19 Wis. 472 | Wis. | 1865
By the Oourt,
It is clear that Mrs. Houle did not acknowledge the execution of the mortgage at the time Last, the notary, took the acknowledgement of her husband. Mr. Houle executed and acknowledged it on the 12th day of January, and it is not pretended that Mrs. Houle executed it until the 26th. She could not well have acknowledged it before executing it, nor is it claimed that she did. We think it extremely doubtful whether she ever acknowledged it at all. In fact there is no sufficient evidence that she did. The certificate of acknowledgment is dated January 12th. It was drawn and signed by Last on that day as the acknowledgment of Mr. Houle alone. It was afterwards altered without
All this is upon the supposition that if it had been clearly proved that Mrs. Houle made acknowledgment on the 26th, the certificate of the 12th, a wrong date, would have been good. That question is not decided. See Elwood v. Klock, 13 Barb., 50.
The mortgage, not having been acknowledged by Mrs. Houle, is inoperative against her. A deed defectively executed or not acknowledged may be enforced as against the husband or other person not under disability, as an agreement to convey. But as against a married woman, a deed not acknowledged by her, or otherwise defective, will not be enforced even in equity. Martin v. Dwelly, 6 Wend., 9; Carr v. Williams, 10 Ohio, 305. As to Mrs. Houle, therefore, the mortgage is wholly inoperative. It does not convey her interest in any of the land. And as it is declared by statute that a mortgage of the homestead shall not be valid without the signature of the wife, it seems to follow, as to the forty acres comprising the homestead, that the mortgage cannot be enforced against either of the mortgagors. It is good only to convey Mr. Houle’s interest in the sixteen acres not comprised in the homestead.
The judgment of the circuit court must therefore be reversed, and the cause remanded with directions that it be dismissed as to Mrs. Houle, the appellant, and that the plaintiff have judgment against Mr. Houle for the sale of that portion of the premises not by law exempt from forced sale on execution.