20 Barb. 371 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1855
It will probably be conceded, and if not, it may be assumed, that if the deed from the plaintiff to Eben J. Dennis of the premises in question, was properly acknowledged by the plaintiff, so as to entitle it to be read in evidence, the plaintiff’s right of dower in the premises was effectually barred, and consequently this suit cannot be sustained. The only question in the case then is, whether the
The counsel for the plaintiff insists that two important requisitions of the statute in reference to the acknowledgment of conveyances by married women have been omitted by the magistrate who took the acknowledgment, and that consequently the deed has no validity to pass her title to the premises in question. The provision of the statute (2 R. S. 758, § 13,) is familiar, and requires the officer in the case of a married woman, to certify that on “ a private examination apart from her husband she executed such conveyance freely and without any fear or compulsion of her husband.” He has omitted to state in the certificate in this case, either that the examination was “ private,” or that she executed the deed “ freely;” and the question is whether the omission of these two statements renders the acknowledgment so defective as to exclude the deed from being offered in evidence. No particular stress is laid on the omission of the word “ freely” in the acknowledgment, for since the decision in the case of Meriam v. Harsen, (2 Barb. Ch. 232.) that is no longer an open question. In that case the officer had omitted to state that the acknowledgment was made freely, but he added that it was made without fear or compulsion. The chancellor held that the word “freely” means only that she acted without constraint or compulsion, and when the certificate states these facts the requirement of the statute is answered.
But a more ingenious argument is made by the counsel for the plaintiff upon the effect of the omission to state that the examination was “ private.” It is contended that this does not mean simply that it is private in respect to the husband only, but that it is to be literally and absolutely private as to all the world ; that the object of the statute is to save the wife from any possible constraint on the part of the husband, and that
But there are decisions in respect to other requirements of the statute, from which a strong analogy may be drawn, and considerations in respect to the construction it has practically received, which should be controlling in this case. Thus the statute provides, as it has for more than half a century, that the officer taking the acknowledgment shall certify that the person making the acknowledgement “is known to him to be the person described in and who executed the conveyance.” In the case of Jackson v. Gumeer, (2 Cowen, 552,) the certificate of the magistrate stated that “ A, B., to me known, came and acknowledged, &c.” The court held this a sufficient acknowledgment. Ch. J. Savage says that if called upon to establish a form of certificate, he should certainly deem it best for the officer to certify that the grantor was known to the officer to be the person described in the deed, “ but,” he adds, “the legislature could not expect the officer to know that the grantor described in the deed actually executed it, otherwise than by his acknowledgment, or proof by a witness. The form used in the case has been in very general use, and the practice in this respect may perhaps amount to a construction of the act."’ In the case of Duval v. Covenhoven, (4 Wend. 561,) an acknowledgment of the same character was also held perfectly good. (See also Troup v. Haight, Hopk. 239.)
The same course of reasoning which led the chancellor to hold that the omission of the word “freely” did not invalidate
Some stress is laid, in the case last cited, upon the consideration that by long usage the statute had received a practical construction, which it would be unwise and eminently unsafe to disturb. The same position is taken and elaborately vindicated, by Chancellor Sanford, in Troup v. Haight, (Hopk. 268,) and approved by Chancellor Walworth, in Meriam v. Harsen, (cited supra.) General usage, long continued and hitherto unquestioned, has great force; and the practical construction of the law by so many public officers, though not given upon adverse litigation, must have much of the weight of judicial decision. I can easily imagine that a decision holding the acknowledgment in this case defective, would unsettle half the titles in this state, and I have no ambition, upon a point so narrow and technical, to open the flood-gates of endless and destructive litigation. The hand might well hesitate to apply the torch -where extensive devastation would inevitably follow, and the fame of the Ephesian incendiary, though wide as the world and lasting as time, has never been considered one greatly to be coveted. It is undoubtedly true that some decisions have been made in the courts of our sister states which maintain the doctrine contended for by the plaintiff’s counsel, and hold acknowledgments like the one in question de
judgment must be affirmed.
W. F. Allen, Pratt, Hubbard and Bacon, Justices.]