection in the District Court to the deed of 1870 is, that it is void for uncertainty in the description of the land, in that it does not describe the county and
‘The judgment of the lower court was correct, and is affirmed.
Greene, C. J., and Langford, J., concurred.