6 Ohio 353 | Ohio | 1834
delivered the opinion of the court:
The certificate of acknowledgment, in this case, does not state ¡that the wife, the present complainant, was made acquainted with ¡the contents of the deed; nor does it state that she sealed and deilivered it, unless this can be gathered, by implication, from the terms “she acknowledged the within indenture to be her act and -deed,” which acknowledgment she is certified to have made conjointly with her husband.
The statute of 1805 regulates the acknowledgment of this deed. A construction was given to this statute, in the case of Brown v. Farran, 3 Ohio, 140, referred to by the counsel on both sides in this ca^e. In that case, it is held that the certificate of acknowledgment must show, either in express terms, or by necessary implication, a compliance with every substantial requisition of law. Before the rights of the wife to lands are affected, section 2 requires. 1. A separate examination, 2. That the wife be made acquainted with the full contents of the deed. 3. An aeknowl
Decree for complainant.