1 S.W.2d 59 | Ark. | 1927
STATEMENT BY THE COURT.
Appellees, who are the widow and heirs at law of Joel Mitchell, deceased, brought this suit in equity against C. R. Hall to set aside a mortgage on the homestead of said decedent as a cloud upon their title, and also prayed that they be permitted to pay off the amount due upon said mortgage.
The record shows that Joel Mitchell executed a mortgage to C. R. Hall upon a tract of land comprising 77 55/100 acres in Union County, Arkansas, to secure the sum of $512.48. The mortgage also purports to have been signed by E. L. Mitchell, as wife of Joel Mitchell, and the mortgage also purports to have been duly acknowledged by Sid Pepper, a notary public. *642
Mrs. E. L. Mitchell was a witness for appellees. According to her testimony, the land embraced in the mortgage was the homestead of Joel Mitchell, upon which she and her husband, together with their children, resided at the time the mortgage was given. The mortgage purports to have been executed on February 25, 1922. She never signed the mortgage, or authorized her husband or any one else to sign it for her. She never acknowledged the mortgage. Joel Mitchell died in October, 1924. The mortgage itself was introduced in evidence, and also specimens of handwriting of Mrs. E. L. Mitchell. An expert in handwriting was introduced as a witness for appellees, and testified that he had examined the signatures to the mortgage, and that the same person signed the names "Joel Mitchell" and "E. L. Mitchell" to the mortgage. This witness also examined the signature "E. L. Mitchell" as it appeared in the mortgage, and stated that the person who wrote it was not the same person as the one who signed E. L. Mitchell on the papers shown to him. It was shown that Mrs. E. L. Mitchell was the one who signed the name "E. L. Mitchell" on the papers shown to this witness.
Sid Pepper was introduced as a witness for appellant. According to his testimony, he took the acknowledgment to the mortgage, but stated that it was possible that Joel Mitchell signed both names to the mortgage. He stated further, however, that he read the mortgage over to the wife of Joel Mitchell, and thought she signed it.
The chancellor found the issues in favor of appellees, and a decree was entered, canceling and setting aside the mortgage as a cloud upon the title of appellees. To reverse that decree appellant has duly prosecuted an appeal to this court.
(after stating the facts). The decree of the chancery court was correct. A proper acknowledgment is an essential part of the execution of a *643
conveyance of land, and it is competent for the grantor to show the falsity of a certificate of acknowledgment. Where the grantor does not acknowledge the deed and the officer makes a certificate that the grantor did appear, the act of the officer is without authority of law, and void. No one can claim that an estate in land can be divested by forgery, and every one must be subject to the risk of forgery by officers authorized to take acknowledgments. Miles v. Jerry,
A mortgage as to the homestead is void where the wife of the mortgagor did not join in the mortgage. Ferrell v. Wood,
It is next insisted by counsel for appellant that the judgment should be reversed because, after the mortgage was signed, the Legislature passed a curative act with regard to mortgages and deeds, which was held to be valid in Sanders v. Flenniken,
It follows that the decree must be affirmed.
HART, C.J. Counsel for appellant earnestly insist that in our original opinion we misinterpreted the effect of the decision in Sanders v. Flenniken,
In that case the court had under consideration the effect of a curative statute as applied to the grantors of a deed. The Legislature, when enacting our homestead statute, could have dispensed with any requirement as to the wife signing it, and, this being so, it had the authority, where no vested rights are affected, to do the same by subsequent legislation. The right which a curative statute or healing act takes away in such a case is the right in the party to avoid his contract. Such legislative acts are sustainable only because they are supposed not to operate upon the deed or contract by changing it, but upon the mode of proof. Green v. Abraham,
In the Sanders case the grantors in the deed signed it, and intended to be bound by their act in doing so. Hence it is said the curative act applied in so far as their rights were concerned. There is a wide difference, how ever, between that case and the present one. Here the wife of the grantor did not sign the deed at all, and did not intend to be bound by its provisions. Here the signature to the deed was a forgery, and no subsequent act of the *645 Legislature could make valid and binding an act which she hand never done or attempted to do. This would render the act unconstitutional, if it should be so construed.
The petition for rehearing will be denied.