32 N.J. Eq. 103 | New York Court of Chancery | 1880
The bill is filed to foreclose a mortgage for $4,000 and interest, dated January 25th, 1874, given by Igene M. Marrenner and her husband to the complainant, on land belonging to Mrs. Marrenner, situate in the city of Elizabeth. Just before her marriage to her present husband, Mrs. Marrenner (who was then a widow) executed a deed, dated November 1st, 1878, conveying the mortgaged premises and another lot of land on the opposite side of the same street, to her father, Daniel D. T. Marshall, in trust for her use for life, and, at her death, to convey the premises thereby granted to her heirs at law. A short time after her marriage to Mr. Marrenner, Mr. Marshall negotiated and obtained for her a loan of $4,000 from the complainant, on the security of the mortgage in suit. It appears to have been necessary to raise the money to save her property, and she seems to have had no other means.of raising it.
On both properties there were two mortgages, which it was necessary to pay off in order to prevent foreclosure, and there were also unpaid municipal assessments which threatened her title. The loan was made to obtain the requisite money to satisfy these encumbrances, and, with the exception of the reasonable expenses attending the loan, the money was so applied.
The deed of conveyance to Mi’s. Marrenner in terms,' indeed, declared that it was intended for the purpose of putting an end to the trust, and the complainant appears, therefore, to have had notice of the existence of the trust declared in the deed of 1873. But no ttust was, in fact, created by the deed of 1873. Mrs. Marrenner testifies that
It is true, in Wells v. Wright, 7 Hal. 132, it was held by the supreme court that a certificate of acknowledgment under the fourth section of the act “ respecting conveyances,” which provides that the certificate shall entitle the deed to admission in evidence without proof, is only prima fade evidence and maybe disproved; and Lambert v. Lam
> In Marsh v. Mitchell, 11 C. E. Gr. 497, i-t was said, indeed, on the authority of Wells v. Wright, that the certificate of the acknowledgment of a married woman is only prima facie evidence, and that the truth of the certificate may be disproved, and the decree in that case was affirmed by the court of errors and appeals (12 C. E. Gr. 631), for the'reasons given by the vice-chancellor in his opinion, yet the question now presented as to the strength of the presumption in favor of the certificate, was not considered in either court. By our law (Rev. p. 154 § 9)-, the estate of a married woman in land in this state will not pass by her deed unless she shall have been previously examined as to her freedom from marital constraint in making the conveyance, and the acknowledgment be certified. And the act provides that, if of age, her deed, duly executed and so acknowledged, shall, if the acknowledgment be.duly certified, pass her estate according to the deed. This acknowledgment stands in the place of the acknowledgment which was requisite in levying a fine of the land of a married woman. Such acknowledgment could not be avoided (except in equity for. fraud) even
The act of the officer by whom the acknowledgment of a married woman under our law is taken and certified, is judicial, and, for the security of titles, must, in cases where the wife has signed the deed and appeared before the officers,, be held to be conclusive against her in favor of a perféctly bona fide grantee, for a valuable consideration. 1 Bishop’s Law of Mar. Wom. § 591; Hartley v. Frosh, 6 Tex. 208; Baldwin v. Snowden, 11 Ohio St. 203; Bissett v. Bissett, 1 Harr. & McH. 211; Ridgely v. Howard, 3 Id. 321; Jamison v. Jamison, 3 Whart. 457; Schrader v. Decker, 9 Pa. St. 15; Michener v. Cavender, 2 Wright 336; Mc Candless v. Engle, 1 P. F. Smith 290; Wells on Sep. Prop. of M. W. § 875; Heeter v. Glasgow, 79 Pa. St. 79 ; Johnston v. Wallace, 53 Miss. 335 ; Landers v. Bolton, 26 Cal. 406; McNeely v. Rucker, 6 Blackf. 391.
In the case before me there was no fraud or duress, but, on •the other hand, the proof is of entire good faith and perfect
Said the court in Jamison v. Jamison, 3 Whart. 457, in which it was held that the certificate was conclusive : “ The judge or justice of the peace, in taking an acknowledgment, acts judicially, not ministerially. The law imposes on him the duty of ascertaining, by his own view and examination, the truth of the matters to which he is to certify, and points out precisely his duty. Having thus entrusted him to see that the proper forms are observed, his solemn certificate that they have been observed, on the faith of which parties act, contracts are proceeded in, moneys are paid and deeds
But if the mortgage be regarded'as an invalid instrument as to Mrs. Marrenner, for want of proper acknowledgment, the complainant would be, as against her, entitled to subrogation to the rights of the mortgagees whose mortgages were paid, and to the rights of the city of Elizabeth to whom the assessments were paid, with the money which it loaned on the faith of the mortgage in question. Paine v. Hathaway, 3 Vt. 212 ; Dixon on Subr. 165.
As before stated, the loan was bona fide made and almost all the money used in discharging encumbrances on the two properties. The complainant cannot be regarded as a volunteer. Those encumbrances were on the property when it lent the money, and it lent it to enable the Marrenners to remove them. In appropriate proceedings, subrogation might be obtained.
And again, the debt to secure which the mortgage in suit was given, was for the benefit of the separate estate of Mrs. Marrenner, and if the mortgage was not acknowledged at all, the debt would, in equity, be charged on her estate generally. Pentz v. Simonson, 2 Beas. 232; Wilson v. Brown, Id. 277; Harrison v. Stewart, 3 C. E. Gr. 451; Armstrong v. Ross, 5 C. D. Gr. 109 ; Pierson v. Lum, 10 C. E. Gr. 390.
And it would be charged on the mortgaged premises as part of her estate, for the mortgage would, in equity, operate as an appointment of that property for the payment of the debt. Wilson v. Brown, 2 Beas. 277.