15 Johns. 89 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1818
delivered the opinion of the court.
The lessors of the plaintiff derive title under Ann Bridges, who was one of the original patentees ; and their right to recover is made out, unless the title of Ann Bridges has been’ devested, by her own act, in conveying it away, or the right to • recover in thjs action has been lost by lapse of time. The vast amount of property, involved in the questions to be settled by this case, has increased their interest, and has drawn forth from the counsel, on the argument, a very able and elaborate discussion. The conclusion to which the court has arrived, and the point on which the decision is unanimously placed, has rendered it unnecessary for me to
It is contended, on the part of the defendant, that Ann Bridges, who had intermarried with Joshua Hunloke, parted with her title by the deed, executed by her and her husband, to Peter Fauconier, bearing date the 12th day of February, 1711. It is objected, however, on the other side, that this deed was not acknowledged in such a manner, as to devest the title of a feme covert. The acknowledgment purports to have been made before John Blanchard,; and his certificate, endorsed on the deed, is in these words: “ This day came before me, one of his majesty’s justices for the county of Essex, the within mentioned Joshua Hunloke, and Ann his wife, to acknowledge this indenture to be their acts and deed, this 19th day of February, 1711. John Blanchard. In the deed, the grantors are described as of Elizabeth-Town, in the province of- East New-Jersey, and the grantee as of the city of New-York. At the time this acknowledgment was made, we had no colonial act on the subject. This has given rise to a very interesting discussion of the question, how far we were governed and controlled by the common law, in the acknowledgment of deeds by femes covert, and by which a feme covert could be devested of her title only by fine, or some matter of record; and on which proceeding she was required to be examined privately, or by the court, to ascertain whether she has parted with her estate freely, and without compulsion from her husband. But there being some diversity of opinion on th,e bench, how far the common law mode of proceeding was at that time in force here, it has been thought unnecessary, at present, to decide that point. It may, however, I think, be assumed, that, in point of fact, and as matter of practice, the common law, in this respect, has never been adopted with us; and it may not be amiss, briefly to observe, that, in some of our sister states, which were British colonies, and equally with us subject to the common law, the mode of acknowledgment adopted in this case, has been substantially recognised and sanctioned. In the case of Davey and Wife v. Turner, (1 Dall. 11.) decided in the supreme court of Pennsylvania, as early as the year 1764, it
The colonial act to which I have referred, purports to be an act to confirm certain ancient conveyances; and recited that, “ whereas it has been an ancient practice in this colony to record deeds concerning real estates upon the previous acknowledgment of the grantors, or proof made by any of the subscribing witnesses before a member of his majesty’s council, a judge of the supreme or county court, or a master in chancery, and sometimes before a justice of the peace. And, whereas, there are lands and tenements held under the deeds of femes covert, not acknowledged in manner aforesaid, and yet made bona fide, and for valuable consideration,
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Several .objections have been taken to this act, however, which it is necessary to notice. It is said to be against the express provisions of the Charter of the Duke of York of 1683, which declares that no estate of a feme covert shall be sold or conveyed, but by deed acknowledged by her in some court of record, the woman being secretly examined, if she doth it freely, without threats, or compulsion of her husband. (2 N. R. L. App. IV.) If this charter was in force here when the acknowledgment in question was taken, and when the act of 1771 was passed, there would be weight in the objection ; but, I believe, it has been the general, if not the universally received opinion, that this charter was not in force here after the revolution of 1688. In the journals of the general assembly of New-York, of the 24th of April, 1691, we find the following proceedings :
“ Upon an information brought into this house by several members of the house, declaring, that the several laws made formerly by the general assembly, and his late royal highness, James, duke of York, &c.: and, also, the several ordinances, or reported laws, made by the preceding governors and council, for the rule of their majesties’ subjects within
It has also been contended, that this act interfered with thé vested rights of' the heirs of Ann Bridges; and, on this ground, ought to be declared null and void. Without entering into the question, of the authority of the court to set, aside the act altogether, it is certainly a delicate power, and ought to be exercised cautiously, and in extreme and palpable cases only. We do not consider the one before us as one of that class. It is an act, confirming and quieting the title of bona fide purchasers, and sanctioning an ancient custom, as to the form of acknowledgment. Such an act ought to receive a liberal and benign interpretation, for the purpose of securing titles derived under such deeds. In Jackson v. Schoonmaker, (2 Johns. Rep. 234.) this court, in speaking of the loose manner of taking the proof of deeds, prior to the act of 1771, say, that the practice in the colony before that time, is, undoubtedly, to be regarded on a question, touching the authority and validity of an ancient deed. By the custom, in some cities and boroughs in England, a bargain and sale, by the husband and wife, where the wife iá examined by the mayor, or other officer, binds the wife, after the husband’s death. (2 Inst. 673,) By the statute 34 Hen. VIII. ch. 22. all such customary conveyances are declared to be of force, notwithstanding the statute, 32 Hen. VIII. ch. 28. which required the conveyance to be by fine, levied by the husband and wife. The statute 34 Hen. VIII. refers to, and sanctions certain customs, which had existed in some cities, boroughs, and towns, as to taking and acknowledging deeds ; and declares that the same shall stand.
But it has been argued, that, admitting the validity of the act, no such possession has been shown, as to bring the present case within its provisions. Before noticing the facts in relation to the possession, it will be proper to examine the act itself, and see how broad a construction it will admit. It is, in general, true, that the preamble of a statute is a key to open the mind of the makers, as to the mischiefs which are intended to be remedied by the statute. This rule must not, however, be carried so far as to restrain the general words of an enacting clause, by the particular words of the preamble. (6 Bac. Ab. 380, 381.) Although the preamble cannot control the enacting part of a statute, which is expressed in clear and unambiguous terms, yet, if any doubt arises on the words of the enacting part, the preamble may be resorted to, to explain it. (4 Term Rep. 793. Sir William Jones, 163. Palm. 485.) In the preamble to this statute, nothing is said with respect to possession of the land, nor any thing from which it could be inferred, that the act was intended to he confined to deeds for lands in actual possession, at the tiirtc of passing the act. After reciting the practice that had prevailed with respect to acknowledgments, it recites that there are lands and tenements held under the deeds offemes covert, not acknowledged in manner aforesaid, and yet made bona fide, and for valuable consideration. By this it would seem, that the Cases intended to be embraced, were those where the purchase was bona fide, and for valuable consideration; that in such cases, the purchasers, and those holding under them, ought to he secured, both in law and equity, against the grantors, their heirs and assigns. The unimproved state of the lands in the colony, at that time, affords a pretty strong ’ argument that the intention of the legislature was to confirm and secure the title in all such cases. To restrict the act to those cases only where there was a pedis possessio, would be providing only for a small pro
Without entering moré particularly into the evidence of actual possession, we feel perfectly persuaded, that enough
Judgment for the defendant.